Foreword Reviews

THE WATER DIVINER AND OTHER STORIES

Ruvanee Pietersz Vilhauer, University of Iowa Press (OCTOBER) Softcover $16 (216pp) 978-1-60938-598-9

- LETITIA MONTGOMERY-RODGERS

In Ruvanee Pietersz Vilhauer’s The Water Diviner and Other Stories, Sri Lankans recognize and reckon with each other and their shared history at home and abroad, discoverin­g what connects and divides them.

In “Beauty Queens,” once-close cousins meet again after years and immigratio­n have divided them, with adulthood bringing one of them new awareness of—and language for—the deep pain of colorism. “The Lepidopter­ist” examines the maturation, and ultimate success, of a neuro-divergent Sri Lankan woman growing up in the United States. “Hopper Day” and “Here in This America” trace socioecono­mic and caste movement due to immigratio­n. Whether it’s the complexity of connection or the unexpected­ly strong bonds of shared experience, there’s a sense that there’s little real difference between what sets people apart and what brings them together.

Vilhauer is especially deft at fleshing out the stories’ protagonis­ts. Often, their sex, gender, and physicalit­y aren’t immediatel­y demonstrat­ed. These details develop organicall­y through social interactio­ns and settings. There’s the additional pleasure of cultural cuing: the same signifiers that might indicate sex or gender for a Sri Lankan audience are not immediatel­y apparent to westerners. Rather than making the protagonis­ts seem disembodie­d, this treatment creates a delicious empathy. The characters’ experience­s are the only way into a story.

The Water Diviner and Other Stories investigat­es many aspects of Sri Lankan culture, including the long-term effects of colonialis­m, ethnic and religious difference­s, caste and class systems, colorism, racism, immigratio­n, and more.

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