From Publishers Weekly
Set in a coastal New England town caught up in the Prohibition-era rum-running trade, Tripp's second novel (after
Moon Tide) illuminates the period's dark underbelly as it explores a family forever changed by the allure of its precarious prosperity. Written from alternating perspectives, the book opens with a flashback to Noel Dowd's whaling days, nearly 60 years earlier, though the bulk of the story belongs to his willful and fiercely independent grandchildren, Bridge and Luce. The brother and sister share an unusually close relationship, approached only by the bond between Bridge and her grandfather. The siblings' relationship is put to the test as 18-year-old Bridge grows closer to Henry Vonniker, a former doctor shattered by the horrors of World War I, and Luce becomes embroiled with Honey Lyons, a local rum-running kingpin. Meanwhile, Noel, with the help of his former shipmate Rui, invests his entire savings in stocks, oblivious to the impending market collapse and the devastating depression that will sweep the nation. While Tripp's impressive research and attention to detail add to the story's heft, the creeping pace of her narrative can undermine the novel's passion and intensity. However, this restraint allows the reader ample time to savor Tripp's elegantly crafted characters, whose joys, sorrows and humanity far outweigh the excitement of a boat chase or the thrill of a romantic encounter.
(June) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.
In this story of a three-generation family in the late 1920s in a Massachusetts seacoast town, Tripp proves that she is no one-book wonder after her well-received debut
Moon Tide (2003). There the foreboding came from a pending hurricane; here it's human-made, from the stock-market crash and--mostly--from the effects of Prohibition. Widower Noel, once a whaler, now builds boats; his daughter, Cora, a widow, takes in laundry; and her son, Luce, a born risk taker, gives up his ice trade for rum running, enticing his sister, Bridge, to work some jobs with him. The current between Bridge and Henry Vonniker, a doctor so damaged by the world war that he now manages a mill, eventually brings them together, despite differences in age and class, before Bridge joins Luce on one last job. Tripp's spare language is particularly appropriate to this time and place; she finds verbs that etch themselves into a reader's memory--waves "scour" in, light "chaps" the surface of the ocean--and her plot unfolds with both surprises and what seems inevitable.
Michele LeberCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.