The book title is taken from an old British folk song which the heroine, Fidelis, sings. This song is also quoted in another book with the same title, the 1972 bestseller by Pat Conroy, author of The Prince of Tides.
When we first meet Fidelis, she’s a nineteen-year-old
house-maid whose eye-catching looks resemble those of a Burne-Jones
pre-Raphaelite model. She’s on the
dockside, waiting to welcome Jack, her father, home. Jack is a no-nonsense Royal Marine drill
sergeant.
Lives can hinge on the slightest thing and Fidelis’s fate is
irrevocably altered when her hat is blown into the harbour and retrieved on the
orders of handsome Lieutenant Daniel Herrick, the son of a colonel. They are both smitten and even though they
come from different social backgrounds, they fall in love.
Unfortunately, Daniel’s father would never countenance his
son marrying ‘beneath’ him and Fidelis has already become engaged to her
childhood friend Harry, who is still serving in India
and won’t be returning to marry her for at least another year.
Harry’s parents are Fidelis’s neighbours and her family’s
best friends. Her father’s sister,
Shamrock, is a stage entertainer with a heart of gold. Fidelis’s employers, Phoebe and James Allen,
were having a difficult time, it seems.
Money problems. James was a
gambler and a spendthrift, yet Phoebe was besotted with him. Until they had to flee from creditors,
leaving Fidelis without work. Phoebe had
some growing up to do and Fidelis would influence her.
We follow the lives of Fidelis, Daniel, Harry, Jack,
Shamrock and Phoebe through love, pain, aching honesty and self-serving deceit. Several resolutions are brought about by
strong-willed plucky women.
What shines through is the author’s care for her characters
– even the subsidiary ones - and Julia Bryant is deeply concerned about what
happens to them. The people in this book
live thanks to excellent dialogue and splendid description. Mood and feeling are conveyed beautifully.
While heart-warming and moving in parts, this isn’t a story
of happy families. Far from it. Clearly, it’s steeped in the real world of
the time – or any time, come to that, since the human problems depicted are
universal from time immemorial.
Stories like this tend to highlight the human condition,
which is in reality characterised by suffering, war, oppression, poverty, vain
striving and disappointment. You find
that the desire to do good and evil are in eternal protracted conflict. Pride and egoism are often shown to be
self-destructive, while selfish desire and craving tend to blind you to the
feelings of others. And, as in the real
world, obstacles have to be surmounted and the simple heroism of every-day life
demands that you pick yourself up and move on.
And that’s what Julia Bryant’s characters do. Excellent stuff. The Water is Wide won’t disappoint.
All her books are available as e-books. She has just
completed her seventh book. Her website is http://www.juliabryant-online.com/julia-bryant-online---my-books.html
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