There is only one way to read and give justice to this novel, and that is to give yourself up to its fairytale, dreamlike quality. Marvellous is an 89-year old woman, the daughter of a mermaid, who has lived most of her days in a caravan on a remote Cornish creek. Meanwhile on the battle front of France a soldier, Drake, comes across a dying comrade who asks him to deliver a last letter home to his father in England. And Drake who, having lived his life with the sense of loss that came from never knowing his father, keeps his promise. In doing so he comes across Marvellous and the pair strike up an unlikely, but inevitable, friendship.
In 1947 Drake eventually comes to live in a shack by the shore of the creek and Peace - a baker who finds that emotions like fear, grief, love when kneading her dough all result in differing tastes of bread - arrives in the village and that is where the story starts to come together. Drake, whose heart is broken, is slowly healed by his extraordinary friendship with Marvellous and the stories she weaves of her past. "Stories, like nature, tend not to end, said Marvellous." There is strong theme of the cycle of life; love, death and grief are all relived throughout the novel.
It is a book of magical realism, beautifully penned, but I have to confess I found it hard to engage with until three quarters of the way through when the characters of Marvellous, Drake and Peace converge. Then I finally succumbed to the novel's charm, as Winman weaves the threads of the stories together. I can't compare it to its award-winning precursor When God was a Rabbit as, I have to admit, that's still lying on my 'to be read' pile but I am keen now to get round to it and discover more of Winman's writing.
Whilst A Year of Marvellous Ways has an enjoyable slow, meandering pace of a story unwinding, something that takes a little getting used to is the lack of speech marks; instead there are just descriptions of speech. However, once you have got over this, and gotten used to the style of writing, this novel is captivating. It's a book that can, and probably should, be read in one sitting, allowing yourself to float away into the dreamlike world Winman creates. It's a book about the beauty and inevitability of life in all its wonders and tragedy; the magic in life and what truly matters.
There is a touching scene when we see Marvellous, not from the viewpoint of her soul, but how others in the world see her, a shabbily dressed, eccentric old woman with hair awry, sitting in a tea shop. Drake feels angry at the people around her for seeing her through such shallow eyes. What matters, he understands, is what lies inside her - there is beauty and magic there - and that is how we all should be judged.