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Treading Water (2005)

by Anne DeGrace

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395640,019 (3.69)6
In the novel TREADING WATER, the voices of the residents of Bear Creek surface. Gus Sanders, a young trapper, arrives to seek his fortune on 1904 but loses his heart, and then his life; Jake Schroeder must choose between his desire to join up and his Mennonite pacifist roots; Isobel Grey, suffragette, leaves the movement in Winnipeg and brings her politics with her; Dutch war bride Aliesje Milner, six months pregnant, waits at the train station for a husband whose face she can no longer remember; and young Paul Doyle’s summer job demolishing houses to make way for the new hydroelectric dam teaches him more than he bargained for. The indomitable personality of Ursula Hartmann, first child born in Bear Creek and among the last to leave, threads through the novel as they trace a community from its innocent beginnings until the day the waters rise.… (more)
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Showing 5 of 5
This story was inspired by the creation of a flood control and hydroelectric dam (now known as the Keenleyside Dam) built in 1968 in British Columbia. It necessitated the relocation the community of Renata, that DeGrace calls Bear Creek in her novel. She tells the story in vignettes, describing the people who lived there since two young trappers arrived in 1904 until all the residents were bought out in 1968. Some were glad to leave, others were distraught to leave homes, graves, thriving fruit-growing businesses and memories. DeGrace's novel is fiction, yet the facts are clearly woven into the story that describes a very difficult time for everyone concerned. As well as being well-written, it was interesting to read of the area I know well, as it was before dams were built. ( )
1 vote VivienneR | Oct 8, 2017 |
I'm ashamed that I have let this book sit on the shelf for so long as it was a very interesting book. It opens in 1904 with one of the first settlers in the Bear River area telling about injuring his leg in a bear trap and waiting for his partner to come to rescue him. The next chapter is 1905 and is narrated by Frieda Hartmann who came to the area with her husband George in 1899 as an advance party for a group of Mennonites from Manitoba. It is the day of her daughter's birth and Frieda names the daughter Ursula to honour the community. And on it goes from there, switching narrators and climbing up the 20th century to give a look at this remote community that was eventually flooded to provide hydro power.

There were some very interesting characters in the book. One of my favourites was Isobel who came from Winnipeg to the community to help her sister after a difficult birth. Isobel is a suffragette and intends to return to her life in Winnipeg as soon as she can. Ace, the horse that arrived in the community at the same time as she did, intervenes and Isobel ends up marrying Ace's owner. Isobel lives in Bear River until the very end. Her husband and Ace were buried under the same cherry tree and Isobel has to fight to ensure that their final resting place is not disturbed.

From what I can tell by searching the internet, the facts about the settlement of the area and about the flooding are true. It must have been heart-rending for those people who spent their whole lives there to have to leave it all behind, and you get a real sense of that from reading this book. ( )
  gypsysmom | Aug 9, 2017 |
Just finished a description of the destruction of another civilisation. The story of a town in BC that was born in 1905 and was drowned by the Revelstoke Dam in 1965. The book was populated by various characters of the town. The town itself became the main character. It was modelled on the real-life story of Renata, BC. Pretty good. 7/10. ( )
  BCbookjunky | Mar 31, 2013 |
Displaced First Nations people, pioneer trappers, Mennonnites, babies born to new mothers in a strange land... A community is followed from settling days in the late 19th C. to 2005, after its lake has long been flooded. We get a sense of time and temporality and changing standards: one of the first characters we meet dies by the end of chapter 1 at 23 years of age; toward the end of book folks are living to ripe old ages. We meet many of the characters when they are very young, and follow them through to old age. Characters are strongly drawn, especially the female ones. One of the most memorable minor scenes is the filmic collapse into surprised death of an old horse. A book I didn't want to see end.
1 vote Muzzorola | Apr 16, 2012 |
Just finished a description of the destruction of another civilisation. The story of a town in BC that was born in 1905 and was drowned by the Revelstoke Dam in 1965. The book was populated by various characters of the town. The town itself became the main character. It was modelled on the real-life story of Renata, BC. Pretty good. 7/10. ( )
  TheBookJunky | Sep 24, 2011 |
Showing 5 of 5
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To the community of Renata, British Columbia, and to all communities who lost their land to progress but kept their stories.
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The ace lies against the chipping block to his left.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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In the novel TREADING WATER, the voices of the residents of Bear Creek surface. Gus Sanders, a young trapper, arrives to seek his fortune on 1904 but loses his heart, and then his life; Jake Schroeder must choose between his desire to join up and his Mennonite pacifist roots; Isobel Grey, suffragette, leaves the movement in Winnipeg and brings her politics with her; Dutch war bride Aliesje Milner, six months pregnant, waits at the train station for a husband whose face she can no longer remember; and young Paul Doyle’s summer job demolishing houses to make way for the new hydroelectric dam teaches him more than he bargained for. The indomitable personality of Ursula Hartmann, first child born in Bear Creek and among the last to leave, threads through the novel as they trace a community from its innocent beginnings until the day the waters rise.

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