The Keepers of the Lighthouse by Kaye Dobbie
Synopsis /
1882
Laura Webster and her father are the stalwart keepers of Benevolence Island Lighthouse, a desolate place stranded in the turbulent Bass Strait. When a raging storm wrecks a schooner just offshore, the few survivors take shelter with the Websters, awaiting rescue from the mainland. But some of the passengers have secrets that lead to dreadful consequences, the ripples of which echo far into the future.
2020
Nina and her team of volunteers arrive on Benevolence to work on repairs, with plans to open up the island to tourists. Also on the expedition, for reason of his own, is Jude Rawlins, a man Nina once loved. A man who once destroyed her.
But the idyllic location soon turns into a nightmare as random acts of sabotage leave them with no communication to the mainland and the sense of someone on the island who shouldn't be there.
The fingers of those secrets from the passengers lost long ago are reaching into the present, and Nina will never be the same again.
My Thoughts /
You know it’s going to be a good book when you can’t bear to put it down. A deeply engrossing historical story, with an irresistibly compelling contemporary thriller storyline.
I absolutely loved the setting of Kaye Dobbie’s latest book, The Keepers of the Lighthouse.
I don’t think I’ve done one of these in a while, so……
LET’S LEARN THINGS:
Lighthouses. Evolving from very humble beginnings, such as basic primitive flames to the towers and flashing lights we have today, lighthouses have come a very long way.
Their historic beginnings stretch right back to Egypt, where one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World was in fact a lighthouse. The first lighthouse in recorded history was Egypt’s Pharos of Alexandria. Built around 280 BC, the source of light was a huge open fire at its summit. As well as being the world’s first, it was also the tallest one ever built, standing a colossal 450 feet high.
In Medieval times, the lighting used was mainly burning wood, coal or torches out in the open. A little later oil lamps and candles were introduced.
With the onset of the ‘modern’ era, improvements in both the structure of the lighthouse as well as its lighting equipment began. This time-period saw the first construction of towers which were fully exposed to the open sea. While masonry and brick were the most widely used materials for construction; concrete and steel were also well suited for building and lent itself to more aesthetically pleasing designs.
Daymarks and Nightmarks make every lighthouse unique. The daymark is the paint colour and pattern on a lighthouse. The nightmark is a distinctive light pattern that is fixed and flashes - or rotates and flashes. Each distinctive daymark and nightmark can be seen from the sea and are used by sailors so they know where their ships are located along the coast.
TO THE STORY:
Free up your ‘to-do-list’, you’ll want plenty of uninterrupted reading time for this one.
A remote island lighthouse in the Bass Strait provides the setting for this dual timeline story, set in 1882 and 2020. In 1882 Laura Webster is living a rather unconventional life for a young woman. She lives with her father, stepmother, and half-brother on Benevolence Island, where Laura’s father Leo mans and maintains the lighthouse. Ever since Laura can remember, she has loved being her father’s assistant. One evening, when a violent storm leads to a boat becoming shipwrecked on the nearby coral reef and breaking apart, Laura and Leo help rescue the survivors.
In 2020 the lighthouse is now no longer manned, and Benevolence Island is treated largely as a wildlife reserve. Nina Robinson and a small group of volunteers arrive on the Island to undertake restoration work on some of the old lighthouse cottages. This work will make it possible for the area to function effectively as a place for tourism and wildlife conservation. It’s critical this job goes smoothly. Workwise, Nina has made a few errors of judgment lately, so there is a lot riding on the outcome of this job. The are dangerous secrets which lay buried in this Island’s history, which find their way bubbling to the surface in this modern timeline.
I don’t want to give too much away, but I can tell you that both timelines are equally interesting, which was a refreshing anomaly for this reader. In both time periods, the characters are endearing and compassionate and I became totally absorbed in the action within each. Although it took a little time for the link between the two to become obvious (or maybe that was just me!) that connection once revealed was brilliantly written and well worth the wait.