Play Audiobook Sample
The Mermaid Chair Audiobook
Play Audiobook Sample
Quick Stats About this Audiobook
Total Audiobook Chapters:
Longest Chapter Length:
Shortest Chapter Length:
Average Chapter Length:
Audiobooks by this Author:
Publisher Description
A transcendent tale of a woman's self-discovery—the New York Times–bestselling second work of fiction by the author of The Secret Life of Bees and The Book of Longings
Inside the church of a Benedictine monastery on Egret Island, just off the coast of South Carolina, resides a beautiful and mysterious chair ornately carved with mermaids and dedicated to a saint who, legend claims, was a mermaid before her conversion.
When Jessie Sullivan is summoned home to the island to cope with her eccentric mother’s seemingly inexplicable behavior, she is living a conventional life with her husband, Hugh, a life “molded to the smallest space possible.” Jessie loves Hugh, but once on the island, she finds herself drawn to Brother Thomas, a monk about to take his final vows. Amid a rich community of unforgettable island women and the exotic beauty of marshlands, tidal creeks, and majestic egrets, Jessie grapples with the tension of desire and the struggle to deny it, with a freedom that feels overwhelmingly right, and with the immutable force of home and marriage.
Is the power of the mermaid chair only a myth? Or will it alter the course of Jessie’s life? What happens will unlock the roots of her mother’s tormented past, but most of all, it will allow Jessie to discover selfhood and a place of belonging as she explores the thin line between the spiritual and the erotic.
Download and start listening now!
"Jessie's story of rediscovering herself and the people in her life fit so perfectly into the background of a small island. I loved that she had to go home and find acceptance there and let go of her past in order to embrace her future. And just like life, it was messy."
— Tamara (5 out of 5 stars)
Quotes
-
A well-told tale about marriage, mystery – and mermaids....Kidd writes at a deeper emotional level than she did in the fabulously popular Bees. Her characters are more tormented, more complex, in their processes of coming unwound and then healing….Yet it is also a quite powerful feminist statement, and can be savored strictly on the basis of Kidd’s beautiful use of language....The Mermaid Chair is a multidimensional pleasure.
— Fort Worth Star-Telegram -
Kidd’s greatest strength as a writer is her sensuous, evocative prose. Egret Island is alive with its scent of salted air, old crab pots, bulling gumbo. The novel is also full, dense with symbolism, from the recurrent motif of the mermaid, diving deep and surfacing, to images of baptism, birds, rebirth. And Kidd continues to emphasize her central insights into the power of secrets to fester, the healing force of honesty and the significance of communities of independent but interwoven women, open to reconfigured rituals of grace….Kidd suggests that to merge body and soul just might enlarge a sense of what it is to be religious and to be married.
— Pittsburgh Post Gazette -
[Kidd’s] imagination, originality and command of language never cease. She is simply a profound storyteller.
— The Denver Post -
Book clubs, start your engines. Sue Monk Kidd's first novel, The Secret Life of Bees, has sold 3 million copies since 2002.…Those are big shoes to fill, but Kidd acquits herself admirably with The Mermaid Chair….Both novels drip with vivid images of hot Southern afternoons, droning insects, swooping birds and oases in which nature is the fabric of life. It is a tapestry strengthened by bonds between women that bridge pain and loss. Most important, both have passages of beautiful writing… Kidd wrote two well-received memoirs before turning to fiction. But perhaps the answer ultimately given by The Mermaid Chair is that a storyteller also can change course and come of age in the middle of her life.
— USA Today"Her writing is so smart and sharp, she gives new life to old midlife crises, and she draws connections from the feminine to the divine to the erotic that a lesser writer wouldn't see, and might not have the guts to follow. -
(A) rewarding second novel by the author of the bestselling Secret Life of Bees. Writing from the perspective of conflicted, discontented Jessie, Kidd achieves a bold intensity and complexity that wasn't possible in The Secret Life of Bees, narrated by teenage Lily. Jessie's efforts to cope with marital stagnation; Whit's crisisof faith; and Nelle's tormented reckoning with the past will resonate with many readers. This emotionally rich novel, full of sultry, magical descriptions of life in the South, is sure to be another hit for Kidd.
— Publisher's Weekly, starred review -
Compelling reading.... The writing is soulful in its probing of the human heart and family secrets.
— The San Francisco Chronicle -
Secrets are told. Mysteries are revealed. In one rich and satisfying gush…, Jessie reevaluates just about every aspect of her life: her husband, her lover, her mother, her artwork, the death of her father decades ago, and most of all herself... Rewarding.
— Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel -
If [The Secret Life of] Bees was a girl’s coming-of-age novel, [The Mermaid] Chair is a woman’s coming-of-middle-age novel….The prose thrilled me. Kidd can really turn a phrase and her descriptions of nature’s archetypal elements are magnificent.
— The Philadelphia Inquirer -
A woman at life's crossroads, a parent’s tragic death and a strong, if eccentric circle of women. Stir in a forbidden love, and the pages all but turn themselves.
— Parade -
Kidd grabs you from the first sentence of The Mermaid’s Chair. It is a satisfying tale that balances Southern gothic…[with] wish-fulfillment romance and a down-to-earth dissection of family problems. Sue Monk Kidd is a high-end practitioner of Ya-Ya-ism, with a lucid prose style and a fine sense of story. ... A good read.
— The Atlanta Journal-Constitution -
Richly rewarding.
— Chicago Tribune -
Kidd's second offering is just as gracefully written as her first and possesses an equally compelling story. It should appeal to the many readers who made her first novel a hit with book clubs.
— Booklist"Fans of Sue Monk Kidd’s best-selling debut novel, The Secret Life of Bees, will be equally enamored with her beguiling sophomore effort....Reconciling the spiritual with the human, The Mermaid Chair is a captivating metaphorical and sensual journey into one woman’s soul. Weaving enduring folklore about the seductive and transformative power of mermaids into a modern-day tale of rebirth, the novel shows us that sometimes we need to swim out to sea for the currents to carry us back home. -
Kidd draws on her extensive knowledge of theology and mythology in this insightful book about the passions and desires of body and soul. Kidd. . . slowly and carefully unveils her story about the meaning of love, the necessity of risk, and the power of forgiveness.
— Orlando Sentinel -
The steady pulse of Kidd's writing pushes this narrative from heart-throbber to soul-searcher.
— Boston Herald -
Kidd’s sparkling imagery in The Mermaid Chair surpasses her efforts in [The Secret Life of] Bees and helps morph a simple story into something approaching myth....What keeps Kidd…flying high is her abiding sense of humor (her characters are really “characters”), an earthbound understanding of the ebb and flow of life, and her studious attention to the great metaphors of life.
— Santa Cruz Sentinel -
This lush follow-up finds Kidd asking even bigger questions with the story of a woman whose life and marriage have grown increasingly stale.
— Breathe -
[An] illuminating investigation of midlife malaise...The Mermaid Chair honors those who conjure up the courage to rediscover and recommit to their life passions.
— The Seattle Times -
No question: Kidd can write.
— The San Diego Union-Tribune -
Those who fell in love with Kidd’s first novel will find pleasure here.
— The Oregonian -
It takes a rare and mysterious novel to speak to our souls in so many ways that we return to the book again and again for refreshment and renewal. Sue Monk Kidd created that kind of magic in The Secret Life of Bees, and her new novel promises to have the same effect….The Mermaid Chair will lure you into its warm embrace if you have experienced a deep sense of loss in your life that will not let you go. It will appeal to your yearning for a close encounter with grace. It will enchant that secret part of you that loves mermaids and saints. It will touch all those who struggle with the Sacred Feminine in all her incarnations.
— Spirituality and Health Review -
As a stylist, Kidd is in firm command of her subje
Awards
-
Winner of Quill Award
-
Winner of Quill Award
The Mermaid Chair Listener Reviews
-
" Loved this book. Short chapters and loved her writing. She also had some challenging vocabulary words which I loved! Awesome read :) "
— Sandra, 2/17/2014 -
" not nearly as good as The Secret Life of Bees "
— Llyn, 1/31/2014 -
" I really enjoyed The Secret Life of Bees and looked forward to The Mermaid Chair. What a disappointment. Nothing much about this story worked for me. I didn't like the writing, nor did I care for the characters. The word contrived comes to mind when thinking about the story, the ending in particular. A pathetic follow up to Bees. "
— Deb, 1/17/2014 -
" Well written and entertaining. Read it on the beach on vacation. "
— Cbrion, 1/15/2014 -
" Wow. What a journey. "
— Casey, 1/11/2014 -
" A little slow-moving and a theme that's been done many times before. "
— Chris, 1/11/2014 -
" Didn't love this one nearly as much as Bees. "
— Sandy, 1/4/2014 -
" I honestly expected more from this authoer, as I thought she did a great job with 'The Secret Life of Bees.' I felt like this was more of a 'beach read,' but it was still an enjoyable book. "
— Mary, 12/28/2013 -
" I love the author's use of language and she writes beautifully. I just couldn't love this story. I loved the women of the island and would much have preferred their story to the one being told. "
— Angela, 11/9/2013 -
" Disappointing after Secret Life of Bees! Choppy. "
— Debra, 11/9/2013 -
" Like "The Secret Lives of Bees" in the powerful relationships between women and description of place. A good summer romance, but it didn't transcend that genre for me. "
— Gabrielle, 10/14/2013 -
" A very good story of facing one's past in order to fully live in the present. "
— Kim, 8/25/2013 -
" Great story, I liked the spiritual/psychological/physical aspects! "
— Jenna, 6/21/2013 -
" Was annoyed at all the uneccessary drama, but still unable to put book down. "
— Sabra, 4/9/2013 -
" I think I liked this much better than a lot of people. I enjoy this author and enjoyed the plot (though it started slow). "
— Kayla, 4/1/2013 -
" Interesting story, but nowhere as good as The Secret Life of Bees. I like her writing style and characters, easy read. "
— Vanessa, 10/1/2012 -
" The Mermaid Chair improved as it went along and I enjoyed the way the truth was revealed and liked the character of Nelle. The questions for reading group discussions in my copy added a depth to the tale but I found a lot of it quite unbelieveable. Definitely a holiday/beach read. "
— Lis, 8/27/2012 -
" I usually like Sue Monk Kidd books but I didn't like the premise of this one. A middle aged woman who leaves her husband to care for her mentally unstable mother only to have an affair with a monk. Rather far fetched, don't you think? "
— Linda, 7/7/2012 -
" Not as good as Secret Life of Bees "
— Tilynn, 5/24/2012 -
" I was severely disappointed in what could have been a great story if the characters, plot, well, frankly everything, had been more completely thought out and developed so that the reader could buy in to the story. I kept reading hoping for a revelation, a spark...but nothing. "
— Dmahon, 1/26/2012 -
" Awful! I loved The Secret Lives of Bees, so I thought I would like this. The story was implausible (she falls in love with a monk?!) and predictable and I thought the main character was selfish and whiny. "
— Patty, 1/23/2012 -
" Nicely written, well constructed etc but rather dull. "
— Joanna, 12/8/2011 -
" I was in Italy when I read my first novel by Sue Monk Kidd. It was nice to get a bit of home from this love story set in my home-state of South Carolina. The mixture of Southern Catholic traditions and folklore added an appealing dimension to the plot. "
— Nicole, 10/2/2011 -
" It took me a few chapters to get hooked into the story but then I read the second half in one go! It was a very poignant story which brang tears to my eyes. "
— Karen, 5/17/2011 -
" Really enjoyed the author's descriptions of this book's setting: the Carolina barrier islands that I explored a little bit last summer. Also learned a bit more about the Gullah culture. The story line was a little predictable,though. "
— Karen, 5/16/2011 -
" Did she really have to have an affair to find herself? "
— Allison, 5/16/2011 -
" An excellent read. Makes me think of home and all... "
— Crestina, 5/16/2011 -
" I really liked and enjoyed this book "
— Andi, 5/14/2011 -
" Great Book! Good story, although I wasn't a fan of the affair. I couldn't put it down. "
— Erin, 4/27/2011
About Sue Monk Kidd
Sue Monk Kidd is the author of the New York Times bestselling
novels The Secret Life of Bees and The Mermaid Chair, the
memoirs Traveling with Pomegranates, which she wrote with her
daughter Ann Kidd Taylor; The Dance of the Dissident Daughter; and When the Heart Waits, and Firstlight,
a collection of her early writings. The Secret Life of Bees has
spent more than 220 weeks on the New York Times bestseller
list and was adapted into an award-winning movie starring Dakota Fanning, Queen
Latifah, Jennifer Hudson, and Alicia Keys. The Mermaid Chair, a #1 New
York Times bestseller, was adapted into a television movie. Both of
her novels have been translated into more than twenty-four languages. The recipient of
numerous literary awards, Sue lives with her husband on an island off the coast
of Florida.
About Eliza Foss
Eliza Foss is an actress who has appeared in numerous theaters in New York City and around the country. She has narrated over thirty books and short stories, been featured in AudioFile magazine, and won five AudioFile Earphones Awards for her narrations.