Sunday Salon & The Light Between Oceans

The Sunday Salon.com

Christmas is almost here, so Merry Christmas everyone! We finally made it to California to spend the holiday with my folks after our usual three hour flight turned into 24 hours of travel. We were stuck in airports awaiting the passing of a snowstorm in Salt Lake City. Holy Moly, I thought we’d never make it. But thanks to the pilot and crew who landed us at LAX at 3:15 a.m. and to a fast cab driver who hurried us into the remaining night. Thanks as well to Will Schwalbe’s engaging book “The End of Your Life Book Club,” which held my interest during a very trying long day.

Now that I’m here, I have a cold and will likely spend the rest of the week coughing and gulping down cold medicine. But man it’s great to be here. I’m undeterred and grateful at this time of year, just a little weary from this head-cold-fever-bug thing. Perhaps eggnog will lessen the effects.

Meanwhile, this week I finished the enjoyable 2012 novel “The Light Between Oceans” by M.L. Stedman. It takes place in the 1920s at an isolated lighthouse on Janus Rock, an island off the coast of Western Australia.There, the lighthouse keeper (Tom) and his young wife (Isabel) come to find a baby that washes up in a rowboat with a body. But instead of reporting it, they decide to raise the child as their own, which ends up having tough consequences down the line for everyone involved.

The book, you could say, is a morality play about a couple that makes a choice that is ethically wrong but they do it for sympathetic reasons, namely that they are unable to have children and they believe the baby’s parents are deceased. They so want a baby, too! The wife believes the baby is a gift from God. Both have suffered so much — the husband through WWI and the wife through three miscarriages. You truly feel for them, but you feel queasy at the same time. And the more you read “The Light Between Oceans,” the queasier things get.

The heart-rending novel is cleverly done, and the descriptions of living at the isolated lighthouse and the characters are vividly portrayed. Who can resist a good lighthouse story? (Not I). It was hard to believe that this is M.L. Stedman’s first novel; it’s very well imagined and constructed. You don’t know for a long while how things will play out. I was quite consumed by “The Light Between Oceans” and will look for what the author writes next. My only criticism perhaps is that the ending got a wee bit crazy with the drama and went on a bit too much. But still I throughly enjoyed the novel, especially the lighthouse parts and living on Janus Rock. It very slightly reminded me of Stephen King’s “The Shining” and what happens when a troubled person goes to a very isolated place for too long a time. As a reader, you know things will likely not turn out all too well.

What about you — have you read this one? And what did you think of it? What are you reading this Christmas? I hope you enjoy it and have a very merry holiday!

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6 Responses to Sunday Salon & The Light Between Oceans

  1. Bryan G. Robinson says:

    I haven’t read that one and as I mostly read crime and mystery fiction, I doubt I’ll get to it, but it does sound good. I’ll have to recommend it to my wife. As for what I’m reading this Christmas, this afternoon after catching up on Sunday Salon posts, I plan on digging into a little Aimless Love, a collection of poems by Billy Collins and then later in the week the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series. After that, who knows? 🙂

  2. Barbara Bartels says:

    My husband and I are just recovering — or we keep thinking we are — from a yucky cold. I’m sick of coughing, sick of being sick. So I sympathize. We don’t really have to do anything but go to our son’s house on Christmas day so the pressure is really off. We did miss a few holiday parties.
    Haven’t read the lighthouse book. Right now I have several books lined up, so I’m not putting new ones on the TBR list, but it sounds good.

    • SGW says:

      Hope you get better soon, Barbara. I think I might get some antibiotics. Otherwise I fear this cold will last for a month. Enjoy your holidays. There seems to be too much to read these days.

  3. Laurel-Rain Snow says:

    I have wondered about this one…I like the sound of it, but having never read this author, I was curious about how engaging the writing would be. So now that I’ve read your take on it, I’m in. And I love lighthouses!

    Thanks for visiting my blog.

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