Stiltsville: A Novel
Stiltsville: A Novel book cover

Stiltsville: A Novel

Price
$10.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
Harper
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0061963070
Dimensions
6 x 1.05 x 9 inches
Weight
1.05 pounds

Description

Amazon Best Books of the Month, August 2010 : It may be a sign of the times that many stories about marriage unfold on a stage of high emotional drama, where the sparks stop flying and start sparring, for better or worse. There may be catharsis in those kinds of stories, but there's often little joy, which is what makes this quiet and tender debut so disarmingly good. Stiltsville is a story of a marriage that begins with serendipity--that holiest of relationship grails--one warm summer day in Miami. It's 1969 when girl (Frances, the novel's clear-eyed, guileless narrator) meets boy (Dennis, who in Frances's estimation is "careless but lucky") at one of a copse of houses built on stilts in Miami's Biscayne Bay. That such a place existed is incredible now, and in the scenes that reconstruct its peculiar beauty, Susanna Daniel ushers you into an exotic and unpredictable corner of the country. It's a perfect place to fall in love, and Frances and Dennis do, without fanfare or pretense. Theirs is a love that almost instantly becomes constant and real, full of simple happiness that makes it possible to weather the storms that come. -- Anne Bartholomew Curtis Sittenfeld Interviews Susanna Daniel Curtis Sittenfeld , author of Prep , The Man of My Dreams , and American Wife , and Susanna Daniel , author of the debut novel Stiltsville , met at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Here they talk about friendship and its role in—and beyond—novels. Curtis Sittenfeld : One of the many things I love about Stiltsville is that it starts with the main character, Frances, making a new friend, Marse, and then pretty much immediately falling for the guy Marse likes. Yet these two women become very close, even though only one of them can get the guy. Were you consciously defying stereotypes about female friendship, or did this just feel like the organic way to depict these characters? Susanna Daniel : There's a lot of bad press out there regarding female friendships, which are so much more nuanced than stereotypes would have us believe. When Frances meets Dennis, her friendship with Marse is just beginning, but already they both know there's potential. Neither woman wants to throw that away. There's a moment when Frances tells Marse that it's not like her to flirt with -- not to mention steal -- another woman's guy, and their future pretty much hinges on Marse believing her. Which she does. To grant your friend permission to pursue what might turn out to be the love of her life -- that's a sign of trust and humility, which Marse is strong enough to give. CS : So much of Stiltsville is about Frances' marriage to Dennis. I'm wondering how you think getting married and having children -- or not getting married and not having children when the people around you are -- changes the nature of women's friendships. SD : I think there's a lot of truth to the idiom that it takes a village -- not only to raise a child, but to support a marriage. Because their lives take such different paths, Frances and Marse must make exceptions for each other that they might not make for other friends. Their differences might have divided them, but instead, Marse becomes a member of Frances' family in a way that a married friend could never be. Late in the book, Frances says that Marse had been almost like a second wife to Dennis in some ways, over the years. But she loves and trusts Marse like a sister, and when Marse's life changes unexpectedly, Frances must look outside her own troubles to support her friend the way she's been supported for so long. CS : Two of Frances' best friends are her daughter, Margo, and her sister-in-law, Bette. What are the particular pleasures and complications of friendships with family members? SD : Bette, Dennis's sister, is one of the most complicated characters of the book. In order to forge a friendship early on, Frances must become a confidante of Bette's, which isn't an easy thing to do. Unlike Marse, who remains in Frances' daily life until the end, Bette has to choose between family and love partway through the book -- and the choice she makes breaks Frances' heart. But later, Frances has to make a similar choice with regards to Margo. Moving away from family, in Stiltsville , is not a choice made lightly or without a lot of heartache, but sometimes it's the only way for a character to grow. CS : You and I met in 1999, on our first day as graduate students at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, when we were the only two women in a class of eight. One of the most frequent questions I get about having attended the Workshop is whether it's competitive and back-stabbing. How do you answer this question? SD : The program is definitely competitive in nature, though not back-stabbing. Writing isn't a team sport -- ultimately it's all about you and what you produce. No one can undermine you if you're focused and ambitious. That said, workshopping material is not for the faint of heart -- not because people are back-stabbing but because they are bright, experienced readers, and devastatingly honest. At the same time, I'm grateful for the Workshop for many reasons, not the least of which is that it's where I met the woman who continues to be my great reader, advocate, and friend: you. CS : You're the friend I've learned the most from because you're so smart and opinionated, and you also see the world in a really different way than I do. But now that we're publicly exposing our friendship, do you think it will go the way of Gwyneth and Winona's? Also, in this scenario, which of us will end up shoplifting from Saks and which of us will dispense frittata recipes on a lifestyle website? SD : I think I'm the boring domestic of the two of us, so it might be me with the web site (I think you probably disagree with this assessment). But then again, you're staunchly ethical, so I can't see you going the way of Winona. I think a better model for our friendship, which I'm proud to publish, is that of Ann Patchett and Elizabeth McCracken, two writers who for decades have read for each other and supported each other while living in different cities. What I hope is that we continue to enjoy the differences between us -- as writers, mothers, wives, friends -- and never let them distance us. When we met, we hadn't yet made the decisions that would root our lives, as we have now. I look forward to a future when maybe we don't live so far apart, and maybe our kids play independently together while we kick back and read magazines and talk about what Winona and Gwyneth are up to these days. Because who even remembers that they were friends once, except the two of us? From Publishers Weekly With its lush flora and constant sun, South Florida is the true star of Daniel's exquisite debut, which follows a marriage over the course of 30 years. In 1969, having traveled from Atlanta to Miami for a college friend's wedding, 26-year-old Frances Ellerby meets glamorous Miami native Marse Heiger, who introduces her to Dennis DuVals and his house on stilts in Biscayne Bay. Though Marse has set her cap for Dennis, he and Frances fall in love and marry within a year. "I had no idea then," Frances says, "what would happen to my love, what nourishment it would receive, how mighty it would grow." Dennis and Frances have a daughter, Margo, buy a house in Coral Gables, and their life together proceeds as a series of ups and downs, beautifully told from Frances's pensive, sharp perspective. As the years pass and Miami changes, so do Frances, Dennis, and Margo, and the nuances of their relationships shift and realign, drawing inexorably toward a moving resolution. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Frances Ellerby travels from Georgia to Miami for a wedding and meets the two people who will change her life. One is the glamorous, sexy Marse, a native of Miami, who introduces her to the two great loves of her life: her husband, Dennis, and the sun-drenched landscape of Biscayne Bay. The author’s organization of the story into seven sections, each of which recounts a seminal year in Miami history and Frances’ life, is a surprisingly successful technique for creating suspense in a book characterized by lushly descriptive and complex writing. The first-person narration provides a vivid look at the characters important to Frances as she becomes a deeply involved wife, mother, and friend. Perhaps the most important character in the story is the city of Miami, which always looms large in Frances’ consciousness until the bittersweet ending of her story—an ending that could have been melodramatic and maudlin but is written with great delicacy and discretion. This promising first novel will appeal to readers of family stories, literary fiction, and southern writing. --Ellen Loughran “I fell in love with Susanna Daniel’s characters, Dennis and Frances. The dialogue, the pacing, and the tenderness between this married couple is so authentic and true. But it’s the setting of Florida, and especially the place that is Stiltsville, that literally elevates this story to magic.” — Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief “This soulful novel will inspire you to reflect on your own definitions of house, home, and what really makes a couple close.” — Redbook “Both structurally and in tone, the book recalls linked short-story collections such as Alice Munro’s The Beggar Maid , following one character chronologically through a long period. Each piece can stand alone, but the whole is enriched when they are read together. . . . Lovely.” — Laura C.J. Owen, Minneapolis Star Tribune “A quietly remarkable novel. . . . Reminiscent of Marilynn Robinson’s Home .” — Scott Eyman, Palm Beach Post “With its lush flora and constant sun, South Florida is the true star of Daniel’s exquisite debut, which follows a marriage over the course of 30 years. . . . Beautifully told from Frances’s pensive, sharp perspective. . . . Drawing inexorably toward a moving resolution.” — Publishers Weekly “A deeply engrossing tale of love, family, friendship, and motherhood, Stiltsville is both an elegantly crafted work of art and a great read. The love story effortlessly spans decades, and the characters are as real and vivid as the novel’s South Florida backdrop. Susanna Daniel is an extraordinary writer.” — Curtis Sittenfeld, author of Prep and American Wife “Set against the wild and changeable landscape of South Florida, Stiltsville is a wise and loving portrait of a marriage, written with keen insight into the ways two lives grow together over the years. This is a rare first novel. Susanna Daniel writes beautifully of matters of the heart.” — Jennifer Haigh, author of The Condition, Baker Towers, and Mrs. Kimble “In this wise and luminous novel, Susanna Daniel does something truly rare: she creates characters so real that you feel they’ve entered the very room where you sit reading. Before you know it, they’ve also entered your heart, and are breaking it…. A work of tremendous maturity, empathy and humanity.” — Dani Shapiro, author of Devotion and Black and White “I fell in love in the opening pages of Stiltsville. There was nothing I wanted more than to spend time in the company of these vivid characters and keep reading Susanna Daniel’s lovely, lucid prose.” — Margot Livesey, author of The House on Fortune Street One sunny morning in 1969, near the end of her first trip to Miami, twenty-six-year-old Frances Ellerby finds herself in a place called Stiltsville, a community of houses built on pilings in the middle of Biscayne Bay. It's the first time the Atlanta native has been out on the open water, and she's captivated. On the dock of a stilt house, with the dazzling skyline in the distance and the unknowable ocean beneath her, she meets the house's owner, Dennis DuVal—and a new future reveals itself. Turning away from her quiet, predictable life back home, Frances moves to Miami to be with Dennis. Over time, she earns the confidence of his wild-at-heart sister and wins the approval of his oldest friend. Frances and Dennis marry and have a child—but rather than growing complacent about their good fortune, they continue to face the challenges of intimacy and the complicated city they call home. Stiltsville is the family's island oasis—until suddenly it's gone, and Frances is forced to figure out how to make her family work on dry land. Against a backdrop of lush tropical beauty, Frances and Dennis struggle with the mutability of love and Florida's weather, as well as temptation, chaos, and disappointment. But just when Frances thinks she's reached some semblance of higher ground, she must confront an obstacle so great that even the lessons she's learned about navigating the uncharted waters of family life can't keep them afloat. With Stiltsville , Susanna Daniel weaves the beauty, violence, and humanity of Miami's coming-of-age with an enduring story of a marriage's beginning, maturity, and heartbreaking demise. Susanna Daniel was born and raised in Miami, Florida. Her first novel, Stiltsville , was awarded the PEN/Bingham prize for debut fiction. She is a graduate of Columbia University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and lives in Madison, Wisconsin. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “A wise and loving portrait of a marriage….Susanna Daniel writes beautifully of matters of the heart.”— Jennifer Haigh, author of
  • The Condition
  • Against a vivid South Florida background, Susanna Daniel’s
  • Stiltsville
  • offers a gripping, bittersweet portrait of a marriage—and a romance—that deepens over the course of three decades. Called “an elegantly crafted work of art and a great read” by Curtis Sittenfeld (
  • American Wife, Prep
  • )
  • Stiltsville
  • is a stunningly assured debut novel sure to appeal to readers of Anita Shreve, Sue Miller, and Annie Dillard, or anyone enchanted by the sultry magic of Miami.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(153)
★★★★
25%
(128)
★★★
15%
(77)
★★
7%
(36)
23%
(117)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Neither Good Nor Bad...

mythoughts

Stiltsville is written as if it is a memoir but it is a work of fiction. I found myself neither able to put the book down nor eager to pick it up. I read Stiltsville over a couple of days but soon realized that as a story it was "middle of the road".

Some books are exciting and you eagerly wait to get to the end while other books put you to sleep and trying to go past chapter one may be a chore...Stiltsville was neither.

Susanna Daniel creates a somewhat interesting story of a young woman, Frances Ellerby, who is on the path of self-discovery. The book is narrated through the eyes and voice of Frances. While the storyline may be interesting...it clearly reminds me of a tale a grandmother would share with her children or grandchildren. I, personally, did not encounter the drama, temptation or chaos that was supposed to be part of this story line.

Those "exciting" elements were promising but elusive and unfulfilling in the storyline. They were often hinted and referred to but not developed or described in such detail that I would feel the emotion behind the situation. The lack of "fire" in the story left me rather cold about the central figures.

Imagine ordering a decadent, mouthwatering chocolate molten cake dessert and instead receiving vanilla ice cream with chocolate sauce. It's good but definitely not in the same league...so it is with Stiltsville.
44 people found this helpful
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Stunning portrait of a marriage

Susanna Daniel has a talent for taking the ordinary and transforming it into breathtakingly beautiful prose. Her description of a marriage is so honest and detailed that it will certainly resonate with many readers. I was entranced by the story and its characters, and could not put the book down. A perfect read for summer or for any time of year that you'd like to be transported to balmy Miami.
26 people found this helpful
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Stiltedville

I think the simplest way to sum this up is to say: If you liked "The Stone Diaries" you'll like this book. I thought "The Stone Diaries" was an exercise in tedium, so there you go.

The problem with this book is that the life of the narrator Frances is so ordinary that it's dull. I always say that if I want to read about an ordinary life I can read my journal. The reason most of us read books is that we want to read about lives that aren't ordinary, about people who have experiences that we ourselves don't have in our ordinary lives. Until a terminal illness is thrown in for the last third of the book, there's nothing that even remotely qualifies as anything extraordinary.

The more cynical reader of this review would sneer and say I want car chases and explosions and that. No. I would appreciate some kind of conflict and drama, though. Really, Frances goes through the first fifty years of her life without anyone dying. By the time I was half that I'd lost both grandfathers plus numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins. That's just symptomatic of the problem that really nothing of interest happens through the first 2/3 of the book.

Here's what happens: a woman named Frances goes from Atlanta to Miami with a friend and they go to this place called Stiltsville, which is a group of houses off the coast of Miami built on stilts. She meets a man named Dennis. They date, get married, and have a kid. There you go.

On rare occasions you can get away with telling an ordinary story. I point to "Breathing Lessons" by Anne Tyler as the gold standard for that. But to be successful, you have to really make the characters and their world come to life. You have to make the ordinary seem extraordinary. The mistake the author makes is writing this as a first-person story. Frances' narration is about as interesting as talking on the phone with my mom. Her voice is dull and that makes her life seem dull.

The terminal illness at the end almost redeems this, but it comes too late. Anyway, I'm a guy so I'm not really the target audience. I imagine women might find it a better read. Though why they want to read something that would only reinforce the dullness of their own lives is beyond me. (But hey, if I knew anything about women I'd be a lot further along.)

That is all.
16 people found this helpful
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Stiltsville

This is a story that pulls you into the lives of the characters. The beginning is nearly all narrative, but you learn to know the people in the story.

It's about an unexpected and unintentional love that brings a couple together and keeps them there through thick and thin. Their friends are lifelong, their daughter grows up and marries, and when needed, friends and family are there.

It's an engrossing story, and one that sticks in your mind.

It starts in Stiltsville, a collection of houses built on palings in Biscayne Bay, in Florida. The houses are mostly used for week-ends and vacations with swimming and diving and boating. (People live in Miami.) It ends in Miami.

You feel as though you really know these people and that you share their lives.

Great book.
14 people found this helpful
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Simple story poorly told

I was very disappointed by this book. I purchased it after reading the rave reviews and then after reading half the book, I checked back to make sure I had the right book. This one is simply poorly written and not very interesting. I would not recommend it.
6 people found this helpful
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Simple story poorly told

I was very disappointed by this book. I purchased it after reading the rave reviews and then after reading half the book, I checked back to make sure I had the right book. This one is simply poorly written and not very interesting. I would not recommend it.
6 people found this helpful
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A Truly Wonderful Book with Great Authenticity

Several months ago. the One Story that arrived that month was "Stiltsville" by Susanne Daniel. I loved it, a story set just after Andrew blew through Florida back in the early 90s. But I wasn't quite sure the author was totally accurate about that notorious hurricane. I thought it had never actually touched any of Miami. So I wrote a little note to the One Story folk and within hours had a response back--from the author. She explained in detail what indeed the eye had gone to where she said it did, that she had done her homework. I also know from the author information supplied by One Story that this short story had blossomed into a novel.
This is a wonderful novel. In fact I use the opening with my writing students at Miami Dade College's Wolfson campus which just happens to be next to the Freedom Tower, which just happens to now belong to MDC. The book opens in 1969 with just the most beautiful description of an approach to Miami from the water as the central character and her friend are making their way toward something that no longer exists--alas, alas--here in South Florida: a stilthouse although they do exist in the Keys. A stilthouse it just what the name suggests, a house built out from the shore on what looks to be stilts, not exactly the most stable housing in a hurricane zone!
The novel opens in 1969 and takes the reader through several decades of Frances' life. Maybe because I have lived for several years in South Florida--Key West and now Miami Beach--I found myself enjoying so much a novel written in an appreciative voice of the real beauty that exists, still exists, in so many places here.
I note that a few readers were disappointed with the novel, saying that the author spoiled their reading by telling too much about what would happen later on. I found myself liking that element because it then gave me more liberty to simply enjoy the beautiful--and it is beautiful--prose. But there are tensions. How would one react where one to watch a small plane glide in and drop what must be a bale of cocaine into the water near another stilthouse, one that seems not to be occupied? Would one call the Coast Guard? Go get it, hoping not to get caught?
The characters are so carefully drawn and so well defined. This is just a wonderful novel.
5 people found this helpful
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Unprovocative, winding, story about a woman with no ambition

Not for me. The book is written from the future, so you know what happens before it happens. Not a real quote but the idea is there "I met , who I would later marry." Where's the fun in that? I already know you'll marry this person, so why do I care to read another chapter about you meeting him? The book takes you from hello, through marriage, through children, through to the end in just over 300 pages - I'd rather have had a novel about a smaller section of time but had it been more fufuilling. I felt like I was reading a person's life's Cliff Notes. Overall not noteworthy, and I would not recommend this book to anyone.
5 people found this helpful
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A Fictional Memoir of Real Life

This fictional memoir begins moments before Atlanta-area native Frances Ellerby meets the man who would be her husband, Dennis DuVal. A few friends were gathered for an evening at a house surrounded by water off the coast of Miami in a real-life community called "Stiltsville," a place that has been handed down, partied through and enjoyed by generations of fortunate locals. Frances would not only fall in love with the view, but also the way of life and the kind, amusing man who shared it with her.

Those who haven't lived this far south might be surprised to know that the Miami area bears little resemblance to the programs "Miami Vice" or "Burn Notice." Lots of neon, great food and plenty of passion, true. But those programs are fun TV. It's great to have a reputation and all, but the real lives within real families generally contain much less drama or excitement than what we see through the media.

And so rather than paint with the broad, now stereotypical brush, first-time author Susanna Daniel renders the decades of Frances and Dennis' fictional lives just simply. She does it with such real texture that I was immersed in their world. No hand-wringing drama or bodice-ripping. Just the ups and downs of ordinary lives so richly presented that I couldn't stop reading.

I highly recommend the book, but admittedly was drawn to it because my husband is one of the "custodians" (formerly "owners") of a house in Stiltsville, which is now part of Biscayne National Park. It is a unique place that could easily disappear in the next big wind. It's here and soon it's gone. Such is life, beautifully presented.
5 people found this helpful
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Not a perfect book, but a pleasant, interesting read

Okay, I do have to complain about a little bait and switch, here. I was hoping (and led to believe by title, cover and synopsis) that this was a book about Stiltsville, the enclave of homes built on pilings in a Florida bay. And though it begins in this place, Stiltsville operates more as a metaphor than a location in this novel. By novel's end, Stiltsville is completely gone, but it ceases to matter much to the story long before it's physically removed. And I am a little disappointed over that.

Miami is beautifully evoked as Frances calmly narrates (very told, not so much shown) the story of her life; a life of marriage, one child, challenges and quiet joys. This is all quite deliberately paced and calm. When there is a huge historical event, (hurricanes and storms, the Gainesville student murders, riots) it's real, but somehow kept at a physical and emotional distance. It's over the phone, in the other neighborhood, after the fact. People in this book just go along and do their best and it's dignified, but there is no humor and so very little passion. The final struggle is a bit too elaborately detailed, but the entire book is full of bittersweet foreshadowing. It imbues the book with such a sad, mournful feeling. Even in the earliest parts, Frances is looking ahead with sadness...I felt as if I were reading a eulogy about a life instead of a record of a life.

Still, I enjoyed this novel as a portrait of time and place; as a view into middle class life on Miami's canals, the weather and water and vegetation, the brightly colored dresses and club memberships and constant physical activity (swimming, running, tennis, aerobics). No one in this book has much of a life of the mind, especially not the main character. It's comforting to see a group of people from their early twenties through their fifties, but it's not gripping, not bracing. This is not a transformative reading experience, just a diverting one.
4 people found this helpful