Zusammenfassung
Zusammenfassung
The award-winning novel that's "a foreboding, compelling story of humanity's uneasy relationship with nature and with each other . . . a gripping read" ( St. Louis Post-Dispatch ).
It has been twenty years since Lucie Bowen left the islands--when the May Day Quake shattered thousands of lives; when Lucie's father disappeared in an explosion at the Marrow Island oil refinery, a tragedy that destroyed the island's ecosystem; and when Lucie and her best friend, Katie, were just Puget Sound children hoping to survive. Now, Katie writes with strange and miraculous news. Marrow Island is no longer uninhabitable and no longer abandoned. She is part of a community that has managed to conjure life again from Marrow's soil. Lucie returns. Her journalist instincts tell her there's more to this mysterious "Colony" and their charismatic leader--a former nun with an all-consuming plan--than its members want her to know. As she uncovers their secrets, will Lucie endanger more than their mission? And what price will she pay for the truth?
"Eerie and intriguing . . . captivates in the first few pages and delivers a gripping, compelling story throughout."-- Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
"Smith's excellent command of language gives life to arresting characters and their creepy surroundings, keeping the suspense in this dark environmental thriller running high."-- Elle
"This alluring novel explores the darkness of love, how it can cajole you into danger or tip your actions toward cruelty. Clean but intoxicating writing . . . Ambitious."-- The New York Times Book Review
"Transporting."-- Vanity Fair
"Beautifully wrought."-- O, The Oprah Magazine
"Engrossing and atmospheric, a thorny meditation on environmental responsibility with a big haunted heart."-- Miami Herald
Rezensionen (2)
New York Review of Books-Rezension
At a birthday dinner midway through "Marrow Island," the main character, Lucie Bowen, a well-meaning but fragile journalist, shares fancy burgers and craft beers with her park ranger boyfriend. "It's not unromantic; we're interested in the same things: ecosystems and how humans use and interact with them," she says. But Lucie's true romance is with Katie, her childhood friend, who has joined a mysterious colony on an island off the coast of Seattle. The place was devastated in 1993 by a massive earthquake; tremors ignited an oil refinery, killing Lucie's father and soaking the soil in toxic chemicals. A secretive community of farmers, activists and apostate nuns seeks to "remediate" the land. This alluring novel explores the darkness of love, how it can cajole you into danger or tip your actions toward cruelty. Clean but intoxicating writing meets an increasingly dreamlike and disjointed plot. By the ambitious last scene - a Tarantino-esque revenge fantasy, from Mother Nature's perspective, and a departure from the sterilized language of "ecosystems and how humans use and interact with them" - the world of craft beers and burgers feels far away. KATY WALDMAN is Slate's words correspondent.
Library Journal-Rezension
As Smith imagines in her wrenching and limpidly written second novel (after -Glaciers), Orwell and Marrow islands are far enough from the rest of Washington's San Juans to be practically in Canadian waters and are linked not just by geography but also by tragedy. An earthquake 20 years ago destroyed Marrow Island's refinery, leaving several workers dead, including narrator Lucie's father, and flame retardants and oil-dispersing chemicals have seeped into the island's soil, making the groundwater toxic. Yet Lucie has returned to the family cabin on nearby, still-inhabited Orwell, possibly to settle there but certainly to visit long-lost friend Katie, who lives in a utopian colony on Marrow intent on reclaiming the land. The novel moves between events immediately before and several years after the colonists gravely threaten Lucie, and the slow unfolding of what happened creates palpable tension. Smith is excellent at showing the terrible things people can do for the sake of their ideals, though not all readers will be persuaded, despite Lucie's strong sense of loyalty and emotionally confused past, that she would feel less angry than almost nobly concerned about those who nearly killed her. VERDICT A near-perfect read but for the frustrating sense that our heroine concedes too much. [See Prepub Alert, 11/30/15.]-Barbara -Hoffert, Library Journal © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.