Available Formats
The Water Garden
By (Author) Louise Soraya Black
Muswell Press
Muswell Press
1st November 2022
14th July 2022
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Winner of Virginia Prize 2018
Paperback
324
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
The novel looks at the challenges of balancing a womans loyalty towards, and love for, her family, with her loyalty to herself. It considers motherhood in a unique way, exploring it in extreme circumstances: there are few stories about relationships between wives/mothers and teenage boys. The story is sometimes uncomfortable to read - and is meant to be, challenging social norms and expectations. Sarah has given up her career and moved to the countryside to bring up her two young children, while her husband works long hours in London. Alone, she explores the fields and the woods near her home and discovers a lake, a memorial bench for a boy who drowned in mysterious circumstances, and Finn, a beautiful troubled teenager who plays truant from school. As Sarah pieces the mystery together, an uncomfortable attraction between her and Finn builds. She knows that this blossoming relationship is wrong but the chemistry between them is difficult to resist. Their relationship reaches a climax over one hot summer, threatening to destroy everything that she holds dear. Woven into Sarahs story are the voices of two other women connected to her family - Maggie, the RAF nurse and Flavia, the Italian girl. As their stories unfold, a secret is revealed, binding Sarah and Finn in a way that they would never guess.
'Beautifully written and very English in its landscape-love, family-love and garden-love' Fay Weldon. 'I was struck by the remarkably evocative atmosphere... intense yearning and guilty longings infused with a multi-layered past, that makes for a deeply seductive read' Ella Berthoud. 'Creating subtle drama and menace, sensuality and enchantment out of the ordinary... wonderful writing'. Patricia Wastvedt
Louise Soraya Black was born in England in 1977, to an English mother and Iranian father, and spent her childhood in Africa, Bangladesh, Iran and Indonesia due to her fathers work with UNICEF. She has a First Class Honours Degree in Law from University College London and practised law in the City for seven years. Her debut novel, Pomegranate Sky, won the inaugural Virginia Prize in 2009, and was reviewed in The Guardian and The Times. She is married, with two children, and lives in Surrey UK