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The Barter

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A heart-stopping tale as provocative as is suspenseful, about two conflicted women, separated by one hundred years, and bound by an unthinkable sacrifice.
The Barter is a ghost story and a love story, a riveting emotional tale that also explores motherhood and work and feminism. Set in Texas, in present day, and at the turn of the twentieth century, the novel follows two young mothers at the turning point of their lives.
Bridget has given up her career as an attorney to raise her daughter, joining a cadre of stay-at-home mothers seeking fulfillment in a quiet suburb. But for Bridget, some crucial part of the exchange is absent: Something she loves and needs. And now a terrifying presence has entered her home; only nobody but Bridget can feel it.
On a farm in 1902, a young city bride takes a farmer husband. The marriage bed will become both crucible and anvil as Rebecca first allows, then negates, the powerful erotic connection between them. She turns her back on John to give all her love to their child. Much will occur in this cold house, none of it good.
As Siobhan Adcock crosscuts these stories with mounting tension, each woman arrives at a terrible ordeal of her own making, tinged with love and fear and dread. What will they sacrifice to save their families—and themselves? Readers will slow down to enjoy the gorgeous language, then speed up to see what happens next in a plot that thrums with the weight of decision—and its explosive consequences.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 14, 2014
      Motherhood is the destabilizing bond that nearly undoes two women linked across a century in Adcock’s suspenseful debut. Former attorney and new mother Bridget is sitting up with her wailing 10-month-old daughter, Julie, when she first senses a ghost in her Austin, Tex., home. The ghost appears to be the spirit of a dead woman. Or is it? Sometimes the presence looks like nothing more than an enormous white cloud. What’s clear is that Bridget is conflicted, whether about leaving her job; relying on her husband, Mark, as he spends more and more time at his tech startup; or indulging her own fears and anxiety when “she should be grateful.” As Bridget spins out in the suburbs, the narrative travels back to 1902 to introduce Rebecca Mueller, 20 years old and newly married. Rebecca struggles against her temper, impulsive nature, and “smothering moments of panic” while negotiating the transition from doctor’s daughter to farmer’s wife in the Texas Hill Country. Adcock builds tension with the ghost’s periodic visitations, but the novel’s real concern lies in the more mundane but no less weighty issue of how fear and self-doubt can corrode marriages and families. Agent: Betsy Lerner, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2014
      A ghost, hungry for a love she was too proud to seize, haunts a young mother. Adcock's (Hipster Haiku, 2006, etc.) debut novel skillfully interweaves the stories of Bridget and Rebecca, two women a century apart bound by the sacrifices inherent to marriage and motherhood. In 1902, Rebecca marries John Hirschfelder, willingly leaving her city home for a hard life as a farm wife. But her wedding night leaves her cold, and her anger at her own inability to embrace her marriage begins to fester. Soon enough, John's passivity and her barely concealed fury lead to fits of passion. Rebecca's mother had died shortly after childbirth, so Frau, Rebecca's father's cousin, helped raise her. Of the many stories Frau told her, the one of her mother's bartering an hour of life for her daughter's happiness troubles Rebecca the most. She wonders what she might sacrifice for her own child. One hundred years later, in the same Texas farmhouse, Bridget sits in the wee hours with her 10-month-old daughter, Julie. Giving up her job to be a full-time mother, at least for a while, seems like a good idea, but she's always so tired, which makes her fly off the handle at everything Mark does wrong. Of course she'd sacrifice her own life for her daughter, but what if Julie died? As Bridget considers this alarming possibility, the very air shifts, and the musty, earthy smell of the small stream running through their property rises. A ghost struggles to shape itself, looming over Bridget and Julie. In the days to come, Bridget scrambles to appease the ghost and save her family from its peculiar hunger. The metaphor of the barter, however, seems awkwardly imposed and too simple for the complex frustrations of women then and now. A tale of troubled souls far too easily resolved.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2014

      New mother Bridget has given up her career as a lawyer to stay at home with her daughter in a comfortable Texas suburb. Resentful about her sacrifice, she feels plagued by picture-perfect mothers and family-friendly cookouts. Bridget tactfully plays the part in her new role, doing her best to fit in with the other caretakers in the neighborhood, until she discovers a ghost haunting her home. The apparition drives Bridget to the edges of madness, distancing her from her husband and evoking fear in their daughter. In a parallel story taking place nearly 100 years earlier, Rebecca leaves her family's pleasant home in town to become a farmer's wife. The similar narratives of Bridget and Rebecca reflect the trials of early motherhood, discontentment at home, and the strains of marriage. VERDICT Like Curtis Sittenfeld's Sisterland, Adcock's debut novel weaves the doldrums of early motherhood with the supernatural. However, her plot is unevenly paced and will leave readers wishing this ghost story were more suspenseful. [See Prepub Alert, 3/31/14.]--Emily Hamstra, Univ. of Michigan Libs., Ann Arbor

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2014
      Adcock's unconventional ghost story features two young women separated by a century but bound by eternal questions of love and loyalty. Attorney Bridget has given up a promising and fulfilling career to be a stay-at-home mom but experiences an unexpected void in her life that is increasingly occupied by a spectral presence invading her home and her subconscious. In 1902, Rebecca marries a young farmer, but soon rejects him, lavishing all her love and attention on their young son. As the stories of these two women struggling to cope with the demands, expectations, and disappointments of motherhood and marriage intertwine, tensions mount, and sacrifices are exacted. Eerie and atmospheric, this psychological thriller will twist its way into readers' psyches.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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