The Water and the Blood: A Novel
The Water and the Blood: A Novel book cover

The Water and the Blood: A Novel

Paperback – October 1, 2002

Price
$11.89
Format
Paperback
Pages
416
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0060989026
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.95 x 8 inches
Weight
11.8 ounces

Description

"An amazingly drawn portrait of small-town souls." — Forth Worth Star-Telegram “Turner mesmerizes once again. . . . This beautifully written portrait of Southern religious repression and racism is a winner.” — Publishers Weekly “Hits at the heart of prejudice in a small, southern milltown.” — Booklist “Says more about America than Gone With the Wind …I’d put it up there with To Kill a Mockingbird. It is moving, funny, and rings very true.” — Mary Stewart Nancy E. Turner's first novel, These Is My Words , was the winner of the Arizona Author Award, and a finalist for the 1999 Willa Gather Award. Turner lives in Tucson, Arizona, with her family. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Water and the Blood By Turner, Nancy E. ReganBooks Copyright © 2004 Nancy TurnerAll right reserved. ISBN: 0060989025 Chapter One We set fire to the Nigra church after the junior-senior Halloween costume party. Marty Haliburton brought the gasoline. Coby Brueller brought his cigarettes and a couple boxes of matches. The Bandy twins came with two pint jars of shinney each pulling down the side pockets of their overalls, and we'd all had several tastes by the time we did it. Those four boys were the root of all evil in our town for most of their lives. But the rest of us were there, too, just as much a part as the boys who spread the gas and fanned the flames. My friends represented a few fairly nice girls and about the sorriest collection of humans caught in the throes of pre-manhood ever scraped together. Maggy, Neomadel, and Garnelle made a little half circle with me in the middle. I guess there's something odd or poetic about me, a girl named Frosty, being in the middle of something burning on a hot October night in East Texas. That bunch of boys and girls would make up about a third of the graduating class of 1942 from Big Thicket High School, but in the fall of 1941 that event still seemed a lifetime away. Neomadel dared me to taste the moonshine, and all the kids giggled as I took the jar. It looked just like water. I put it to my lips and just touched it with the tip of my tongue. Garnelle snickered into her hand. "Coby, don't be pushing that on her," she said. Coby looked back at her and shrugged. "Nobody's making her drink it, are they? Give it back or drink up, Frosty." He held out his open hand toward me. They were all watching closely. "Come on," Beans Bandy said. "Gimme a swig." "I'm not drinking after you," I said. "Just give me a second. I'll take a drink." "She won't either, " Neomadel said. "I knew she wouldn't do it." "Nobody has to if they don't want to," Maggy said. I guess I wasn't in the mood to be swept aside like that. I guess I had something in my craw that a good swig of liquid might wash away. I opened my mouth and gulped. The fire surged to a pit somewhere below my navel and boiled out the top, as if steam shot from my ears. My eyes watered; my nose stung; my throat closed like a large hand had reached around my neck and squeezed. From somewhere in the back of my head a little voice said, "She isn't breathing. Slap her on the back, get her to breathe." Black sky and grass and stars and dirt rolled around in my eyes, and my face was pressed flat somewhere wet and dark and froggy-smelling. "Sit her up," the voice said again. Voices swirling in the darkness argued for a second, then I coughed so loud and long I thought my lungs would burst. All I could think of was Garnelle's daddy coming home from the war gas and coughing his lungs out and barely breathing and what if I have to have an iron lung and live in a tube forever? After a few minutes the coughing subsided. I held my elbows tight to my ribs, and I could see the kids circling me. "Lookit," Marty said, "We came to do something, and we're gonna do it. You all can horse around later. Pass me that shine." He took a drink, smacking his lips with a satisfied sigh. "Sissies and babies shouldn't be drinking a man's drink anyway." Coby said, "You girls just take a little sip first, till you get the hang of it. Y'all doing all right, Frosty?" "I'm fine," I croaked. "Your turn, Neomadel." We passed that jar around the circle, and then we passed it again. I began to feel better than I had all day. It was Marty's idea that we come here tonight. The Bandy boys always had their hands on shinney, so that part probably wasn't planned. Marty had a rusty yellow can full of at least three weeks' worth of gasoline, and he was circling the little shack like he had a special purpose on earth, sizing up the place, checking for anybody hiding out that might tell on us. Satisfied, he returned to our cluster and said in a whisper, "Let's do it." Then he held out his hand to Coby. "Gimme them cigarettes, Cobe." Coby said, "Nothing doing. You pour the gas, someone else lights. Otherwise you're liable to set yourself up, too." Coby upended the first jar of shine and finished it off, smacking his lips and belching to punctuate the act. Farrell Bandy had already started on a second one. Beans had a whole one to himself. The boys circled the little church, marching, pouring gas in arcs against the sides so the liquid left slick black hooks painted on the walls. The girls and I stepped back, watching intently as they walked round the building a second time, drizzling the gasoline into the damp ground. I took another step into the shadows cast by long pines under the watered-down moonlight. I knew there could be nothing hiding in the darkness any meaner than I was. The scratch-puff of matches being struck made me keen in the direction of the sound. Abruptly there was a hustling noise, jostling, elbowing, and out of the darkness the boys ran, headed toward us. We waited. Nothing happened. After all the gas was gone and most of the matches, there was still only a meager flicker of flame on one side. It had rained just yesterday. The wood was soaked. "Let's go home," Coby said. "This is no good anyhow. There's enough there to show 'em we meant business. It don't have to really burn..." Continues... Excerpted from The Water and the Blood by Turner, Nancy E. Copyright © 2004 by Nancy Turner. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • I turned and faced the road we'd come down, my face hard and set. The kids moved on without me. I could still see a slight glow and the murky, gray smoke reaching above the trees, where it spread to the south. . . .
  • When I thought they were out of earshot, I took a deep breath. "You lied to me," I whispered toward the building, to all the people it represented, to the hours I'd spent on those hard, split-log seats, and to my childish epiphanies born there . . . . "You lied," I said. "These are my best friends now."
  • Rare is the gift of a writer who is able to conjure up the voices of very different worlds, to give them heat and power and make them sing. Such is the talent of Nancy E. Turner. Her beloved first novel,
  • These Is My Words
  • , opened readers to the challenges of a woman's life in the nineteenth-century Southwest. Now this extraordinary writer shifts her gaze to a very different world - East Texas in the years of the Second World War - and to the life of a young woman named Philadelphia Summers, known against her will as Frosty.
  • From the novel's harrowing opening scene, Frosty's eyes survey the landscape around her - white rural America - with the awestruck clarity of an innocent burned by sin. In her mother and sisters she sees fear and small-mindedness; in the eyes of local boys she sees racial hatred and hunger for war. When that war finally comes, it offers her a chance for escape -to California, and the caring arms of Gordon Benally a Native-American soldier. But when she returns to Texas she must face the rejection of a town still gripped by suspicion - and confront the memory of the crime that has marked her soul since adolescence.
  • Propelled by the quiet power of one woman's voice,
  • The Water and the Blood
  • is a moving and unforgettable portrait of an America of haunted women and dangerous fools - an America at once long perished and with us still.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(251)
★★★★
25%
(209)
★★★
15%
(126)
★★
7%
(59)
23%
(192)

Most Helpful Reviews

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An excellent work by Turner

Once you get past the mixed POV (the main character's story is told in the first person, and other characters are brought in by the omnipotent point of view), this book is a very enjoyable read.
The story is of Philadelphia (Frosty) Summers, going from childhood to young adulthood during the time of World War II. She struggles to break from her family's stronghold and the ties that bind her to Sabine, Texas, her small, prejudice-laden hometown. Through her experiences, she learns independence and compassion - something she can only do by cutting the apron strings that bind her to Sabine.
This is a much different story than my all-time favorite "These Is My Words" but only slightly less compelling. I strongly recommend it to anyone who enjoys historical fiction. I have become a huge fan of Nancy E. Turner and can't wait to read whatever she comes up with next!
34 people found this helpful
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Good Water, Bad Blood.

I found this book hard to follow in the beginning. I couldn't get past the first few chapters for the longest time. There were too many characters thrown at you way too fast. And way too many situations presented all at once. I found myself flipping back to the beginning chapters to understand a later character/chapter better. The author uses a lot of flash backs so you never fully know if you are in a memory or in the present story. The story has potential and is interesting enough to read once.

I loved Nancy E. Turners other books and These Is My Words is my favorite. But this one just didn't flow as smoothly as her other books. Her other books are written in a diary format. I like her way of writing diaries and this book should have been written as a diary as well. It still feels like a diary but there are absolutely no dates to follow. So you never know what time or year you are in.

If you can get past the first half of the book the story seems to go pretty fast. The characters are thrown at you fast and without any history to them at all until much later in the story. The mother is abusive but there is no revelation as to why. The author hints at mental illness but does not go into any detail as to why she would be this way. Many times you wonder if it is not her real mom and the author does nothing to correct your thinking until the very end.

Frosty marries a Native American and introduces him to her extremely prejudiced family and town. Knowing her family and her town, Frosty never thinks it is odd that her husband is invited to go "hunting" and doesn't return? She goes about her life the next day. Still no sign of her husband. She goes to church, still no sign of her husband. She never asks, or searches or wonders. When the church that her husband did electrical work on goes up in flames, she does not worry about her husband or go frantically searching for him. She just goes down to the church to check it out. Very odd. The character is very frustrating. At the end of the book she and her husband just up and leave. They make a stop out in the middle of nowhere where they both seem to contemplate suicide over a cliff. Then the book just abruptly ends. No epilogue, no wrap up. Just ends. Obviously leaving it open for the author to write another book. If she does, I hope it is entirely in diary format!

Two problems I found with this book:

The story takes place in 1941 & 1942. One third of the way through the book the author mentions "...a famous missionary like Corrie ten Boom..". Would the character even know that Corrie ten Boom was famous yet? The ten Booms helped hide jews during 1943 & 1944. They were captured in 1944. It wasn't until after the war that we even knew of the Ten Boom family and the help that they offered. Corrie became a missionary after 1944. Corrie ten Boom would not become famous until after the war. So how would the character in The Water & the Blood even know about her?

Page 344 is a complete mess! Apparently the editor fell asleep or couldn't make it to the end and approved the rough draft without finishing the book. A paragraph ends at the top of the page, and it sounds fine. But then you get to the next paragraph and the same sentence that appeared in the previous paragraph is now here. And it is now mixed with new ideas and new sentences. While the new paragraph works, it makes you question which ending of the previous paragraph you would have liked better. And now you wonder how you would have liked to read this new paragraph. Which paragraph should the sentence be in? Very odd and disappointing.
31 people found this helpful
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Be carefull of those that profess to speak for the Lord

I was enchanted by Nancy Turner's novel_These is my Words_; in fact, it was my personal book of the year.
Nancy Turner delivered a fresh novel, heavily burdened with baptist theology and ironic interpretations that were predominate in the pre-world war II days and post WWII.
Enter "Frosty" Summers, whose real name is Philadelphia. The contrast of names is not lost on the reader.
Born into one of the most dysfuntional families in East Texas, Frosty grows up amidst bigots and heavy bible thumping people who choose to preach but not obey.
Frosty is a sensitive soul, with an independence that becomes her savior. From the start of the novel, she is unknowingly weaved into a web of planned criminal behavior which feasts on the ugly issues ingrained in the history of whites vs. blacks. Frosty is not the typical child, reared back at this time to segregate herself and her life from the "dark" skins. Her life is constantly reinforced to follow programmed steps, and above all else, to never associate herself with those not like herself.
It is so obvious in this lovely, historic novel, that the most senstive, importantly holy people are those with "dark skin". The absolutely pure and christian beliefs that impart baptist theology are never more ironic than in this novel. The ugly reality of life of blacks were beyond the tolerance of any mortal soul. What makes their journey significant, is that the black people had to indure the disgusting offenses committed upon them by some of the most ignorant persons in the world, and holding the bible before them in complete security that their interpretation is that of the word of God.
Oh, how far from the teachings of the Lord can one ever be.
13 people found this helpful
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Well worth a second reading

I read it in such a rush that I feel obligated to read it again so I can savor what a great job of storytelling this is. Turner's description of life in that insular Texas town in the months leading up to Pearl Harbor is so vivid that it makes me feel I should drop to my knees and thank my mother for not deciding to live in that area with people with such constipated mindsets. I've met enough people like this that her characterizations seem what the Brits call "spot on." I don't recall very many books that focus on what the women were doing to help the war effort so this was enlightening. There were a lot of Rosie the Riveters out there.
6 people found this helpful
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It was a struggle

After reading Turner's trilogy about the Arizona frontier (These is My Words, etc.) I found the first three quarters of this book hugely disappointing. It is extremely disjointed, jumping from scene to scene, switching points of view, and moving from present narrative to flashback with little logic. One minute the family is so poor they live in a boxcar, the next minute the oldest daughter is buying a car, with seemingly very little increase in income. The supposedly rigid Southern Baptist family allows their teen-age daughter to drive across the country by herself, staying overnight with random strangers along the way. Really? In 1942? The author overdevelops some characters and relationships, Delia/Frosty for example, while leaving others underdeveloped (the father and Opalrae). However, the last quarter of the book somehow succeeds in spite of the messy beginning. Turner does manage to show how a young woman badly damaged by an incredibly dysfunctional family can learn to trust herself.
5 people found this helpful
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A challenging and worthy read!

The Water and Blood is a powerful novel of that challenges us to examine our own family's false perceptions of race and cultures. The story is an accurate inside journey through the bigotry of our country and how difficult life becomes when one faces this evil but how strong love is when we focus our hearts and minds on truth instead of lies. This is a tragic story that offers hope.
4 people found this helpful
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Extraordinary!

I usually read in the evening to help me fall asleep. I actually lost sleep over this one. The characters were so real they followed me into the next day's mood. The 'loved it' or 'hated it' reviews were telling. Turner let us get to know the characters without having to load us up with description and history. Those who need all sweetness and light and require everything spelled out for them will not like this book, nor will southern Bap-Diss. I will be reading her other works soon.
3 people found this helpful
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Small Town Bigotry Revealed

Nancy Turner delivers again in this fascinating study of small-minded people living in a small town during a period in US history when the country was doing big-minded things (fighting fascism) on a big stage (the globe). The hypocrisy of fighting racism so effectively abroad while Native Americans and African Americans suffered from it profusely at home is painful to witness, but the fundamental decency of the heroine reminds us that one person doing right can change the lives of many.
2 people found this helpful
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Strong Southern themes

This book is certainly different from Turner's tales of Sarah and her quilts! As a daughter of the South, I feel Turner's characterizations of hypocrisy and racism in this Southern gothic tale hit the mark, and she does a good job of building a sense of intrigue as the hunt builds for the church-burners. I recommend this one and passed it on to my reading friends in a departure from the types of stories I generally pass on. This leaves me wondering if I ever got it back....
2 people found this helpful
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Big fat fascinating juicy read

Arrived promptly, nice quality trade paperback. Fascinating read set in WWII East Texas and southern California. Note to author and sloppy editing staff at Harper Collins: Carmel and San Diego are a LONG way apart - not an easy daily commute. Otherwise a terrific read.
1 people found this helpful