The McClouds are the last family with children on a tiny island in the Scottish Hebrides. Eilean Fior’s population has been declining steadily for years, and as Andrew Ladd’s novel begins, the only new inhabitants are rats.
Owners of a guesthouse popular with summer tourists, George and Maureen McCloud cling to their livelihood despite the portents of gloom. But do they and their three children have any more control over their fate than the rats which can be systematically trapped and removed?
Life on Eilean Fior may once have been idyllic, but in 1980 chances for happiness are shrinking along with opportunities and the number of residents. The isolation in no way prepares the young McClouds for the outside world, especially their first harsh introduction to it, the totally alien and brutal environment of boarding school. Yet all will ultimately be forced to choose their future: shall it be the unknown possibilities on the far shore or returning home to work in the guesthouse and care for their parents as they age? Will they be guided by self-interest, self-preservation, or guilt?
Maureen, hardly a nurturing mother, offers little encouragement in the life decisions of Barry, Flora, and Trevor. Her interactions with her children are generally sharp, demanding, and unsympathetic, yet when one chooses to leave the island, she is devastated --and expresses it by yelling that she won’t allow such a decision. Or is she jealous? Certainly the marriage she so desperately wanted has its share of staleness and drudgery.
And George? A decent and understanding if sometimes oblivious father, he was content to return to the island after college to take over the guesthouse from his parents, spends hours with his cryptic crosswords, and caters to his wife without complaint.
In many ways the McClouds’ story is reminiscent of those of numerous families: one adult who feels stuck in a monotonous life, one who is quite happy with it, and offspring who can’t get the hell out of Dodge fast enough and those who are painfully torn about their own futures and their debt to their parents. By setting this tale on a dying island the author heightens all of these elements.
“What Ends” is beautifully told, profoundly sad, very human. We’re never told everything about any given character, but with the glimpses we have of each of the five McClouds over 20 years, their actions and their thoughts, we come to know and understand them. We may not quite like them -- but liking them doesn’t really seem to be the point.
My only quibble is the placement of one of the four sections out of chronological order, especially since it wasn’t a typical flashback. There may have been a grand purpose for this, but I was just confused by it. Otherwise, this would have been a clear five-star book for me.