I learned about this novel when reading a book of interviews of Canadian writers of historical fiction, and chose this one to read by Jane Urquhart because it was regarded as having lyrical prose and a compelling story. Indeed it is. The first few chapters are so beautifully written I read them a few times; the remainder of the novel is definitely absorbing but not as brilliant in its use of language, and certainly not as "magical" in its story.
From Library Journal's review: Like a heartbreakingly romantic ballad of hard times, unrequited love, and lamentation, Urquhart's third novel is an entrancing saga of a family who must leave Ireland for Canada during the potato famine of the 1840s. As a young girl in Ireland, Mary is taken "away" to the faeries after a young sailor whom she rescued dies in her arms. Although she does eventually marry and start a new life in the Canadian wilderness, Mary still hears the call of her sailor and finally leaves her family to live the rest of her life alone by a lake. Her daughter Eileen, in turn, falls in love with an Irish nationalist whose passion is only for his cause... Urquhart beguiles the reader with a cast of lovable eccentric characters in a wonderfully surreal world.... An extraordinary achievement.
From Library Journal's review: Like a heartbreakingly romantic ballad of hard times, unrequited love, and lamentation, Urquhart's third novel is an entrancing saga of a family who must leave Ireland for Canada during the potato famine of the 1840s. As a young girl in Ireland, Mary is taken "away" to the faeries after a young sailor whom she rescued dies in her arms. Although she does eventually marry and start a new life in the Canadian wilderness, Mary still hears the call of her sailor and finally leaves her family to live the rest of her life alone by a lake. Her daughter Eileen, in turn, falls in love with an Irish nationalist whose passion is only for his cause... Urquhart beguiles the reader with a cast of lovable eccentric characters in a wonderfully surreal world.... An extraordinary achievement.
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