All tagged Scotland

Ghost Wall and Summerwater

Just like the ceaselessly falling rain, unusual even in Scotland’s wet climate, there is something eerie from the start in Sarah Moss’s Summerwater (2020). It was a similar feeling to that aroused by the opening scene of bog sacrifice in her Ghost Wall (2018). Both begin with scenes that portend harm, that set an ominous tone. And yet, there is also something so everyday about so much of the human experiences and interactions in Moss’s slight books. Something so recognizable takes form amid her characters. It is that tension—the foreboding and the mundane—that make her books so compulsively readable. The reader wonders, will she go there, will it get that dark, that startlingly disturbing; it is not until the final pages that the reader can grapple with answers to such questions.

The Metal Heart

Caroline Lea’s recent historical fiction, The Metal Heart: A Novel of WWII (2021) fictionalizes events on the northern Scottish islands of Orkney during the 1940s. Twin sisters, Dorothy and Constance, flea to a remote island said to be cursed after the death of their parents. Facing the brutal elements as winter descends, the sisters find their isolation invaded by a population of prisoners of war who are relocated by the British Army to Orkney in order to labor on a protective earthen barrier around the islands.