I have learned that if I don't like the first two pages of a book I will never like it. I thought it would be the same with this book because it was so boring, nothing was happening, not even up to maybe the first 100 pages. So, why didn't I quit like I would otherwise? Well, I love the ocean and wanted to read a book on village life in another country. I am also reading books around the world and had looked for one set in Newfoundland. But after 25 pages I did put it down; a week later I picked it up again. I did this over and over. At `100 pages or so I had it in my hands and almost put it in my bag of books to take to the library sale. For some nagging reason I set it back in my read pile. Then a few days later, I began wondering how Sweetland, the main character of the story, was doing.
Moses Sweetland is a 70 year old man who lives on an island off the coast of Newfoundland with friends, family and other residents. Many on the island had already left to find jobs elsewhere, leaving just a few residents, mainly the elderly and others who either had jobs on the island or couldn't work.
The government wanted to pay them all to leave the island because they didn't want the expense of bringing supplies to so few people. But first, all of the villagers had to sign the agreement or the government wouldn't pay any of the them. Sweetland wouldn't sign. Of course not. That's the story. His act of defiance angered some in the village while others just tried to coerce him into signing. He even received threats. And all of this slow action is taking place in the first 100 pages that I was struggling through. Yet in that time you get to know the people, you get to know Sweetland, and I believe that was the purpose of Crummey's taking so long to pick up the pace. And maybe nothing really doesn't happen in a small village until someone throws in a monkey wrench. Sweetland did just that.
I had a read a review of this book and learned that after everyone leaves the island, after Sweetland had signed the papers, he goes back to live there by himself.That was almost a spoiler to me, and actually it was, because I thought, well, that's all folks. No. That wasn't all. There is yet another 200 or more pages left.
So next we have Someone who commits suicide, or so they think. Sweetland begins preparing to stay on the island without the villagers or the government realizing what he is doing. He is storing up food, planting a garden, and getting his gear ready. Then when he is alone on the island he is having flashbacks of his life and conversations with people who had lived there. We follow him as he fishes, gets lost in the fog, hunts rabbits, preserves food, feels so lonely that he begins listening more to his radio, a radio that only has batteries and so will soon die. Then he hears music in the church, feels something running past him in the dark, breaks into vacant homes looking for supplies, stops by the empty shops, finds a barge but not all in that order. The excitement continued thoughout the book. I realized soon enough that was reading an adventure/ survival book--my favorite kind of book.
I finished the book and put it on my book shelf to be saved along with the other few good books that I keep and hope to read again when I have forgotten the stories.
Alone on the island:
"The weather had turned for fall and even the warmest days had an edge to them, the wind cold enough to warrant a jacket. The dark coming earlier each evening, and he was often surprised to turn from the film of light on the horizon to see the cover already settled into night. The abandoned buildings huddle and lifeless, their windows black. A gaudy rash of stars about them."
"Most days there was nothing else to see. He felt nearly invisible up there (in the lighthouse) and he didn't mind the feeling as a rule, though now and again he was blindsided by an apocalyptic loneliness he was afraid he might be unequal to."
"He caught a blur (at the cemetery) of movement outside the circumference of the light then, a shadowed scurry that made him swing around in the dark. His heartbeat in his ears."
"Sweetland kept his eyes on it (the moon) as he made his way along the path and was almost among the houses before he saw the light in Queenie Coffin's window. He stopped still, watching the flow of the dull yellow square. He blinked quickly three or four times. He scanned along the Church Side hills, out as far as the point where he saw nothing but the habitual black. And when he turned his eyes back to Queenie's house the window was dark."
Crummey has won awards for his writings. He is also a poet, which I feel makes his writing beautiful, brilliant, and lyrical. I felt that I was living on the island with him, with the people, and I didn't want them to leave the island, but I was also glad for the adventure that followed Sweetland's return to an island devoid of the residents.
Michael Crummey's next book, "Galore" has won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best Book, Caribbean & Canada and the Canadian Authors Association Literary Award; Finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Thomas Head Raddall Atlantic Book Award, and the Winterset Award. It also takes place in a small fishing village. I have just purchased it.