Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Sabbathday River

Rate this book
When she stumbles upon the drowned body of a newborn baby girl floating in the Sabbathday River, Naomi Roth, something of an outcast in conservative Goddard, New Hampshire, becomes involved in the case of Heather Pratt, a young single mother, who is charged with murder.

504 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1998

6 people are currently reading
813 people want to read

About the author

Jean Hanff Korelitz

17 books3,028 followers
Author of nine novels: THE SEQUEL (2024), THE LATECOMER (2022), THE PLOT (The Tonight Show's "Summer Reads" pick for 2021), THE UNDOING, originally published as YOU SHOULD HAVE KNOWN (adapted by David E. Kelley for HBO and starring Nicole Kidman, Hugh Grant and Donald Sutherland), ADMISSION (adapted as the 2013 film of the same name, starring Tina Fey, Lily Tomlin and Paul Rudd), THE DEVIL AND WEBSTER, THE WHITE ROSE, THE SABBATHDAY RIVER and A JURY OF HER PEERS, as well as a middle-grade reader, INTERFERENCE POWDER, and a collection of poetry, THE PROPERTIES OF BREATH.

Watch for television adaptations of THE PLOT and THE LATECOMER!

I'm the founder of BOOKTHEWRITER, a New York City based service that offers "Pop-Up Book Groups" where readers can discuss books with their authors in person and online. Please join our mailing list at www.bookthewriter.com to hear about our events.

If you've become aware of my work via THE UNDOING, you should know that my novel differs significantly from the adaptation -- and that's fine with me! Just know that the twists you might be expecting will likely not be there on the page. Other twists, yes, but you'll have to read the book to find them.

If you're trying to reach me, please know that I don't do any communicating through Goodreads, and that includes FRIEND REQUESTS AND FOLLOWING. (You may also infer that I've read more than the few books listed here, all of which are -- coincidence? -- written by me. I have another GOODREADS account, under another name, with which I keep track of my reading, but it's private.) I'm particularly inept on Facebook, as well, so trying to reach me that way will be spectacularly ineffective. If you want to get in touch, please use the contact form on my website, jeanhanffkorelitz.com

Thanks so much for your interest in my work!

Jean Hanff Korelitz

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
122 (24%)
4 stars
200 (40%)
3 stars
136 (27%)
2 stars
27 (5%)
1 star
12 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 82 reviews
Profile Image for Lisa (NY).
2,146 reviews833 followers
August 12, 2022
Although a mystery is the center of The Sabbathday River, it is really a slow building novel focusing on the character development of a few imperfect people in a small New Hampshire town, culminating in riveting courtroom drama. I love the way Hanff Korelitz digs deep into her characters. There is so much "meat" here that I didn't mind when she diverged now and then into excess wordiness.
Profile Image for Debra Komar.
Author 6 books85 followers
November 28, 2014
I am officially giving up on this author. I have read (endured) three of her books and the problems are consistent throughout - grossly overwritten and poorly edited. Page after page of pseudopsychoanalysis of the characters and ludicrous descriptions of settings. I was thirty pages in and could sum up the plot in one sentence. The rest was just very painful filler.

For example, here is the first sentence of chapter 5:

"To a New Englander, the northern hardwoods' annual shedding of their chlorophyll was not precisely the inauguration of beauty, the ecstatic cacophony of landscape-induced endorphins, that is was to the gaping outsider; rather, this predictable explosion of wild reds and speckled oranges, staunch evergreens and punctuations of yellow running the hillsides in their stripes and patches, was a starting pistol for the brief season in which substantial money might just possibly get made."

Less is more. How about advancing the plot or telling us about a character? The author's bio says she's a poet, and apparently has taken license to bore the hell out of her reader.

There is an interesting idea in this book (as with most of her others) but it is buried under her inability to reign it in (for example, her protagonist stops while carrying a baby into a police station to look in a mirror and comment on her own large nose. This pales in comparison to the long-winded discussion of a doll she owned as a child and lost and other "background" that I am sure the author thinks "fleshes out" her characters but just makes these books a painful mess).
Profile Image for Sara.
Author 1 book946 followers
May 26, 2015
Naomi Roth is jogging beside the Sabbathday River and finds a dead baby face down in the water. She pulls it out, wraps it in a handmade sampler and carries it to the police station. Thus begins a mystery that shows up the worst of a small town full of prejudices and exclusion.

I do not generally read modern mysteries. For the most part they leave me cold or I find them predictable. This book, however, was more about the psychology of the characters to me, with the mystery hanging out there like an extra bonus wanting to be solved as well. At times it felt excessively bleak and the townspeople a little over-the-top in their lack of compassion or understanding, but this did serve to move the characters forward and explain some of their actions.

Korelitz held my interest and while I did suspect her final twist before it arrived, I did not feel that it distracted from my overall enjoyment of the book. Perhaps I will read one of her later books, since it is always nice to break from the routine and just get swept up into a "story" now and then.
Profile Image for Judy.
242 reviews
July 2, 2013
I don't know why but I usually shy away from mysteries. My friend Elaine recommended this one and I'm glad I tried it, as it had a hold on me from page 1, with Naomi out jogging and finding a baby floating in the river. Instead of calling the authorities, she wrapped the baby in one of her cooperative worker's hand-made alphabet linen samplers and brought the body to the police station where she found herself being interrogated. Naomi's considered an outsider, since she and her husband came to this small New Hampshire town not that many years ago. After their divorce Naomi stayed and started a business, marketing the handmade samplers and quilts made by local women, Heather Pratt being one of them. Making no attempt to hide her affair with a local married man, Heather was not part of the local women's clique. After giving birth to Polly, she further ostracized herself by breastfeeding Polly on the front porch of the local store. This situation set the scene for many more twists and turns, including a courtroom drama, forensic evidence, morally corrupt small town lawyers and policemen, and a second dead infant. Naomi's friend Judith is defending Heather who's on trial for the murder of two infants. Judith and Naomi share a Jewish heritage and during a Jewish holiday observation celebration the family members spend more time than I would have liked discussing the existence of God. I wanted to get back to reading about the trial. I found an explanation for the departure in the last few twists and turns of the story.
Profile Image for Jana Bouc.
870 reviews4 followers
November 9, 2009
One of the best legal/mystery books I've ever read. Very much character/psychology driven, with great plots twists some interesting philosophizing, and the best part: I'm almost to the end of the book and I still have no clue "who done it." I also really like that the three main characters, all women, are imperfect, especially the defendant who, unusual in this kind of book, is rather pathetic and even unlikable, making it even more mysterious.
Profile Image for Alaina Cyr.
126 reviews1 follower
December 20, 2018
I hope Korelitz got paid per word for this book because it's the only way I can justify the length of this book. The story is told in 5 parts: Parts 1 and 2 are told through Naomi and Heather (respectively), then Parts 3 and 4 retell most of their stories through the investigation and trial. You could remove most of Parts 1 & 2, or Parts 3 & 4 without consequence. I didnt need to be told the plot twice over. The story itself kept me hooked, if I was annoyed by the writing style.
Profile Image for Kelly.
972 reviews15 followers
April 30, 2024
First off, what a read!! It completely grabs you and won't let you go until the final outcome. This author does not write easy reads. Unfortunately, in this book, she had a bit too much going on. Yes, the Jewish"ness" mattered, but only in the ethnicity sense. We didn't need any of the religious debate. I did appreciate the commentary and the misogyny aspect, but given the ending, that certainly fell flat! Lastly, there was not one single likable character in the whole book. Even baby Polly was not likable, lol. Still, given all that, it was one heck of a read, and I will continue to devour her books.
Profile Image for Clark.
831 reviews26 followers
May 8, 2022
Probably 4-½ Stars is more like it. I have been meaning to read this author’s novels for a long time and was not disappointed.
Profile Image for Lora Shouse.
Author 1 book32 followers
October 19, 2018
There’s so much in here! The Sabbathday River is difficult to categorize. It is partly a murder mystery. Much of it is taken up with gripping courtroom drama. But it is mainly a story of friendship and not-friendship. The difficult choices of friendship, and the bad outcomes of not-friendship.

Though there are several sort-of-main characters, the most central is Naomi Roth. Ten years or so ago, she and her husband came as VISTA volunteers to Goddard Falls, a small town in New Hampshire. Daniel Roth sort of washed out trying to create a maple syrup co-operative in the town, but Naomi was more successful in creating a craft circle and then expanding that into a co-operative business selling quilts, hooked rugs, and embroidered pieces. Eventually, Daniel left to join a commune somewhere, but Naomi stayed.

But Naomi, a liberal New York Jew always felt out of place among the tight-lipped, conservative New Hampshire natives. To her mind, although they could gossip to each other, they never really seemed to talk in a heart-to-heart manner. And even as she managed her business and the women of the town came to the old mill she had converted for them to work in, she never felt that they accepted her.

So, when one day she notices what she thinks is a child’s doll in the river that runs near the road where she is jogging and pulls it out only to discover that it is actually a dead baby, it seems only natural that this should lead to further estrangement from the town.

As the sheriff and the district attorney are investigating the body, they are referred by about a dozen informants to a girl, Heather Pratt, who does embroidery for Naomi’s co-op. Heather has a child by a married man and has never made a secret of this, and the townspeople look down on her because of it. But it seems the townspeople shunned Heather her whole life, well before she became involved with the married man. Her mother left town as a young woman, got pregnant somewhere, and came back to leave Heather with her grandmother, who raised her. The mother then disappeared, never to be heard from again. Shortly after her daughter was born, Heather’s grandmother died.

Based, apparently on the consensus of the women of the town, Heather and her baby (about a year old at this point) are brought in for questioning. The district attorney goes out of his way to bully a confession out of her, twice refusing her requests for an attorney, among other things. At one point before finally confessing to putting the baby in the river, Heather tells a completely different tale of giving birth to a dead baby and leaving it in the mud of a pond behind her house. She asks the police to check out this story, but they refuse. Finally, the district attorney dictates the confession he wants, and she agrees to it and signs it, hoping she will be allowed to take her baby home. But of course, it doesn’t happen. At some point, Heather is asked if there is anyone she would like to take care of her baby, and she requests Naomi for the job.

About this time Naomi meets a new couple in town – New York Jews like herself. The woman, Judith, turns out to be a lawyer who is about to start working for the nearest public defender’s office. Naomi and Judith get along famously – finally Naomi has a friend she can relate to. She asks Judith to take up Heather’s case. Judith is reluctant to do so, but in the end, as it happens, she does wind up defending Heather.

When Naomi visits Heather in jail, before picking up baby Polly, Heather mentions the story of the dead baby in the pond to her. Naomi seriously doesn’t want to but finds herself compelled to go to Heather’s and check the pond anyway, and sure enough, she finds the other dead baby there. But far from exonerating Heather, this just leads the district attorney to concoct a bizarre story of ‘superfecundation’ which, he claims, led to Heather giving birth to twin babies with two different fathers (blood type evidence has indicated that Heather’s boyfriend was not likely to have been the father of the baby found in the river).

The long saga of the trial follows, and it is a thing of beauty to see how Judith demolishes the district attorney, who at first seems to be sure to win if only because of his own conviction that he is right. But during and after the trial other secrets are revealed. And some things that we would like to know we never find out.

Shortly before the end of the trial, Naomi attends a Passover seder with Judith and her family at their house. Even though none of them are particularly religious. This leads to one of the most intense and well-thought-out scenes in the whole book, which appears at first glance to have little to do with the main story. In it, Naomi gives an absolutely stunning indictment of the God of the Old Testament.
303 reviews1 follower
June 16, 2024
I don’t usually read mysteries, so I am not sure why I chose this. I did not like the wordiness of the author. Her writing was a bit quirky, but the plot was good for the most part. It was a bit contrived, but I kept reading to solve the mystery. Heather was a bit of an exaggeration. I am not sure there are actually any women as stupid as this, but there probably are. The prosecuting attorney was also a bit of an exaggeration. He did not do his job properly. I am not sure that happens too often, and I could not figure out a motive for why he might want to railroad this naive and stupid young woman. Nevertheless, I finished all 500+ pages.
2 reviews
September 21, 2021
I liked this book. Was alarmed by some of the attitudes, of some of the characters, Ashley Deacon. I thought Stephen Trask was after something, and was. Loved how true to herself Naomi was, even when put in situations she did not seek. Agreed with what the midwife and Pick had to say about child rearing and pregnancy. Loved the discussion about God, even as a non-Jewish person. The twists and turns in this book where kept very interested, I could hardly put the book down. Although, Ms Korelitz can be a bit too descriptive sometimes, I really do enjoy her books. Thanks.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
175 reviews
March 2, 2024
Science errors, unbelievable coincidences, too many needlessly detailed sex scenes that did not further the plot, and the author's glaring elitism (ALL of the small town characters were ignorant, bigoted, and entirely lacking in ambition).
Profile Image for William Harris.
651 reviews
December 28, 2024
Superb, small town New England crime/legal procedural with a compelling focal character (aside from the accused). Full of satisfying, surprising twists. Not as polished and seamless as a later novel like THE DEVIL AND WEBSTER—for instance, the defense lawyer’s family backstory, though plot relevant in the end, felt a bit clunky; likewise, the late, sizable chapter featuring a debate about faith, suffering, etc, while relevant, felt a bit forced and, occurring late in the novel, a tangent from the compelling courtroom drama. Otherwise, expertly written, compelling, credible—especially as far as small minded, subjective bias and failure to it as such. The parallels to SCARLET LETTER were not overdone, but quiet background—to the good of the novel.

“Propulsive” is the current buzzword, I think. Loved this book and love this author’s work.
251 reviews
September 10, 2023
This woman can WRITE!! This is the fourth book that I have read by Ms. Korelitz, and, as always , I am absolutely AMAZED at how much she puts in her books that educates, as well as entertains...and, as always, I find her books hard to put down. This one was one of her early works (1999), and is about a woman who is jogging and comes across a dead baby in The Sabbathday River; a local girl, who has been having an affair with a local married man and has had a child by him, is accused of murdering this baby, which she strongly denies. It is a story, also, of small-town gossip, and the people who live there. So beautifully written, the author carves out her characters strongly and tells her story with pathos and, when required, with humor. It's a beautiful book. Read it.
Profile Image for Connie Hess.
581 reviews4 followers
March 28, 2024
Jean Hanff Korelitz is an absolute genius.
This is her sixth work that I have read. It is powerful and you want to savor every word and digest it.
Naomi Roth discovers dead baby while running/jogging along the Sabbathday River.
A local young woman, Heather, who has had an open affair with a married man in a small, opinionated New Hampshire town, is blamed.
She is railroaded into a confession by an aggressive DA and after five months in jail, finally legally represented by Naomi's friend, Judith.
Get ready for some clever discoveries.
Profile Image for Alisa.
41 reviews
July 13, 2017
Good but not great. Like all of Korelitz's books, I found it slow to start but with a twist at the end that made me glad I kept reading. This is so obviously a modern day telling of the Scarlet Letter: Heather Pratt as Hester Prynne, Ashley DEACON as the minister with whom she has an affair. But I found the debate over morals, ethics, public breastfeeding, and feminism as relevant today as when it was written in 1999, or when it was set in the early 1980s.
Profile Image for Jeannette Ligget.
154 reviews1 follower
February 26, 2022
Maybe 3 1/2 stars, and certainly not as good as her later works (You Should Have Known and The Plot). I was distracted by this one being loosely based on The Scarlet Letter, the main characters having the same initials, the town’s citizens shunning the woman adulteress and her child, the trial and public humiliation. The story also got bogged down in spots - some of the trial testimony and a long debate during a Seder about faith in God and Judaism. However, it was still a good read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Courtney Mauzy.
528 reviews3 followers
February 4, 2023
Another paper back jewel found on the shelf at SBI. At first writing seemed excessively wordy but as novel developed it all flowed together for me. I loved for example the 10 - 15 page section devoted to the arguments for and against the reality of God which I found stimulating in themselves but which also were vital to conclusion of story. Courtroom scenes captivating. This is my first book by Korelitz and I think it was one of her first. I will read more from her.
112 reviews5 followers
February 9, 2021
Written in 1998, set in the early 1980s. You hope it couldn't happen now, but it probably does. A courtroom drama meets The Scarlet Letter. The ending, though disingenuous, really forces you to re-examine everything that came before.
Profile Image for Linda Brule.
60 reviews
September 17, 2022
FIRST BOOK I READ BY THIS AUTHOR THEN I READ EVERY ONE SHE HAS WRITTEN. JUST FINISHED THE LATECOMER, 5 STARS SECOND BEST AFTER SABBATHY DAY FOR ME. I LOVED SABBATHDAY BECASUE IT BROUGHT ME TO THIS AUTHOR.
647 reviews
June 12, 2023
A dead baby is found in the Sabbathday River, and the story follows the search for the killer. It's set in a small town that blames the "bad" girl. Most of the book is about the trial. I could see most of the answers coming in the book, so wasn't surprised by the outcome.
Profile Image for Diana.
546 reviews8 followers
June 22, 2024
Twisty and compelling but also really bloated by tangents on religion and really heavy handed moralizing and overwritten. Also Naomi is a bit of a cipher to spend so much time with in the book. The section from the pov of Heather was the most compelling and completely heartbreaking.
30 reviews1 follower
February 1, 2019
Decent mystery novel. The characters are largely unlikable, but the whodunnit aspect and tense legal drama later in the novel were (barely) worth reading through completion.
98 reviews
July 20, 2019
I really liked this book, however the ending is far fetched.
136 reviews
March 27, 2020
It took me quite awhile to engage in the characters, then hard to put down at the end. Reminds me of Chris Bohjalians style.
661 reviews
Read
September 28, 2020
Hard to get into but interesting story line in the end. A lot of things hard to believe.
50 reviews
October 2, 2020
Eh tries to be too many different stories for one book. The good parts are interesting the others too much to get through.
1,417 reviews5 followers
May 21, 2021
I read the number of pages this book should have been if it had been property edited and then gave up. Way too many words.
Profile Image for S.A..
Author 44 books94 followers
September 1, 2021
This book will leave you gasping for air.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 82 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.