Jacob's well : a novel

by Stephen Harrigan

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Originally published in 1984, Stephen Harrigan’s passionate, emotionally intense second novel takes readers deep into the mysterious passageways of a Central Texas aquifer—and of the human heart. This edition includes a new afterword by the author.

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Member Reviews

2 reviews
Just finished the first of my Christmas books, Jacob's Well by Stephen Harrigan. This is a story that is based around a fictionalization of a very real place, the once mysterious Jacob's Well in Wimberly, TX. As a caver I have known about the Well for years, mostly because of the often gruesome accident/fatality reports I would often read. Gruesome events, yes, but they're the sort of things that occasionally inspire someone to write a book, and if we're fortunate, it's a good one and we get to read it.

Now as it happens, author Harrigan was one of the divers who had the sad duty to participate on a body recovery in Jacob's Well many moons ago, and he turned the memories of this unfortunate experience into a really remarkable story. In show more fact, I would go so far as to say that this is just the sort of book that reminds me how much I enjoy reading, and how much I wish I could write so well...it really is that good. That it revolves around diving and particularly cave diving is purely incidental, unlike other such books I've read...I'm thinking David Poyer's Down to a Sunless Sea here, where the locale and the activity is central to the progression of the story. In Harrigan's work the interest is in the characters and their often complex relationship to one another. The characterization is as deep as the well itself, and the primary antagonists are all fascinating and not at all cliche'd. Nicely done.

As to the story itself, I must confess this is one of those works that once you get to the end, you are tempted to rush through it, especially if you're approaching the finish at 11 PM as I did. DON'T DO IT! Trust me, put the book down and finish it when you're lucid! The last thirty or forty pages are as gripping as any contemporary suspense novel you've ever read...this despite the fact that Harrigan's work was originally published in 1984. You're going to want to enjoy this denouement, savor it.

Jacob's Well has aged remarkably well, and maintains its sense of mystery throughout as much as the real Jacob's Well has through the years. Of course the fact is that the Well has been explored rather completely over the course of the past ten to fifteen years...weirdly, that original sense mystery still remains. What's around the next corner? Can we squeeze past that obstruction? Does the passage end, or will it continue for miles and miles? Life can be like that, I suppose.

At any rate, it's marvelous stuff and comes highly recommended. You can purchase the reprint (complete a very appropriate and informative afterword by Harrigan) through Amazon.
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A love triangle against a backdrop of cave scuba diving with unique, complicated and intriguing characters.

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21+ Works 1,373 Members
Stephen Harrigan is the author of numerous works of nonfiction and fiction, including Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas and the critically acclaimed novels A Friend of Mr. Lincoln, Remember Ben Clayton, and The Gates of the Alamo. He is a longtime writer for Texas Monthly and an award-winning screenwriter who has written many movies for show more television. show less

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3558 .A626 .J3Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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16
Popularity
1,513,795
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (4.50)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5