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Loading... The Innocents (2019)by Michael Crummey
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A story of hardship, survival, and love set. Ada is about 5 and her brother, Evered about nine when their little sister and both parents die leaving them orphaned on the remote coast of Newfoundland. Used to hard work and harsh conditions, they manage to survive using the skills they have learned from their parents. Once a year, a ship comes by with supplies that are traded with the salted fish they have caught. They survive by helping each other in the only way they know how. As they near their teenage years, emotions change. The author's portrayal of these times is so well done and done with such respect for his characters. A wonderful story and memorable one. The ending is just right. A very good read by a Canadian author. Survival, isolation and growing up quick are the themes in this book. Set in Newfoundland many (~150ish?) years ago, when each day was a struggle for survival. A story of siblings making due with what they were taught at a young age. Only knowing what happens on the cove, and the rest of the world a fairy tale they hear from the infrequent strangers arriving by a boat with their provisions for the year as well as to pay off their debts with the fish they collected over the summer. Very graphic at times, and occasionally inappropriate for some readers, but would definitely recommend, and will keep Michael Crummey as a go to author in the future. When Ada and Evered’s parent both die, they are still young. It’s the 19th century and they live in an isolated area in Newfoundland. They do what they can to survive. I listened to the audio. It was slow-moving and I couldn’t get interested, though the Newfoundland accents and phrases are fun. I missed much of what happened in the book, but I didn’t really care, either. I’m not sure how old the kids were when their parents died and not sure how old they were at the end of the book, either. It was a bit ugly as they became teenagers with no one else around, though. When I saw this book was nominated for a few awards, that explained it for me (my not liking it). no reviews | add a review
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"A novel about an orphaned brother and sister who must fend for themselves on a remote fishing outpost in the late 1800s"-- No library descriptions found. |
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This is a well-written book, chock-a-block with Newfoundland English (luckily I could access the Dictionary of Newfoundland Usage online), descriptive, well-researched. The story, however, was a hard one for me to read. I cringed at the desperation of the two lonely children, winced at threats to their well-being, was horrified when incest jutted its ugly head into the story. There were vivid passages about gutting and skinning animals, and I simply don't have the stomach for reading that.
A good book, but not one I'd recommend, then, because of how it made me feel. I like fiction to leave me feeling either content or interested or wanting to find out more of the story; sadly this book gave me none of that. It did, however, give me the pleasure of reading fine passages by a gifted writer, and I will try Michael Crummey's works again, but something less bloody and off-putting. ( )