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Paperback The Housekeeper Book

ISBN: 159692215X

ISBN13: 9781596922150

The Housekeeper

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

When Jamie Hall finds a boy tied to a tree and cuts him loose, she can have no idea of the desperate chain of events her act of humanity will trigger. An orphaned teenage runaway who has fetched up... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A haunting, starkly beautiful, and brilliant story

By the time she was 16, Jamie had lost everyone she loved. Hanging on desperately to her dog, she fled after her mother's death so that she could remain free of the social service/foster care system. Far more than a beloved pet, the dog was all Jamie had in the world, with the possible exception of her memories. She set out for Dyers Corner, the place she remembered as her grandparents' home. She wanted to see the reservoir that covered their house when the government flooded the valley. When Jamie finally gets to Dyers Corner, she discovers that there isn't much to see there and the weather gets really ugly. However, having nowhere else to go, she decides to stick around a while. A little bit of good luck comes her way when Margaret, a savvy elderly woman, gives her a break --- and a job as housekeeper. But soon Margaret heads for warmer climes when the cold sets in, leaving Jamie once more on her own, haunting the post office almost daily for Margaret's payment. Growing up hard and fast, Jamie clings almost fanatically to the dog, fearing abandonment every time he goes outside. But Jamie has to learn to trust. After choosing the wrong people for help too many times, she realizes that she must simply depend on herself. Unfortunately, not all of her decisions prove wise. The dreary community of Dyers Corner seems populated solely by broken and damaged souls. If there are any happy, well-adjusted residents, Jamie certainly hasn't found them. She encounters only people with heavy, scarred baggage: a man burdened with a guilt he shouldn't claim; a man unfettered by a conscience he should have; a man carrying a torch for a long-dead woman; and an undeserving man who steals Jamie's love. And then there's the boy, who unravels her life. The first time Jamie saw the boy, he was tied to a tree...... You should have left him there... I did. But you untied him. That one innocent act of kindness leads to unimaginable horrors. As the townsfolk so aptly put it, the boy is not right in the head. Once freed from his bonds, he stalks Jamie, along with animals, family and anyone who crosses his path, littering the way with misery. If only she had known. With the outcome so unpredictable, you may be tempted to rush ahead to find out what ultimately happens, but you can't. Ms. Wallace's writing is just too starkly beautiful. Take the time to savor her prose and relish the emotions; roll each sentence around in your head and visualize the pictures the carefully chosen words evoke. They are not all beautiful --- some even bordering on brutal --- but THE HOUSEKEEPER is a brilliant story of a period in a young girl's life memorable for its conflicts. --- Reviewed by Kate Ayers

(4.5) "I'm like him now. I'm among the missing."

Menace finds its way easily, rooting out the defenseless with eager eyes, uncovering the vulnerable. Jamie Hall is such a one, a girl who describes herself as "someone things just happen to". Setting off on foot after the death of her mother, an orphan with only her dog for a companion, Jamie has no one and belongs nowhere. With only her family history as a guide, Jamie heads for Dyers Corner, the only other place she has ever been, trekking across a chilly winter landscape to the place her grandparents were forced to leave by the government, who flooded their land with a reservoir, its icy surface belying the fact that people's histories are submerged in its watery depths. It is 1976 and poverty is familiar to Jamie, who takes up little space and asks nothing she can't pay for, a few bills tucked in her pocket. Along the way, Jamie draws attention, her youthful beauty, her aloneness, save the dog at her side. Confronted with the barrenness around her, Jamie looks for shelter, accepting it from a married man who drinks too much and will leave her soon, finding temporary employment with Margaret, a photographer who has recorded the history of this place in pictures that line the walls of her home, traveling now, secure in the knowledge that Jamie is caring for her things. When Jamie comes upon a boy tied to a tree, she sets him free, unleashing a series of events that bring with them the promise of malevolence, aggravating the somnolent men who are content to rage in private until one of them is interfered with, the pristine countryside in counterpoint to the seething menace of the boy's father and a local poacher. Jamie's only solace in this bitter land is Galen, a trapper who lives in isolation, content to avoid the past until Jamie needs his protection. There are innocents: Jamie is one; the boy, made wild by a brutal father, now ranging across the hills in search of mischief; and the dog, a happy companion to those who treat him kindly. The opposing forces converge, innocent and guilty, crazed and calm, in stark relief against an unforgiving wilderness, where innocence has no place and violence thrives, while nature, indifferent, looks on. In lyrical prose familiar from Blue Horse Dreaming, Wallace delivers a powerful tale, a taut and seductive vision of poverty, loneliness and the cruelty bred of ignorance, one young girl walking through the heart of darkness, the devil snapping at her heels. Luan Gaines/ 2006.
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