Perdita is travelling around Lanzarote with her employer, a successful writer of children's books, who is scouting the island looking for material for one of her pirate stories. At the end of a dusty, rutted track they find so much more: an irresistible house, a chance encounter, a ghostly ship, danger and terror, a happy ending. The plot is fairly simple but there is an older story that occasionally surfaces and interweaves with the modern one and, as it turns out, a few red herrings. I started reading it again as soon as I had finished it, and was immediately struck by the many subtle hints and references to the older story that are so casually scattered that they only become meaningful on a second reading. That is the charm of a Mary Stewart book. You can speed through it for the story and the atmosphere, or you can take your time and come back when your return will be amply recompensed by these charming touches.
The heroine is typical Stewart: young, beautiful, capable, independent, athletic but, ultimately, very happy to find a man she can lean on and fall in love with. The supporting cast is small but well drawn and through their conversation, Stewart offers fascinating insights into the creative writing process. The romance aspect is minimal and more understated than usual, but realistic enough for anyone who believes in love at first sight.
Although it appeared as a short story in Redbook Magazine, this was never published as a book in the US or in paperback form anywhere, so the only available edition is the original hard-cover, a slim volume in sombre grey cloth and barely stretching to 96 pages. The novel is charming but really pared down and one can almost see the places where it could have been developed and fleshed out. Lady Stewart's next published work was the first of what later became the Arthurian series, and she wrote in an essay that she considers this as a “coda” to her previous novels and a “bridge” to “The Crystal Cave”. It is exquisite but I, for one, was left wishing for more!
I would probably recommend it to confirmed Mary Stewart aficionados and completists like myself. If you are new to this author, you may want to start with something like “Nine Coaches Waiting”, “Touch Not The Cat”, “The Ivy Tree”, her strong début novel “Madam, Will You Talk?” or the fabulous “This Rough Magic”.