Showing posts with label lighthouses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lighthouses. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

The Light Between OceansThe Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve always been drawn to stories of lighthouses and this one did not disappoint me! Another story of love, loyalty, and loss – this time set on a small island, Janus Rock, nearly a hundred miles off the coast of Australia. The only inhabitant, Tom Sherbourne, fresh from the horrific memories of war on the Western Front, has returned as lightkeeper with his new bride Isabel. Isabel loves the lonely island as much as Tom and revels its beauty, but after two miscarriages and a stillborn birth, the grieving Izzy is not the same woman who arrived. When a boat washes up on the beach with a man who no longer breathes and a crying baby, Izzy comes alive, claims the child as her own and calls her Lucy. Tom is beside him with what to do, even as he falls in love with the tiny Lucy, as he records a daily journal of all events on the island. With each passing day his dread escalates - especially since shore leave, which comes only every three years, will soon be upon them. Unknown to them, back on the coast, a woman named Hannah has never given up hope that her baby is still alive.

The Light Between Oceans is M.L. Stedman’s very first novel and is a winner. Descriptions of the lovely, lonely island are inspiring and I googled Janus Rock to see if it was for real! (alas it is not, but I can pretend) The character of Tom, loyal to his wife, but torn between right and wrong, honesty and love will make you understand his pain and dilemma. Although I was upset with Izzy’s crossover into belief that Lucy was really hers without much of a qualm, I’ve never dealt with her excruciating losses. A very deep book that will leave you with conflicting thoughts for days after.


From an exclusive interview with M.L.Stedman:
Is Janus Rock real? If not, what inspired this place and does the name "Janus" have any significance?
Janus Rock is a figment of my imagination (I hate to disappoint any would-be visitors…). It just appeared as part of the story, and at some stage I realized it was located at the point where the Indian Ocean and the Great Southern Ocean meet.
The name is taken from Janus, the Roman god who has two faces looking out in opposite directions. The doors of his temple in the Roman Forum were open in times of war and closed in times of peace. He stands for beginnings and transitions, so his image is often found on doorways and thresholds. Janus's two faces are a literal reminder of one of the main themes of the book, namely that there is more than one way of looking at things.
In contrast to Tom and Isabel when they make their fateful decision on the eponymous island, Janus can see the past and the future. In some ways, too, the figure is symbolic of Lucy, who effectively has two lives in two worlds. It also ties in with the motif of division that runs through the book, particularly when Tom and Isabel can no longer see eye to eye.



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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

One Summer

One SummerOne Summer by David Baldacci

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


David Baldacci does a 180 and writes the story of the Armstrong family - Jack, who is dying of a rare form of cancer and only wants to live through Christmas, his devoted wife Lizzie, who is caring for him at home, teenage daughter Mikki, who can't deal with Jack's illness, 12 year old son Cory, and Jack Jr. - still a toddler and unaware of his dad's impending death. As Jack's body continues to weaken, Christmas Eve arrives - but with more tragedy. Lizzie, on a last minute trip in her van to the pharmacy for Jack's meds, is hit and killed when she runs a red light - broadsided by a snowplow. In despair, Jack prepares to die and allows Bonnie, Lizzie's mom, to take his three children and farm them out to different family members. Alone in a hospice unit all Jack has left is his memories, but then the unthinkable happens - a miracle for Jack. He begins to slowly regain his strength. Although the doctors advise Jack that it's just temporary - no one recovers from the unnamed illness - Jack struggles to recover his life and begins by reclaiming his children and moving back to the beloved childhood home of Lizzie's on the ocean.


Labeled sappy by some readers, One Summer is still a good read - an emotional roller coaster and you will cheer for Jack, a veteran of Afghanistan an Iraq. Fans of Nicholas Sparks and Richard Paul Evans will enjoy this novel. Devoted, die hard fans of his Camel Club mystery thrillers may not be so thrilled....



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