Dreaming Water
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Average customer review:Product Description
Bestselling author Gail Tsukiyama is known for her poignant, subtle insights into the most complicated of relationships. Dreaming Water is an exploration of two of the richest and most layered human connections that exist: mother and daughter and lifelong friends.
Hana is suffering from Werner's syndrome, a disease that makes a person age at twice the rate of a healthy individual: at thirty-eight Hana has the appearance of an eighty-year-old. Cate, her mother, is caring for her while struggling with her grief at losing her husband, Max, and with the knowledge that Hana's disease is getting worse by the day.
Hana and Cate's days are quiet and ordered. Cate escapes to her beloved garden and Hana reads and writes letters. Each find themselves drawn into their pasts, remembering the joyous and challenging events that have shaped them: spending the day at Max's favorite beach, overcoming their neighbors' prejudices that Max is Japanese-American and Cate is Italian-American, and coping with the heartbreak of discovering Hana's disease.
One of the great joys of Hana's life has been her relationship with her beautiful, successful best friend Laura. Laura has moved to New York from their hometown in California and has two daughters, Josephine and Camille. She has not been home in years and begs Hana to let her bring her daughters to meet her, feeling that Josephine, in particular, needs to have Hana in her life. Despite Hana's latest refusal, Laura decides to come anyway. When Laura's loud, energetic, and troubled world collides with Hana and Cate's daily routine, the story really begins.
Dreaming Water is about a mother's courage, a daughter's strength, and a friend's love. It is about the importance of human dignity and the importance of all the small moments that create a life worth living.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #536825 in Books
- Published on: 2003-05-01
- Released on: 2003-05-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780312316082
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Tsukiyama (The Language of Threads) has a style at once evocative and formal, well suited to historical romances; now she takes on contemporary drama. At 38, Hana Murayama is dying of Werner's syndrome, a genetic defect that causes premature aging. Hana is almost totally dependent on her mother, Cate, who at 62 is still recovering from the sudden death of her husband, Max. As a child during WWII, Max had been interned with other Japanese-Americans in a camp in Wyoming and subsequently went on to teach history at a small northern California college. That background, her mother's love of gardening and her own usually feisty outlook are what Hana brings to her effort to live and die with dignity. Over the course of two days, Hana and Cate retrace in memory their lives and Max's. Their scattered and sometimes conflicting expectations are brought into sharp focus when Hana's best friend, Laura, now a successful East Coast lawyer, arrives with her two daughters, Hana's godchildren, allowing Hana and Cate to find a measure of the reconciliation that has eluded them. Tsukiyama has a wonderful ability to elicit delicate atmospherics; in particular, she uses the sense of touch to stunning effect. But the pacing is stilted, and neither Cate nor Hana allows herself a moment of private rage, although, in her thoughts, Cate strays briefly from the stoic. Her implicit frustration adds a note of vulnerability to the moving, subtle narrative.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Tsukiyama's fifth novel details a short span in the life of Cate and Hana, a mother and daughter coping with the onslaught of Werner's Syndrome. This syndrome, which ages a person abnormally, makes Hana look and feel 80 rather than 38. Yet she yearns for all the good things that life will never bring her, and Cate, recovering from the sudden death of her husband, cares lovingly for Hana. When Hana's best friend, Laura, arrives with her teenaged daughters to visit, Hana has a chance to reconnect with this troubled woman after a long absence. Laura and her children are able to help Hana and Cate face the future's uncertainties, while at the same time Hana and Cate discover that they are able to help Laura's girls grow up in numerous unseen ways. Tsukiyama (Women of the Silk) writes beautifully about courage and love, showing us the importance of daily kindnesses and highlighting the beauty found in the relationships among mothers, daughters, and friends. Highly recommended. Ellen R. Cohen, Rockville, MD
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
At 62, Cate is caring for her seriously ill daughter, Hana, and grieving for her beloved husband, Max. Hana is suffering from Werner's Syndrome, a disease that has caused her body to age at twice the normal rate. Not yet 40, Hana is as frail as an 80-year-old woman. As Cate struggles to come to grips with her daughter's decline, she remembers happier days, when she met her husband, Max, a Japanese American who struggled with his memories of being interned during World War II. She also remembers when Hana was a child, with an overabundance of energy until the signs of Werner's surfaced in her twelfth year. Amid all this heartbreak, Tsukiyama finds hope. Hana, despite the devastations of Werner's, clings to life and lives for each day. When her childhood best friend, Laura, along with her two daughters, comes to visit Hana and Cate, Hana has mixed feelings about her arrival. But an unexpected connection with Laura's eldest daughter Josephine and the memories of her youth that Laura's presence brings back prove invaluable to Hana. Tragedies abound in the novel--Max's death, Hana's illness, Laura's loss of both parents--and yet they do not overwhelm it. Beautifully written, effused with both sadness and hope, Tsukiyama's novel cannot fail to move readers. Kristine Huntley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
A Poignant and Heartbreaking Tale about Memorable People
Previously to reading Dreaming Water, I read The Samurai's Garden and fell in love with Gail Tsukiyama's characters and storyline. I seriously doubted that I would ever find another book by this author which I would ever love or think about as much as this title. But now that I have finished reading Dreaming Water, her newest title, I must admit that I loved this book just a bit more. Perhaps it is the mother in me as to why this book had such an impact on me or because Tsuliyama has the rare ability to entice her her readers with her first words and doesn't let go until the last ones. As she did in The Samurai's Garden, in this novel, Tsukiyama introduces us to wonderful charcters who live unusual lives due to physical and emotional limitations which in part are forced upon them. Told in alternating voices, we come to know these characters, feel for them and grieve along with them. And all the while one keeps asking themselves, why do bad things happen to good people? Not an easy questions to answer. But in the hands of a gifted writer like Tsukiyama, this book which takes place over two days is written as delicately and beautiflly as the gardens and flowers she so often describes in her books.
Against prejudices fueled by WW II, in 1960,Cat and Max, establish a life in Nothern California in a small university town. Max, a Japanese Amercian, teaches while Cat takes care of their one precious daughter, Hana. It is this child, who is raised with the background of her mother's Italtian family and her father's Japanese heritage that is at the center of Dreaming Water. While Hana is a bright and lively child she is very small for her age which concerns her parents. Then at the age of 13 she is diagnosed with Werner's Disease, a disease which brings on the rapid onset of old age although the effects won't become obvious till she is in her 20's. Terrified for her future Cat and Max are determined to bring Hana up with as normal a life as possible. Now the years have passed quickly by and Max is dead and Hana at 38 resembles a woman of 80. Her mother, at 62, is Hana's solecaregiver and still grieves for her husband who has been dead for three years. Cat also mourns for the missed opportunites and life her daughter has missed out on because of this disease. She worries about how much time she has left with Hana and what she will do once Hana dies. And Hana also thinks about her missed opporutunities and adventures and worries about her mother's life without both her husband and someday her daughter.
Then Hana's childhood friend, Laura, on the verge of a divorce, comes to visit Hana with her two young children. Hana hasn't seen this friend in many years although they correspond frequently and she is the god-mother to her children. Josephine, the older of the two children, at 13 is sullen and angry at her mother and father over their impending divorce. Clearly she is not an endearing child to anybody but is intrigued by Han and her illness. For Hana, Josephine is just what she needs. Suddenly Hana has a goal and purpose to whatever time is left to her. And in the end Josephine and Hana give to each other a precious gift of understanding and friendship.
This is a tender, poignant and at times heartbreaking novel. As the author weaves this tale, her characters reflect on their past and their concern for the future. And as I read, I couldn't help but feel these characters burdens and ultimate joys with each other and their lives. Certainly the book speaks to the human spirit and to every parent and caregiver as Tsukiyama says, "Mothers and their children are in a category all their own. There's no bond so strong in the entire world. No love so instaneous anmd forgiving." To my mind there are few other books which portray this wonderful, and at times confusing relationship between a mother and daughter so memorably and gracefully as this book does.
Thank you, once again , Ms. Tuskiyama for affording your readers such a wonderful and insightful journey.
Dreaming Water Review
What really moved me in Dreaming Water were the closed and life-long relationships between Max and Cate and between Laura and Hana. It seemed like nothing could break these relationships. I thought that Cate had been a widow for a very long time because her visions of her husband were always as a tall, young and handsome Max and from her words, it sounded like they had been apart for a very long time. Not until I got to the part that said Max died at the age of 63, did I let out a sigh of relief. At least they had grown old together even though she would like to spend her whole life with him.
It's very unlikely nowadays to see a beautiful friendship like Laura and Hana's. Laura never thought of leaving her friendship with Hana as a part of her past. She kept in contact with Hana when she was away, and at the end she and her kids paid Hana an unexpected visit. She didn't mind talking to an old lady who was in fact her same age. She certainly didn't mind going out with a crippled old friend while she was still a strong and youthful woman. The two of them were like day and night but they were still able to seek understanding and comfort from each other.
Dreaming Water is not an outstanding novel, at least to my point of view, but it is a sweet story. It makes us think more about the spiritual side of life. We seem to be so busy with the necessities of life such as keeping our jobs, getting promotions, entertaining ourselves and taking care of our own families that we forget about other important things such as keeping a true friendship and maintaining a healthy and loving relationship with our partner or with our parents. Sometimes, the comfort of giving love and being loved is far more rewarding than other material things we are trying to get.
One of the best of 2002
Dreaming Water by Gail Tsukiyama
The value of life and the shortness of it all: one of the themes that are touched upon in DREAMING WATER. Gail Tsukiyama's style of writing creates a very beautiful story about a woman who is dying of Werner's disease, a disease that ages a person at twice the normal speed. Hana Maruyama was born like any normal healthy child, but by an early age her parents, Max and Cate, noticed that her growth patterns were not normal. There was something terribly wrong with her, and after much testing with doctors, by the time she is 13, they have diagnosed Hana with having Werner's disease.
Knowing that Hana's life would be short and that her parents would most likely outlive her, they treat every day as something precious, and every passing year as something very special. And with each passing year, Hana's symptoms worsen. She seems to be fine for many years, until she develops cataracts while in college, and from then on, her life becomes a roller coaster. She is no longer in control of her body. Every day Hana wonders what new symptom would she experience, as her body ages faster than it should. By age 38, Hana appears the age of an eighty-year-old woman.
The book spans a period of two days, but within those two days, the reader sees into the thoughts of both Cate and Hana and learns about their lives. We learn about Hana's father Max, who was a second generation Japanese American, interned as a boy with his family in the camps during WW II. Max, who had died only a few years ago, lives through the thoughts of both Cate and Hana, and we learn about his years spent at Heart Mountain internment camp in Wyoming, and how he dreamt of water and how much he longed for it. Living in the parched dry lands of the camp, Max lived a life of imprisonment and shame. He brought this shame with him after the war was over and the Japanese Americans were released. Max rarely talked about the camps with Hana or his wife. It was from Max's father that Hana learned about her father's family and their time spent in Wyoming.
We learn about Hana's grandparents, and their love for their granddaughter. Max and Cate's marriage was not approved of by either set of parents. Cate's parents disapproved of their daughter marrying a Japanese American, and Max's parents had hoped their son would marry "a nice Japanese girl". Max in turn told them, "But I'm marrying a nice Italian American girl".
But the birth of Hana, a few years after their wedding, helps unite both families together. Both grandparents are ecstatic, and finally acknowledge the marriage that they had originally disapproved.
One of the themes of DREAMING WATER is racial prejudice, but the true story is about Hana. She knows she only has a few years left, and so the story takes us into two days of Hana's life, her memories, and the people she loves. The book is very short and concise, yet Tsukiyama was able to fit an entire story about the Maruyama family and their love for their daughter Hana. It is a very moving story, and I consider this book one of the best books I've read in 2002.




