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Water Witches by Chris Bohjalian
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Water Witches (edition 1997)

by Chris Bohjalian (Author)

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561942,392 (3.53)18
A conflict between a ski resort attempting to expand and environmentalists wanting to preserve a mountain for nature. The setting is Vermont, the protagonist, a lawyer hired by the ski resort to handle their case. As the novel progresses he becomes convinced of the validity of the opposition's cause. By the author of Past the Bleachers.… (more)
Member:Phyllis.Mann
Title:Water Witches
Authors:Chris Bohjalian (Author)
Info:Touchstone (1997), Edition: 1st Scribner Paperback Fiction Ed, 352 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:fiction, authors-my-very-favorite

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Water Witches by Chris Bohjalian

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Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
Although this book was written 25 years ago, it is more relevant today than it was when first published. There are some mystical elements with the main character being a “dowser” or “water witch.” This provides the author his creative license to explore the effects of the environment on the community. Essentially, there is a case brought to trial to prevent the expansion of a ski resort, Powdered Peak, which would draw on the already lowering water levels in the nearby lake. Things seem to be moving along to get the permits despite the protests until the attorney representing the builders and his daughter, Miranda, see a family of catamounts below them on a gondola ride. It becomes a matter of conscience and accountability for Scottie Winston. Does he “ignore” the potential presence of wildlife where the company has invested money to build or jeopardize his legal career?
( )
  marquis784 | Nov 16, 2022 |
Chris Bohjalian is one of those authors from whom I never know what to expect. I have loved some of his work, I have been indifferent to much of it as well. None of it is terrible, but if it were not for those that shine, I would have deserted him long ago. This one, unfortunately, falls into the “not so good” category for me.

Can’t anyone write a book without an obvious political agenda anymore? Must all the people of the world be either wealthy and corrupt or new-age, tree-hugging and caring. I really do think there is a lot of space between those two and most of us live in it. You can care about the environment and also want jobs and progress, those things are NOT altogether exclusive of one another. Everyone who is building something isn't hating the environment and unconcerned about what he destroys in the process.

As well, the concept is a little difficult for me to grasp onto. The women in this family are dowsers. That isn’t difficult, I believe some people can dowse for water. The part that was difficult was that they seem to have some super-natural ability, so they can dowse for all kinds of things...like bodies, lost people, the right places to build things (a little feng shui vibe), (and how silly is this) the vitamins in the food people eat. They can also divert streams, etc. to make them flow in another direction. All of that just exceeds believability for me. Then there is the daughter, a nine-year old child, and I have a lot of problems with the way she is portrayed in the book. I find the adults irresponsible where she is concerned. Finally, I never connected to a single character...not the kid, not the father and certainly not the new-age aunt. They were as elusive for me as the catamounts of Vermont were for them.

In the beginning, Dad is a bit of a skeptic. As he began to believe more and more, I begin to lose any belief I had started with. I doubted that was an intended result.

So, I am giving this a 2.5 rating and rounding down. Not bad enough to make me bail (which might have something to do with the fact that I just bailed on another book and felt I needed to finish something I started this week), but bad enough to make me wonder if I just read the last Bohjalian I will be willing to buy. ( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
Easy summer read, one of the better by Bohjalian. Little freaky reading it while watching the lake levels get really low here in the Laurentiens.... ( )
  Rdra1962 | Aug 1, 2018 |
This story of a lawyer, his wife, and child living in VT brings factors of politics, family, and spiritualism surrounding and connecting to water in a flowing manner. Something drew me to this book and I'm very glad it did! ( )
  niquetteb | Jun 17, 2016 |
I agree wholeheartedly with another Goodreads member who says: " Hmmm. Why do I keep reading his books? I suppose because he's a really good story teller and in these days of facts and figures and "reality", we all need a good story just for it's own sake." ( )
  FAR2MANYBOOKS | Apr 5, 2014 |
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Epigraph
And Moses lifted up his hand and struck the rock
with his rod twice; and water came forth abundantly,
and the congregation drank, and their cattle.
 - Numbers 20:11

Kilimanjaro is a snow covered mountain 19,710 feet high, and it
is said to be the highest mountain in Africa. Its western summit is
called the Masai "Ngaje Ngai," the House of God. Close to the
western summit there is the dried and frozen carcass of a leopard.
No one has explained what the leopard was seeking at that altitude.
 - Ernest Hemingway
Dedication
For Anne Dubuisson and Howard Frank Mosher
First words
Some people say my wife's sister is a witch.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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A conflict between a ski resort attempting to expand and environmentalists wanting to preserve a mountain for nature. The setting is Vermont, the protagonist, a lawyer hired by the ski resort to handle their case. As the novel progresses he becomes convinced of the validity of the opposition's cause. By the author of Past the Bleachers.

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