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The Well
Catherine Chanter
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Description for The Well
Paperback. 'I loved this book' JESSIE BURTON AN AUTUMN 2015 RICHARD AND JUDY BOOK CLUB READ LONGLISTED FOR THE 2015 CWA JOHN CREASEY (NEW BLOOD) DAGGER Num Pages: 400 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 131 x 197 x 34. Weight in Grams: 274.
A RICHARD AND JUDY BOOK CLUB READ AN OBSERVER NEW FACE OF FICTION 2015 A HUFFINGTON POST 'ONE TO WATCH IN 2015' LONGLISTED FOR THE CWA JOHN CREASEY (NEW BLOOD) DAGGER 2015 'I was gripped by Catherine Chanter's The Well immediately. The beauty of her prose is riveting, the imagery so assured. This is an astonishing debut' Sarah Winman, author of When God was a Rabbit 'I loved this book!' JESSIE BURTON, author of The Miniaturist When Ruth Ardingly and her family ... Read morefirst drive up from London in their grime-encrusted car and view The Well, they are enchanted by a jewel of a place, a farm that appears to offer everything the family are searching for. An opportunity for Ruth. An escape for Mark. A home for their grandson Lucien. But The Well's unique glory comes at a terrible price. The locals suspect foul play in its verdant fields and drooping fruit trees, and Ruth becomes increasingly isolated as she struggles to explain why her land flourishes whilst her neighbours' produce withers and dies. Fearful of envious locals and suspicious of those who seem to be offering help, Ruth is less and less sure who she can trust. As The Well envelops them, Ruth's paradise becomes a prison, Mark's dream a recurring nightmare, and Lucien's playground a grave. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Canongate Books Ltd
Place of Publication
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
About Catherine Chanter
Catherine Chanter was born and raised in the West Country. She has written for Radio Four and has had short stories and poetry published in a wide range of anthologies and publications. She won the Yeovil Poetry Prize in 2010. Catherine has a Masters, with distinction, in Creative Writing from Oxford Brookes University. The Well, her first novel, won the ... Read more2013 Lucy Cavendish Prize for Unpublished Fiction and was longlisted for the 2015 CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger. Show Less
Reviews for The Well
This story ripples with mystery and intrigue from the first page
Daily Mail
A markedly assured new voice . . . a novel of increasing psychological suspense . . . its story and narrative will put many readers under a deliciously shivery spell
Sunday Telegraph
A drought-ridden, riot-threatened ... Read morecountry; a sinister religious cult; a child's unsolved murder; and a culture of surveillance. Catherine Chanter's first novel has the ingredients of a dystopian nightmare, yet it's more . . . a literary page-turner
Independent
This accomplished debut is both a futuristic evocation of a Big Brother society and an Ibsenite fable of humans faced with limited resources
Observer
A haunting novel about ordinary people confronted by extraordinary situations
Elle
I loved this book!
JESSIE BURTON
author of THE MINIATURIST
There is undeniable power - both of ideas and execution - here. Fans of the once-upon-a-time, read on
Guardian
The Well has the pulse of a thriller combined with a futuristic evocation of a Big Brother society and an Ibsenite fable of humans faced with limited resources. It is so astoundingly assured that I wondered if A. S. Byatt had adopted a pseudonym
ALLISON PEARSON The Well is Ruth's narrative, a patchwork of memories too painful to forget and those too painful to remember. It is a curious mixture of a story being told, a personal history being recalled, and a reminder being related to a close friend, or even to oneself . . . How could you accurately summarise this book? I've written well over a thousand words and still don't feel I've captured it at all . . . but I couldn't get enough of it. I'll be keeping an eye out for it (and urging everyone to try it) when it's published in March. The Well is comparable to lots of other books in various small ways, but ultimately stands on its own as something totally unique. It confounds expectations and is a stunning debut. 10/10
Learn This Phrase blog, 10/10
This book is extraordinary . . . intoxicating . . . This is proper feminist post-apocalyptic fiction for those who are still missing Station 11
Alexandra Heminsley
The Debrief
Superb: frighteningly assured, its themes are deftly tied together and it manages to maintain real suspense . . . Its treatment of grief and anger - at a world dying, at the vicious dissolution of a marriage - and of the fear of one's own inner darkness is so realistically drawn that it would threaten to overwhelm without the focus that Chanter bring
Skinny
The Well perfectly balances the cross-genre tightrope of an unsettling dark thriller with a dystopian setting
Dulwich Books Review
Compelling . . . lyrical . . . it is the emotional drama which hooks the reader in this beautifully written fable for a modern age
We Love This Book
A haunting, beautifully written, and utterly believable novel that probes the fragility of our personal relationships and the mystical connection between people and the places they call home
OMG That Book
I was gripped by Catherine Chanter's The Well immediately. The beauty of her prose is riveting, the imagery so assured. This is an astonishing debut
Sarah Winman
When God Was a Rabbit
Would you call it a chiller? Someone asked across The Pool office, grasping for the right word to describe the indescribable. Yes, yes I would. But also a taut unsolved murder, a psychological suspense, and an insightful study of what makes human relationships function under duress that will keep the pages turning long, long after bedtime
Sam Baker
The Pool
Calls to mind fiction by Margaret Atwood and Michel Faber although stylistically Chanter has developed a strong voice of her own . . . The novel's greatest power is lyrical language: this unsettling tale is awash with imagery of water as Chanter explores the sense of identity as fluid, truth a slippery thing, certainties dissolving. Fiction proves a terrific tool for testing what exists and what is merely a fragment of the imagination . . . As love and water drain out of characters' lives, language swells in to tell a frightening and forceful story about what sustains and nourishes us, what keeps us well
Anita Sethi
Observer
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