Since there is no storyline info here this is from the cover:
It is 1958 and the Sputnik satellite has taken a dog up into space; back on earth, five-year-old Andy has a new sister, Elaine – a baby who, his father insists, is ‘not quite all there’. While his parents argue over whether or not to send Elaine away, Andy sleeps beside her cot each night, keeping guard and watching as his mother – once an ambitious, energetic nurse – twists away into her private, suffocating sadness.
Knots keep treasures safe, Andy’s rope-maker grandfather tells him, and, as he listens to stories of the great Harry Houdini, Andy learns the Carrick Bend, the Midshipman’s Hitch and the Monkey’s Fist. Then a young painter, hired to decorate the family’s house, seems to call Andy’s mother back from the grief in which she is lost. But one day, at The Siding – the old railway carriage that serves as the family’s seaside retreat – Andy is left in charge of his baby sister on a wind-chopped beach, where he discovers that not all treasures can be kept safe for ever.
Three decades later Andrew returns from self-imposed exile to The Siding, the place where his life first unravelled. Looking back on the broken strands of his childhood, he tries, at last, to weave them together, aided by his grandfather’s copy of The Ashley Book of Knots and the arrival of a wild-haired, tango-dancing sculptor – a woman with her own ideas about making peace with the past.
Okay my review. I really liked this book, the prose reminded me a great deal of Monica Wood's writing - which I adore. I love how the author expects alot from her readers. She gives us the story in three narratives that can change on one page - this could frustrate some readers but I lapped it up! The most interesting story for me was certainly that of the mother, Helen. I also enjoyed Andy as a boy but as an adult I just found him to be a self-indulgent, insensitive pain in the butt. There is an interesting little twist at the end regarding some of the family where I was stunned as I had completely assumed something else had gone on.
A really enjoyable read for me, challenging and mysterious with beautiful stark prose.