From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. British travel writer Harding (
Tranquebar: A Season in South India) makes her fiction debut with this slim, shimmering historical. In 1616, the whaler
Heartsease sets out from England, bound for the Greenland coast. During the voyage, the experienced, much-respected Thomas Cave strikes up a friendship with young Thomas Goodlard, the crew's least-experienced member, who is another Suffolk native. As winter approaches, the crew, having loaded up on whale oil and other tradestuffs, prepares to leave, but a friendly disagreement among them—about whether a human being had ever wintered on the Svalbard coast—darkens and escalates. In a charged moment, Thomas Cave bets £100 that he can survive the winter alone on an uninhabited island. They leave him, with plenty of provisions, to return the following spring. This cold-weather Robinson Crusoe tale (minus Friday) unfolds with spare grace, along with Thomas Cave's past, which includes a lost wife and lost son. In a free and direct style that touches on period dialect but is never heavy-handed (and that is bookended by two first-person remembrances from Thomas Goodlard dated 1640), Harding probes Cave's solitude and his responses to a landscape that, in a heartbeat, can be unrelentingly bleak or dazzling. It's a simple story of spiritual purification, and it is handled beautifully throughout.
(Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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From School Library Journal
Adult/High School—Readers who grew up enjoying Gary Paulsen and Will Hobbs will appreciate this compelling survival story. Thomas Cave, a 17th-century English whaler, accepts a dare from his shipmates to spend the winter alone in Greenland. The novel is divided into three parts, beginning with a first-person narrative by Tom Goodlard, a teenager and Cave's only friend on the whaling ship
Heartsease. An omniscient narrator takes over in part two, combining a suspenseful story of physical survival with flashbacks to Cave's family life in Copenhagen. While he struggles to endure the cold, dark days and record the practicalities of his survival in a journal, Cave is haunted by memories and mirages of his wife and her ill-fated pregnancy. He finally realizes he must face his grief before he can overcome his despair. Goodlard narrates the final portion of the book, relating the
Heartsease's return to Greenland and reunion with Thomas Cave. The Arctic setting is integral to the story, and Harding's clear and evocative prose allows readers to see the beauty of a stark winter there, yet feel the pain of an isolated existence in frigid conditions. This first novel will spark discussion along several themes: the relationship between humans and the natural world, human reactions to tragedy and loss, and the nature of personal relationships. Although Cave survives the physical trial, this is not a "happily ever after" book, and the ending is thought-provoking and realistic.—
Sondra VanderPloeg, Tracy Memorial Library, New London, NH Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.