“Once, the four stones, the Four Sisters, had stood tall on the headland, but Iris had only known them as they lay tumbled on their sides…”. Iris and her three sisters, Rose, Lily and the youngest, Daisy would go to the stones for thinking, for planning and for a feeling of belonging. It was their father who had uprooted the stones and, as local myth would have it, had cursed the land and the people by so doing.
This is an epic family saga, told on two timelines; the 1930s and present day. I found it gripping and affecting with characters who are sympathetic and very real. Buchanan writes vividly not just about the people she populates the story with and the times they live in, but as the story travels from Scotland to ‘Ceylon’ to Australia, her descriptive powers are outstanding in evoking a sense of place, from the mists and chill winds of Skara to the heavy fragrant heat of Ceylon to the choking, dusty savage heat of the Australian outback.
It’s a story of courage and resolve. When Iris’s father loses his business and the family becomes destitute, Iris promises her dying mother to find their elusive uncle Ralph so he can repay money he owes the family. Unfortunately he never replies to letters and, as far as they know, he lives in Ceylon. And so Iris embarks on a dangerous journey always with the intention of returning to Skara and her sisters. Disaster and tragedy follow and the sisters are scattered to the four winds. Will they ever be together again? Will Iris ever return to her belovéd Scotland?
In the present day we follow Roz. Following a terrible tragedy in her family, Roz flees Australia for London. Passing an antique bookstore one day, she sees an old painting of the Four Sisters standing stones which resonates with her and this is a pivotal moment in her story.
I loved this book and the characters in it. Her descriptions of Scotland, beautiful but wild and remote, resonated very much with me.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys excellent vivid writing and a gripping story with wonderful characters.
Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC for kindle. This is my honest review after a full read of the book.