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Knowledge of Water (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

Knowledge of Water (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.60
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: This book should NOT have been written.
Review: Fortunately, I read Vanished Child first. I'm not sure what happened in between these two books but The Knowledge of Water was very dissapointing. The thought behind the book was good. But the book itself was hard to read and easy to put down. As an example, I have waited through two books for Reisden and Perdita to get married, their wedding was in one paragraph written in third person. Sarah Smith seems to lose you during the important parts and tries to get you into the parts of no relevance.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Too many soggy plots weigh down 'Water'
Review: I am a firm believer that an author should never try to write the same story over and over again just to sell books. Therefore, I was happy to read the other reviews, though negative, of Knowledge of Water. They told me that although Sarah Smith carried characters from The Vanished Child over to this book, it would not be just a rehash of the first one.

However, even if one does not compare the content of the two books, the first one is far superior, as all events turn on the central thread of the novel, the story of the 'vanished child'.

Smith chose as her central thread here the Paris flood of 1910. However, that thread frays early on, leaving too many scattered ends drifting like flotsam in the flooded Seine.

Once again, Alexander Von Reisden is the anti-hero of the story, along with Perdita, his partially sighted fiancee, who dreams of a career as a concert pianist. Perdita knows that she ultimately cannot commit to marriage, as she will one day leave to follow her passion. Reisden, still haunted by the death of his first wife (events described in Vanished Child) is content to simply let the relationship carry on as is; the same as Perdita. But, even though both feel that there is no real future for their love, passion eventually overtakes them.

Enter Roy Dougherty, police officer and friend from home (Boston) who quite correctly deduces that the relationship has progressed to being far from platonic, with the usual consequences.

Reisden is called in for questioning in the matter of a dead girl, the 'Mona Lisa'. He aides the police as much as possible, since he knew the girl in passing, and begins receiving notes asking him to 'do right by her' and see that she is 'taken care of'. Reisden and the police deduce that it is her killer making these requests, and set out to trap him.

Perdita, as well as Reisden, is drawn into an art forgery investigation, along with Dougherty, headstrong writer Milly Xico, and Reisden's 'cousin' Dotty, all convinced that Dotty's 'original Mallais painting' is nothing of the sort. Perdita takes up residence next to the widow Mallais and her shut-in brother Yvaud, befriending the kindly old woman, and soon learns that not all is as it seems.

The book is well written, but the story is what suffers from a lack of development. The central thread of this book seems to bounce back and forth. The flood; the art forgery; the dead girl; the well-meaning killer; Perdita's musical career; Reisden's mental clinic....too many focal points for one story. While I enjoyed the author's style and brand of prose once again, I was sad to see that nothing gelled into a main storyline, at least not for me. Most conflicts are resolved by the last page, but...with so many different story threads, it is hard to really enjoy any of them completely. Just when you are drawn in to one particular sub-plot the story shifts to another.

I eagerly await reading the third novel in the trilogy, A Citizen of the Country, as the reviews and book description all praise it highly.

I can only give this book 3 stars, however, and in comparison with part 1, it pales. Hopefully part 3 will even the score.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Engrossing, thought-provoking, and a good read.
Review: I found The Knowledge of Water to be an absorbing blend of mystery, period history and romance; but before you write it off as a bodice-ripper, let me add that the characters are well developed and believable, and the thorny women's issues are thought-provoking and timely. The result is good, entertaining brain food.
My only regret is that I read this volume before the first one in the series, The Vanished Child. Although I plan to go back and read it now, I fear Knowledge of Water gives away too many of the surprises from the first novel.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: It is not what I expected
Review: I just finished Sarah Smith's The Knowledge of Water. Absolutely incredible, with passages at the end that are worth reading, and reading again, and then stopping to savor. It's a book about passion, and in particular the passion for one's art, one's calling, and how people honor that passion in the context of a whole life -- not "fit it in," because passion cannot be accommodated, does not fit comfortably around the edges -- and it's about how expectations twist people's lives. And it's about women, their expectations for themselves, men's expectations, about the choices they make, about what it does to a person to give up her truth in order to do the laundry and buy the groceries and raise the children.

There are no bad guys in this book. There is a pianist who loves a man, but who for days leading up to her first public performance forgets to write to him. There is a doctor who gets caught up in saving his hospital and forgets that he has left his bride-to-be in a cheap hotel. There is, yes, a wedding that comes off in a paragraph, because the story is not about weddings but about marriage, of which the wedding is only an incidental part. There are discussions of love and risk and art and truth and forgery. I think -- although I won't know for years -- that this book will bear reading and re-reading, and may be one of the ten books that I would take to a desert island.

I was reading this book in Penn Station, waiting for a train, and had to sit down on the floor because I was so far into the book that I was beginning to lose track of where I was.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: It is not what I expected
Review: I was very disappointed with the Knowledge of Water. There are too many unnecessary characters, too many story lines that do not seem to come together at the end. Even main characters were not well developed. The story is too factual. Do read the Vanished Child! It is wonderful! Don't bother with the Knowledge of Water.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another good book!
Review: The Knowledge of Water is a fine book. I think the difficulty readers of The Vanished Child have when they compare the two is that The Vanished Child is truly an exceptional. The Knowledge of Water is a less comfortable book and the subplots more complex. While the first in the series deals with in large part with the first heady stages of following in love, this book is about remaining in love. Now which is more challenging and less comfortable? I had a good time reading this. I found salon scene and women of Paris an interesting backdrop. I was impressed by the research author put into the book. I really felt for Peridita's plight as she tried to reconcile her need to be an artist and to have love. She is such a cool and believable character. The tension of the murder and the bedeviled soul stalking Alexander and Perdita kept the story going at a good pace. I can't wait to read the last book in the series.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A book so well written it's chilling
Review: This book is so intricate it is chilling how well it is written. I won't reveal the plot, except to say that it is a continuation of THE VANISHED CHILD. also not to be missed is the 3rd book, A CITIZEN OF THE COUNTRY.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It was a fairly good book
Review: This book wouldn't make a lot of sense, and would be confusing, mostly, to anyone who reads it before reading the first book, The Vanished Child. If someone reads that book first, many of what might have been confusing would make sense. Thank Goodness I read the Vanished Child first


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