Alice Thornton’s family history is filled with tormented women and a dark, inexplicable connection to the lake around desolate Bear Island in New Hampshire. Alice, abandoned at birth and adopted by a couple with troubles of their own, grows up unaware of her roots. Throughout her life, however, she never loses her sense of loss, and searching; she unwisely chooses one inappropriate lover after another, never quite finding what she hopes to. Only when Alice finally begins to discover the pieces of her past does her own search for love, acceptance, and happiness roar to life; and she will ultimately be drawn back to the lake that claimed so many of her ancestors.
With shifting points of view that take us from 1910 through 1994 and reveal the tumultuous paths of Alice’s aunt Signe, grandmother Sophie, adoptive mother Clara, and Alice herself, Lake People quietly and powerfully reveals the intensity of family connections, even among family we barely know; the pull of our homeland; and the impossibility of outrunning what, long ago, was slated to be our destiny.
*Review was originally written for the San Francisco Book Review. I received this book in exchange for an honest review.