by Michael Crummy
This book has been getting a lot of acclaim. It was on the short list for the Giller Prize.
This was a very interesting book. It is the story of two young children, living in a bay in Newfoundland who are left orphaned and to fend for themselves when their parents die. The boy is 12 and the girl is younger.
The kids are really innocent and there is no one else around to help them or teach them. The girl doesn't have any idea what to do when she eventually gets her period. Sometimes they sleep together to keep warm... at times they engage in foreplay kind of activities not understanding what it is or why or that it might not be a good idea.
They work really hard and eke out a living, fishing and gardening and collecting berries. A supply ship comes once a year and the boy takes the salted fish harvest to the ship as his father did before. They get some supplies of flower, salt, etc. The supply ship people are concerned about whether they will survive but the boy insists they will try for a year or two
The children buried their parents at sea, a young sister died and she is buried near the family garden. The young girl was around when the baby was born and later hears her mother say she would like to kill herself (post-partum depression). The girl is traumatized by what she saw her mother suffer in the birth. The young girl talks to her sister often.
They have a number of strange adventures... they see a ship stranded in the ice one day. When they go to it they find out all are dead on board, the boy discovers evidence of cannibalism but doesn't tell his sister about this. They take some wood, clothing and other supplies from the ship and take it back to their house.
On another occasion the boy gets ill and they the girl gets very ill. The boy feels she will die but through some chance of fate a ship arrives and a man and woman help to nurse the girl back to health. The man also shows the boy how to use his father's gone to shoot animals and to set traps for animals.
Later another ship arrives, seeking wood for a replacement mast. The leader and his men stay with the boy and girl for a time The crew are quite raunchy, the leader regales the girl with stories of the many countries he has visited. At times the girl and this man spend some time together and the crew suggest they are having sex.... they don't
After they leave the boy and girl go back to their usual lives but one day the boy is almost drowned when a storm comes up when he is fishing. He survives and and as the girl is trying to warm him up they end up having sex.... they have no idea where a baby comes from. The girl thinks there can be virgin births, the boy thinks it might be the boat leader's. As the book ends we learn that the baby girl is told the boy is her uncle.
This was a very interesting story, the language, the descriptions of life at the time, etc. and the portrayal of the two young ones was almost like something from the bible.... Adam and Eve.
This was a beautiful but sad book, powerful and gentle, kind and brutal at times. Very impressive and memorable.
Saturday, 18 January 2020
The Face of a Stranger
by Anne Perry
This is the first in the William Monk series by this author. It is about William Monk, a police detective. The story opens with Monk being in hospital after being injured in a carriage accident. He has lost his memory.
A police officer comes to see him and he does not recall he is a police officer, he thinks he is a criminal. Eventually he recovers enough to go back to work but his memory is still weak. His boss treats him with disdain, accusing him of being aggressive, egotistical, only interested in progressing in his career. Monk is very disturbed to see himself characterized in this manner and fears it might be true. The boss assigns him a young assistant and tells him to solve a high profile case that was being investigated by another officer.
A man of a wealthy family has been found viciously beaten in his apartment. Monk first of all goes to the north of England to meet a sister he doesn't remember. As he meets the family of the dead man and people who knew the young man they all say that he was liked by everyone... if so why was he murdered. Monk sees a cane in the umbrella stand at the man's house and it seems to be familiar to him but why.
The caretaker of the building admits seeing someone enter the building on the night of the murder but the guest went to visit a different tenant.
As the story progresses Monk comes to realize that he visited the dead man on the night he died and he fears that he may be a murderer although he can't imagine why he would do it.
Eventually he figures out that the man's brother murdered him in frustration because the young man was accumulating debts and possibly involved with a financial scam that caused families harm and shame.
The book mentions the inheritance rules in England and the class difference issues. The wealthy people are reluctant to talk to Monk as they consider themselves to be much better than him.
It was an interesting story... I am looking forward to reading the next one in the series to see if he recovers his full memory.
This is the first in the William Monk series by this author. It is about William Monk, a police detective. The story opens with Monk being in hospital after being injured in a carriage accident. He has lost his memory.
A police officer comes to see him and he does not recall he is a police officer, he thinks he is a criminal. Eventually he recovers enough to go back to work but his memory is still weak. His boss treats him with disdain, accusing him of being aggressive, egotistical, only interested in progressing in his career. Monk is very disturbed to see himself characterized in this manner and fears it might be true. The boss assigns him a young assistant and tells him to solve a high profile case that was being investigated by another officer.
A man of a wealthy family has been found viciously beaten in his apartment. Monk first of all goes to the north of England to meet a sister he doesn't remember. As he meets the family of the dead man and people who knew the young man they all say that he was liked by everyone... if so why was he murdered. Monk sees a cane in the umbrella stand at the man's house and it seems to be familiar to him but why.
The caretaker of the building admits seeing someone enter the building on the night of the murder but the guest went to visit a different tenant.
As the story progresses Monk comes to realize that he visited the dead man on the night he died and he fears that he may be a murderer although he can't imagine why he would do it.
Eventually he figures out that the man's brother murdered him in frustration because the young man was accumulating debts and possibly involved with a financial scam that caused families harm and shame.
The book mentions the inheritance rules in England and the class difference issues. The wealthy people are reluctant to talk to Monk as they consider themselves to be much better than him.
It was an interesting story... I am looking forward to reading the next one in the series to see if he recovers his full memory.
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