A review by selenajournal
The Well and the Mine by Gin Phillips

4.0

After she threw the baby in, nobody believed me for the longest time. But I kept hearing that splash. (Tess, pg 1)

The sun was strong, and I was calmed by the heat, the sweat. Amazing the difference between the smell of the earth, warm and moist, full of cucumbers and tomatoes, watermelon and corn, compared to barren dirt, ripe with only black rock. I loved sucking up great breaths of that growth and green - full-sized lungfuls of peas and squash and soil instead of careful, shallow sips always testing for a pocket of after damp or black damp, one of the stranglers. -pg 43

None of the operators wanted to do a thing for you. Living in their big houses with maids and gardeners, cream in their coffee and roast chicken whenever they wanted, they could empty out the change in their pockets and pay a crippled man a year's wages. But they didn't. Could be money was a sickness that spread through their veins, but they couldn't ever have enough. They'd let a man die from bad mine construction, with his wife and children looking forward to starving as soon as the funeral was over, and they'd no more than toss a bill or two on the coffin. Hearts choked off, no feeling at all. Like a women who could kill her own child. We couldn't do nothing about them. But we might could do something about her. -pg 53

I wanted my well and my creek and my dreams back. Some nights, sitting out there on the porch by the well, I'd thought that view was the most beautiful, perfect thing in the world. And the more I thought about the baby, the uglier everything got. I wanted to stop thinking about it altogether. -pg 60

The woods started at the edge of the creek, and the sound of moving water blocked out the sound of birds until I got deep into the trees. Then the ground was speckled with shadows and leaves and sometimes sunshine, and my shoes made loud sounds that made me feel like I didn't belong. But if I was still, I could be compltely quiet, and I could sink into the woods, maybe lean against a tree or sit down on a flat rock with no moss or bugs. I could hear pecans or hickory nuts hit the ground. No one else there. No one watching, no one listening. I liked the woods best when I could be alone. -pg 66

Grandma Moore had separated from Grandpa Moore before I was born, leaving him in Fayette and moving here to a house Papa bought her. That was the first house she ever lived in that was her very own. And Grandpa Moore's mother had divorced her husband and changed her name and all the kids' names back to her maiden name. That's why we were Moores. He must've done something awful to make her want to go out and not just erase him out of her life, but erase his name, too. Whatever he did, if he hadn't done it, we'd all be named Adams. -pg 68

With boys and most grown-ups, you ended up feeling like they were holding up some yardstick to you. I didn't like being measured was all. -pg 69

When peace like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot thou hast taught me to say
It is well, it is well, with my soul.
-pg 79

1873 hymn written by Horatio Spafford, used in the context in the book as a hymn the girls like, in church, as they're looking around for who which woman may have killed their child

For years I thought of her sweetness as written there in the darkness of her eyes, the softness of her mouth. Remembered--imagined?--that from that first night, I knew her small hands would mend a pain in my neck as sure as a swig of whiskey, that the crook of her elbow would fit a baby like God had carved it purely for that purpose. -pg 103

In church we learned about Cain and Abel. Abel tended the flock and Cain worked the soil, and the Lord preferred Abel's offerings of fat firstborn animal sacrifices to Cain's offerings of vegetables. (Even as a teenager, Tess would keep on about that passage all the way home from church - "Do you think God would like squash? Do you think Cain got in all that trouble just because God was allergic to green beans or some such?" And eventually Papa would tell her to hush because she was being sacrilegious, and he'd try to keep his mouth from twitching. But Cain was jealous that the Lord favored Abel, and he killed his brother. The Lord heard Abel's blood cry out to him from the ground, and he cursed Cain to wander ceaselessly across the earth. And to make sure that Cain wasn't killed before he got in a life's worth of wandering, God put the Mark of Cain on him. -pg 118

(The next passage talks about how this was used the Sunday school teacher to explain race relations and prejudice - ascribing Blackness as the Mark of Cain.

She goes on to say: "There was ugliness to it, too, I didn't miss that, but church was full of ugly things - blood and crucifixion and thorns and swords and ears lopped off - that were part of God's perfect plan. -pg 118

An educated old maid was the worst of all, bottom of the list. Aunt Celia said no man wanted a woman who cared more about books than she did about him. When I was learning long division, the numbers all swam together and I hated it. Aunt Celia said then that it didn't pay to be too smart, that it wouldn't serve me well anyhow. I figured out long division anyway, partly because that made me mad, and partly because when I repeated it to Papa, he said, "It don't pay to be too stupid, neither." -pg 140

I never liked sermons about this world being just a train stop. It had always seemed like a pretty nice place to me, with magnolias and chocolate cake and baby chicks. But it could be that I'd missed something important, that really the earth was a place as full of hatefulness and danger as the preacher said. -pg 151

Mama's sister Emmaline died at eighteen, and Aunt Merilyn named her youngest daughter for her. That daughter's granddaughter named her youngest daughter Emmaline. When the family and friends packed into a tiny maternity-ward room in Boston, Massachusets, in 2004, text-messaging the good news while they waited their turn to tug at the fingers of a dark-headed baby, they were touching some part of a girl who died quietly on top of a handmade quilt in 1906. -pg 162

Ever since that baby died, pieces didn't fit together as well as they used to. Some things were convoluted before, of course. Papa was the strongest man in the world, so of course nothing could hurt him, but he was cracked all over from the mines. God was good, but he might decide to send you to hell. Getting baptized in the river cleaned your soul, but I still had to take a bath on Saturday nights even if I'd just been swimming. -pg 173

But usually I tried to ignore it when the pieces didn't come together quite right, even when something big and heavy poked at the edge of my mind and tried to shove its way in. Especially then. -pg 173 (next paragraph after the above)

I didn't want to live in some far-off place or do some remarkable thing. And I didn't want this. I didn't want to give every last speck of energy to my husband and houseful of kids and have no ime at all for any pleasure of my own. I wanted something left for myself. ALl that was left was to figure out what was in the middle between remarkable and Carbon Hill. -pg 274

"How did it feel to shoot that deer, Jack" I asked. "Were you scared? Did it look dangerous? Or did you feel bad about it 'cause it was pretty?"
He answered with his mouth full. "Both, I guess."
He figured that out quicker than I did. That the right answer could be more than one thing at the same time.
-pg 287 (last paragraph)