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The Waters & the Wild

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Haunted by a past crime and a past lover, a psychoanalyst tries to protect his daughter from his mistakes—but at what cost?

“This dazzling gothic-tinged thriller takes us deep into a labyrinth of secrets, lies, and deceptions.”—Dan Chaon, New York Times bestselling author of Ill Will
 
Daniel Abend is a single parent in New York City, with a successful therapy practice and a comfortable life: an apartment on the Upper West Side, a teenage daughter, a peaceful daily routine. When one of his patients commits suicide, it is a tragedy, but one easily explained: The young woman suffered from depression and drug addiction.
But soon after, Daniel receives an ominous note that makes him question the circumstances surrounding his patient’s death. He is provided with a provocative series of clues—a mysterious key, a cryptic poem, a photograph with a chilling message. A few days later, his daughter abruptly disappears.
Daniel is swept into an increasingly desperate search for his daughter, and for the truth—a search that stretches back decades, to when he was a young man living in Paris, falling in love with a woman who would ultimately upend his life. As he is tormented by a steady flow of anonymous letters, Daniel recognizes that he must confront the secrets of his past: There is a debt to be paid, an account to be settled.
Advance praise for The Waters & The Wild
“Elegant, elegiac, enigmatic: three words to describe The Waters & The Wild. DeSales Harrison crafts a series of intricate psychological layers that blur the lines between what is past and present, real and unreal. This is a compelling debut that is equal parts character study and literary labyrinth.”—Matthew Pearl, New York Times bestselling author of The Dante Club and The Last Bookaneer 
“A cryptic, beguiling puzzle-box of a book, The Waters & The Wild is chilling in its acuity and deep in its sorrows—a mesmeric exploration of guilt in the vein of Vertigo or The Secret History, with the frantic nightmare-logic of a thriller.”—David Gilbert, author of & Sons
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 29, 2018
      When artist Jessica Burke dies of an apparent overdose in her New York City apartment, her psychoanalyst, Daniel Abend, the protagonist of Oberlin professor Harrison’s poignant but ponderous debut, is shocked; he thought she’d turned her life around. Daniel manages to push the matter from his mind—until three years later, when he receives an anonymous package containing proof that Jessica was murdered. He destroys the evidence to avoid becoming involved, but then his 18-year-old daughter, Clementine, goes missing. His mailbox fills with menacing messages suggesting that the sender not only knows Clementine’s whereabouts but also possesses information about Daniel’s past indiscretions and the death of Clementine’s mother. Daniel knows that he must atone for his sins, but how far will he go in order to save his child? After a strong start, the story loses steam. Although the central mystery intrigues, its convoluted denouement frustrates, and Harrison’s fondness for florid prose and philosophical asides slows the pace while obscuring the plot. Agent: Bill Clegg, Clegg Agency.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2018

      Daniel Abend, a psychoanalyst and single father living in New York City, pens a confession to a priest he barely knows about an affair years earlier with a woman in Paris, the mother, we are led to believe, of his teenage daughter Clementine. Multiple suicides have begun to trouble the doctor, fears that increase when Clementine, who has begun to ferret out the truth of her past, disappears just as an unknown nemesis threatens vengeance against the family. When enigmatic photos and letters arrive in the mail, Daniel is led via a series of disturbing revelations to an unimaginable conclusion. VERDICT Harrison's debut is more lyrical effusion than taut psychological thriller--poetical self-analysis marked by verbal repetition, endless questions, lengthy rumination, and similes that are sometimes far-fetched ("The road had sought me out, I thought, like a penetrator cable hoisting a downed pilot up through jungle canopy."). Still, patient readers who favor literary mysteries, along the lines of Carol Goodman's The Lake of Dead Languages, will enjoy the effusive language and the plot's tightening web. [See Prepub Alert, 10/16/17.]--Ron Terpening, formerly of Univ. of Arizona, Tucson

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2018
      As elegiac and plaintive as if came from the quill of Edgar Allan Poe himself, Harrison's novel is carefully constructed around Poe's favorite theme, the death of a beautiful woman. Daniel Abend is a successful Upper West Side psychoanalyst and the perplexed single parent of a teenager daughter. His life begins to unravel when he receives disturbing clues in the mail implying that one of his patients, believed to have committed suicide, may have been murdered. Then, when his daughter disappears a few days later, he is forced to confront the tangled mess he made as a young man living in Paris?a mess that left debts to be paid and accounts to be settled, perhaps with his own life, or even his daughter's. There is a striking psychological intensity to Harrison's fiction debut, which unfolds in the form of a written confession to a priest in which repetitive lines from a Yeats poem, The Stolen Child, help generate the story's ominous tone. Despite a twenty-first-century setting, this will satisfy fans of historical-fiction authors Louis Bayard and Matthew Pearl.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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