Malachy Tallack makes the ordinary extraordinary with his beautiful, lyrical, understated prose that brings alive the isolated windswept landscape of Shetland and the lives of 2 generations of the Paton family, interspersed with handwritten songs, though these can be a little hard to read on kindle. Sonny is working on a whaling ship in the South Atlantic in 1957, an ugly, brutal, harrowing job, making the decision to leave the life after living through a vicious storm. He returns home, asks Kathleen to marry him, the couple living with her Uncle Tom, at his home, Hamar, where their son, Jack is born. In the dual timelines, we follow glimpses of the family through the years, and in the present, we observe 62 year old Jack's life as it is thrown out of kilter with the mysterious gift of a kitten. He names it Loretta, as to his surprise, it weaves it way slowly and surely into his life.
Jack is a loner, his parents were lost at sea, he is unambitious, time means more to him than money, and he sees life through the lens of country music and songs. A shy and introverted child, he came alive listening to the music, the be and end all, teaching himself to play the guitar. Jack builds a rich interior musical landscape where the island, and his home, stuffed to the gills with albums, is composed entirely of country music. Jack writes and sings his own songs, performances no one else is privy to, keeping him company, ambling from note to note, idea to idea, asking deep philosophical questions of the genre, the singers, the magic of the songs. Through song, Jack experiences a rich vibrant. life beyond his immediate surroundings, he has been many people, done great things, experienced great loves, lost and found
Loretta is the trigger that shakes everything, opening up his world, as he bonds with neighbours, single mother Sarah and her 8 year old daughter, Vaila, besotted with the kitten, and becoming close to Jack too. This is a gripping read that held me entranced from start to finish, a lonely yet content Jack, sure with some regrets and feelings of nostalgia, having lived in one home all his life, yet inhabited by the joys, heartbreak and sorrows of country music. Loretta, Vaila, and Sarah open his life up further, although this is not without its challenges. It was fascinating to learn, from the author notes at the end, that a disproportionate number of Atlantic whalers came from Shetland, presumably because of the poverty and lack of other opportunites, which is to change through time.
This is a brilliant, emotionally affecting read that will stay with me for some time to come, the atmospheric location of Shetland, Jack, and his family, Vaila, a novel that I simply cannot recommend highly enough. I have no doubt it will do well on publication. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC,