3 Stars
This novel is set on Scatarie which I had never heard of but is a real island off the northeastern tip of Cape Breton Island.
The narrator is the ghost of Cara Murphy who died when she was fifteen in a shipwreck near the island. She tells the life stories of three people, Hardy, Sam and Mary Alice, all born on Christmas Day 1922. As the three grow up, they become inseparable, and their friendships bind them for the rest of their lives. We learn about the major events of their lives: marriages, births and deaths.
The title may refer to the narrator, but in many ways the book is about life on the island and the spirit of the place. There’s a very close-knit fishing community because people depend on each other. There is little comfort and few conveniences: no electricity, indoor plumbing, or running water, and only one telephone. Daily life on the isolated island is harsh and is described very realistically, though the beauty of the place is also emphasized. As time passes, changes come, especially to the fishing industry, so families move away. Mary Alice talks about “watching our lifeblood seep away.” In fact I came to learn that Scatarie was inhabited for over 300 years as a fishing station until residents were resettled to the mainland in the mid-1960s. The island is now a protected wilderness area.
The three main characters emerge with distinct personalities. I think that Mary Alice is the type of feisty character that would appeal to young readers who enjoy books like Anne of Green Gables. I did have some difficulties with Mary Alice, however. She is obviously attracted to one man but then, without ever showing any romantic interest in another man, says she loves the latter and immediately agrees to marry him.
I found the writing style unpolished. There are a lot of minor characters, mostly relatives of the three main characters, who appear to move the plot along and then disappear. It’s almost impossible to remember who is who. Then there are irrelevant scenes or scenes which have unnecessary details. For instance, do the logistics of each visit to Cape Breton need to be given: this character picked up this person and this character lent a vehicle and this character offered a place to stay? Parts of the narrative are predictable; for example, when Stuart is introduced and his attention to Sam’s wife is described, the narrative arc is totally foreseeable.
One element I really enjoyed is the story of Jane, the war bride. She comes to Scatarie from London with no real idea of what life is like on the island. What she sees upon her arrival is a great shock to her, and I imagine what many war brides faced must have been equally difficult. Of course the women of the community help her, and Jane realizes that “’the island is the best place in the world’” because she had friends and family on Scatarie when she had “’nobody in one of the most populated cities in the world.’”
I wasn’t convinced that the perspective of a spirit was needed, but the author seems to want to comfort the reader by claiming that the spirits of loved ones are around if one is open to them; there is no death: “no loss of life among you, only the ship.” Cara offers lessons to the living: “Life can be cruel and magnificent. You must resolve that both realities exist in the living realm” and “That is the paramount canon here. Forgiveness. Of others, but mostly of your own heart” and “Every little soul needs a friend. That’s a founding principle, a doctrine of this afterlife. No one can get through life or death alone” and “Are you aware of what a few kind words can do for a person? All of us are capable if we have a mind to.”
I did not find this to be one of Lesley Crewe’s finest novels, but it will appeal to readers who like an emotional story with both heart-breaking and heartwarming moments.






