The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman | Goodreads
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The Light Between Oceans

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Librarian's note: An alternate cover edition can be found here

Australia, 1926. After four harrowing years fighting on the Western Front, Tom Sherbourne returns home to take a job as the lighthouse keeper on Janus Rock, nearly half a day's journey from the coast. To this isolated island, where the supply boat comes once a season and shore leaves are granted every other year at best, Tom brings a young, bold, and loving wife, Isabel. Years later, after two miscarriages and one stillbirth, the grieving Isabel hears a baby's cries on the wind. A boat has washed up onshore carrying a dead man and a living baby.

Tom, whose records as a lighthouse keeper are meticulous and whose moral principles have withstood a horrific war, wants to report the man and infant immediately. But Isabel has taken the tiny baby to her breast. Against Tom's judgment, they claim her as their own and name her Lucy. When she is two, Tom and Isabel return to the mainland and are reminded that there are other people in the world. Their choice has devastated one of them.

M. L. Stedman's mesmerizing, beautifully written debut novel seduces us into accommodating Isabel's decision to keep this "gift from God." And we are swept into a story about extraordinarily compelling characters seeking to find their North Star in a world where there is no right answer, where justice for one person is another's tragic loss.

362 pages, Hardcover

First published March 20, 2012

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About the author

M.L. Stedman

4 books3,312 followers
M.L. Stedman was born and raised in Western Australia and now lives in London. The Light Between Oceans is her first novel.

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5 stars
157,347 (34%)
4 stars
191,947 (41%)
3 stars
85,209 (18%)
2 stars
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1 star
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 38,038 reviews
Profile Image for Barbara Williams.
90 reviews64 followers
September 30, 2015
I am going to start with review with a disclaimer. This review is subjective, from my point of view etc. I thought this book was terrible, bad, no good. You don’t have to agree with me, and you could think that this was the most AMAZING book and your eyes almost exploded from all the awesomeness that traveled through them to reach your brain which leapt in your skull with every sentence you read, and that is fine. I do not think that you are inferior to me.

Now on to my review. Stop here for spoilers (although you might regret it! It’s an awesome review.)

I am not one to judge books by their covers, although a good cover is always a bonus, and this book has a excellent one. Props to the graphic designer. Combined with being on the New York Times Best Seller list, and having an first rate premise, I thought this one was a winner. But I was wrong. DEAD WRONG (ok that is a little dramatic.) If I was describe my reading experience like the ocean tides, sometimes I would be fine, floating near the shore, but other times it would sweep me out to sea with its ridiculousness. The conclusion didn’t help the novel’s case. It left a distinctly bitter taste in my mouth.

So basically the premise is that a couple, Tom and Isabel, living on a island in a lighthouse in Australia, find a dead man and baby ashore. Isabel, filled with grief from her last three miscarriages, begs her husband to kidnap the baby and bury the dead man in a ditch so she can be fulfilled as a woman and finally have a child. She assumes that the mother is dead, so I mean, is she really doing anything wrong? It’s like when you find a stray dog and it has a collar. What if the dog was being abused, so that’s why it ran away? It’s your duty to keep that cute dog and love it forever. Except…. This is a BABY. Now I have never had a miscarriage, nor have I ever had children, so I guess this is why I hated Isabel so much. I don’t understand her point of view AT ALL. I agreed with Tom, and was pretty mad when his sympathies got the better of him. I mean really, it’s a BABY people. It is a human life you're messing with!

So Tom and Isabel visit the main land like every three years, and this time they bring the baby, who they have named Lucy, for her christening and to show off to everyone. Now here comes the twist: the mother is alive! Shocker I know. So Tom once again is like, “Hey, this is kidnapping now, and the mother is literally insane with grief. Maybe we should give back her baby.” And Isabel is all like, “No! I can’t have babies. And I am a selfish person who is pretending to be a good person by saying it is better for the baby if she stays with us. We can’t confuse Lucy!” For me, I have always thought love was doing what is best for the person you care for. Apparently, this is not what Isabel thinks love is, so this makes her the villain of the story in my perspective.

So of course, Tom and Isabel are found out eventually, all by Tom’s doing, so he takes the blame for everything. This is the point where I want to give up on the book, and it’s not because I hate Isabel for letting Tom take the blame to make him suffer for taking Lucy away. The story is full of pointless dialog and characters (and not even Jane Austin style with enjoyable pointless dialog.) It is like Stedman’s publisher was like, “This novel has to be 300+ pages so, get on that and write me some more!” I think I would have enjoyed this story much more if it was a short story. I skimmed the last chapters, just so I could be done with it.

Now there are some redeeming factors to this novel ( I mean it’s not like this is 50 Shades of Gray terrible, I gave it two stars) . Stedman is a great writer when it comes down to descriptions of the island of Janus and little antidotes about the 1920’s in Australia. I just didn’t like her characters, NOT one of them.

So my conclusion is read this book for yourself and make up your own opinion. As for me, I still need to learn that “judging a book by its cover” is a phrase for a reason.

***EDIT***
So I just found out that they are making this book into a movie. Because Hollywood.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2547584/?ref_=nv_sr_1
Profile Image for Gaby.
16 reviews29 followers
December 17, 2015
The Light Between Oceans is an incredibly moving novel about what happens when good people make bad decisions. The story takes place in the town of Point Partageuse, Australia during the 1920s. The story begins when a light house keeper and his wife find a life boat containing a live baby (and dead man) on the shore of their isolated island. Through a mixture of misplaced intentions and unsupported superstition they decide to raise the child as their own -- deciding not to inform the authorities of the child's existence.

Although the book was a quick read, I never once felt that it was forced or lacking in anyway. The plot is compact -- never wavering from its central theme. I enjoy this kind of focused writing. Irrelevant or distracting side plots would have pulled me away from Tom and Isabel's narrative and weakened my investment in their turmoil.

The story is highly emotional. Stedman crafts a perfectly gray scenario that forces its readers to question their own moral standing. This truly is reader manipulation at its most powerful. Allowing the reader to sympathize with morally ambiguous characters is a difficult task, however, Stedman presents her narrative in such a way that the reader can't help feeling the same inner conflict as Tom and Isabel.

Considering this is Stedman's first published novel, I am incredibly excited to see what she produces next. This was a masterpiece in storytelling.
May 30, 2014
On the Offshore Lights you can live any story you want to tell yourself, and no one will say you’re wrong: not the seagulls, not the prisms, not the wind.
So Isabel floats further and further into her world of divine benevolence, where prayers are answered, where babies arrive by the will of God and the working of currents.
There's this married couple, their names are Tom and Isabel. For the purposes of this review, Tom = Doormat and Isabel = Batshit Crazy but we'll shorten it to Batshit. It's 1926 Australia, we're on a rock (it's actually called Janus Rock) in the ocean in the middle of nowhere, and considering we're in Australia, it's even middle-of-nowhere-er.

Doormat is a lighthouse keeper. He records the motion of the ocean, the way of the waves, the bodies that wash ashore, and all of that. Well, not so much the bodies that wash ashore, because that happens just once, and apparently, once is one time too many because that didn't turn out well at all.

The day when a man dies and is washed ashore is called "the day of the miracle." Hoooooo-kay. Whatever you call it, Batshit.

Ok, here's the situation. One day a dead body washes ashore. Along with it is a wee lil baby, a living baby. Batshit is a woman who desperately wants a child. She has suffered from multiple stillbirths and is grieving and is going slowly mad because of it. A long time ago, she was a woman who had a lot of joy and happiness in her. It was what attracted Doormat to Batshit in the first place.
...he wondered what other secrets lay behind her playful smile.
8 years later, we know what secret lies behind that "playful smile." Pure, unadulterated lunacy.

Batshit wants a child. A baby washes ashore! Huzzah! It's a miracle! Only, the baby's not theirs to keep. Sure, it's 1926. And sure, it's Australia, the wild land populated by criminals and kangaroos and wombats (or maybe that's New Zealand?), and people who speak really, really strangely.
“Izzy,” Tom called. “Izzy, wait! Don’t do your ’nana, love. He’s not…” But she was already too far off to hear the rest of his words.
“She…” Tom considered whether to explain. “She got the wrong end of the stick about it. Sorry. She’s chucked a wobbly. Once she does that, all you can do is batten down the hatches and wait for it to pass. Means I’ll be making sandwiches for lunch, I’m afraid.”
But in this lawless land, in this lawless time, there are still regulations and shit to be followed. That's why Tom's there, working as the lighthouse keeper. So when a dead man and a living baby washes ashore, Tom's got a whole lot of fucking paperwork to fill out.
“It’s all got to go in the log, pet. You know I’ve got to report everything straightaway,” Tom said, for his duties included noting every significant event at or near the light station, from passing ships and weather, to problems with the apparatus.
Only he doesn't. Because his beloved Batshit insists on keeping the baby, for just a little bit longer, the way a 4-year old child says "Please, daddy, I'll go to bed in just 5 minutes!" It ain't gonna happen. It's never going to be just five fucking minutes, and Batshit isn't just planning to keep the poor half-dead baby just oooooooooone more day. Despite what Doormat tells her, against all fucking common sense to just, you know turn the baby in to proper authorities, Batshit doesn't fucking listen.
“Then the baby’s probably got a mother waiting for it somewhere onshore, tearing her hair out. How would you feel if it was yours?”
“You saw the cardigan. The mother must have fallen out of the boat and drowned.”
“Sweetheart, we don’t have any idea about the mother. Or about who the man was.”
“It’s the most likely explanation, isn’t it? Infants don’t just wander off from their parents.”
“Izzy, anything’s possible. We just don’t know.”
“When did you ever hear of a tiny baby setting off in a boat without its mother?” She held the child a fraction closer.
-_- Oh, logic, you really fucking got it, eh, Batshit? Sure, the baby's mother isn't there. She must be dead. Somehow. Her body must be on the bottom of the ocean floor. The baby can't POSSIBLY have another relative on land.

Makes perfect fucking sense. To someone who belongs in Bedlam asylum (not to be mistaken for Arkham asylum. This isn't Batman) Do they have a Bedlam franchise in Australia?

Poor Doormat's got a crisis of conscience. He wants to do the right thing, but he's just so fucking in love with Batshit that he gives in. Totally whipped.
“I suppose, at a pinch…” he conceded, the words coming with great difficulty, “I could—leave the signal until the morning. First thing, though. As soon as the light’s out.”
Yeah, so they wait one day to turn the baby in. And the next thing you know Batshit's breast-feeding the baby! Well, that escalated quickly!
“Oh, little sweetheart,” she murmured, and slowly unbuttoned her blouse. Seconds later, the child had latched on fast, sucking contentedly, though only a few drops of milk came.
They had been like that for a good while when Tom entered the kitchen. “How’s the—” He stopped in mid-sentence, arrested at the sight.
Isabel looked up at him, her face a mixture of innocence and guilt. “It was the only way I could get her to settle.”
“But… Well…” Alarmed, Tom couldn’t even frame his questions.
“She was desperate. Wouldn’t take the bottle…”
“But—but she took it earlier, I saw her…”
Uh, ok. So the baby can bottle feed, it's just more convenient to breastfeed her. -____________-;

And then next thing you know, the baby's got a name.
“We need to welcome Lucy, and say a prayer for her poor father.”
“If that’s who he was,” said Tom. “And Lucy?”
“Well she needs a name. Lucy means ‘light,’ so it’s perfect, isn’t it?”
Seriously, what the fuck? Now all thought of turning the baby in to the authorities is out the window, because how the fuck is poor Doormat going to explain the fact that they kept the baby for weeks, gave her a name, breastfed her, didn't notify the authorities right away, and didn't notify the authorities that they found a dead body that might be her father. Clearly, they're in some deep fucking doodoo.

And Batshit is there in her little land of happiness, contented with the fact that she has her wewy own baby! Let's just forget about the fact that the baby may or may not still have a mother or a relative. Let's just throw out all reason out the window.
“Izzy, Izzy! You know I’d do anything for you, darl, but—whoever that man is and whatever he’s done, he deserves to be dealt with properly. And lawfully, for that matter. What if the mother’s not dead, and he’s got a wife fretting, waiting for them both?”
“What woman would let her baby out of her sight? Face it, Tom: she must have drowned.”
What woman would let her baby out of her sight? Maybe a desperate one? Maybe one who gave her to a nanny while she was away? Guh!

So there they live, in blissful happy ostrich-in-the-sand-land for several years. Until they realize that, well, shit the baby's mother might be alive. And she ain't a bad person, or a despicable person.
“Funny how lives turn out, isn’t it? Born to more money than you can shake a stick at; went all the way to Sydney University to get a degree in something or other; married the love of her life—and you see her now sometimes, wandering about, like she’s got no home to go to.”
So as it turned out, the baby's mother is alive and breathing. And wealthy. And scared, and lost, and lonely, because she's lost her husband AND her child. Poor Hannah may be rich, but she's had to fight for her love. She fought to marry a German, and this was pretty bad, considering this is post-WWI. Her father disinherited her, she had to work menial labor, she had to suffer a lot to marry the love of her life. And now her husband may be dead somewhere, she doesn't know (because Batshit and Doormat never reported the dead body) and her daughter may be dead somewhere, she doesn't know (because Batshit and Doormat never reported FINDING A FUCKING BABY).

So Hannah is now searching for her husband and daughter. She is wealthy because her father has accepted her again. If Batshit and Doormat returned the baby (Lucy) (who's more like a small child by now), Lucy will have a happy life with a loving mother, a loving aunt, and a doting grandfather, not to mention she'll be rich as fuck. Settled for life, yo. The natural thing, the good thing to do would be to give Lucy that future.

But of course, they're not called Doormat and Batshit by me for nothing.

So there's poor Hannah. In mourning. Desolate. Childless.

And here's how Batshit reacts to that.
“Hannah had a terrible tragedy a few years ago. Family lost at sea—her husband, and a daughter who would have been about your girl’s age by now. She’s always asking that sort of thing. Seeing little ones sets her off.”
“Dreadful,” Isabel managed to mutter.
Understatement of the fucking century.

The Romance: There is no romance in this book. It is a love borne out of madness and obsession. It is a love that is full of mindless devotion on Doormat's part, with pure emotional manipulation on Batshit's part.
“How can you be so hard-hearted? All you care about is your rules and your ships and your bloody light.” These were accusations Tom had heard before, when, wild with grief after her miscarriages, Isabel had let loose her rage against the only person there—the man who continued to do his duty, who comforted her as best he could, but kept his own grieving to himself.
Doormat's mad devotion to his wife will eventually be his own downfall, and as we will learn towards the climax of the book, that love is truly a one-way street.

Overall: This book didn't convince me of anything. There were morality issues that failed to send any sort of message besides that of "crazy woman is crazy," "life sucks," and "men need to grow some balls." I didn't like any of the main characters, I ended up being sympathetic to Hannah aka poor mom who lost the kid, which made it all the more frustrating when crazy woman is constantly shoved in our face.

Maybe I'm not supposed to like the main characters, but why the hell should I bother to read a book if everything about it frustrates me?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Matthew.
1,221 reviews9,504 followers
July 8, 2016
The book - 4 stars
The audiobook - negative 1000 stars! (more on that later)

This book was a soul crushing catch-22. The decisions the characters had to make and the options they are presented with range from totally awful to not all that great. It was interesting to read a book that felt the entire way through like there is no chance for a happy ending. Which bad option will be the outcome?

The audiobook is terrible. So bad that I will never listen to another book by this reader (Noah Taylor). His odd inflections, weird and frequent pauses, poor enunciation, and whispering made this painful to listen to. As much as I did enjoy the book, I was thankful when it was over.
Profile Image for Brenda.
4,437 reviews2,846 followers
March 15, 2021
What a wonderfully complex and morally riveting story! I literally could not put this down, and read for a solid 3 hours last night, until 1am, when I finished this book!

When Tom Sherbourne returned from WWI, he was a shattered man. He needed a quiet place to gather his thoughts, to calm himself, as he didn’t believe he should have survived the war, when his mates did not. So he became a lighthouse keeper, and over the next few years, he did his job, and learned his trade, until he accepted the job of lighthouse keeper on the small island of Janus Rock, an extremely remote location off the coast of Western Australia.

The small township of Partageuse was where he spent a week or so, before heading out to the island for his first look at Janus Rock, with the help of Ralph and Bluey. They would come out in The Windward Spirit every three months with his supplies, any mail, anything that was needed. But in the time he spent in Partageuse, he met up with the lovely Isabel Graysmark, and over the next months, a quiet courtship occurred, with letters going back and forth on The Windward Spirit with Ralph and Bluey.

On their marriage, in 1926, Isabel joined Tom on Janus Rock, and the two of them lived their lives happy, content, and isolated from the rest of the world. Their happiness was not complete however, as Isabel endured miscarriages and depression, with Tom struggling to comfort her.

One April morning, with the wind blowing strongly, a boat was washed ashore, with a dead man, and a crying baby onboard. The consequences of the choices they made that fateful day would live with them forever.

As the years unfolded, their decision would see many lives affected, with an extremely devastating result. The continuing heartbreaking story will tear you apart, as you grapple with the right and wrong of love and loyalty.

This debut novel by Aussie author M.L. Stedman is gripping in its intensity. I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Jeanette (Ms. Feisty).
2,179 reviews2,051 followers
December 4, 2012
"Sometimes life turns out hard, Isabel. Sometimes it just bites right through you. And sometimes, just when you think it's done its worst, it comes back and takes another chunk."

Remember when you were four years old, and your mother was just about your entire world? If you can remember that long-ago feeling of attachment to a parent, or if you have a child, or if you have longed for a child of your own, your heart will break for little Lucy. And it will break for all the grown-ups who loved her, whether they had a right to or not.

This story can feel so slow that you might be tempted to give up. It's gorgeously written, but slooooow. Much of it takes place on a lighthouse rock 100 miles off the tip of Western Australia. The setting accounts in part for the pokey pace, but it's also a big part of the novel's charm. Somewhere in the last third of the book you'll begin to appreciate the mastery in the careful build-up. The pace will pick up (a bit) and you'll be glad you stayed with it.
Profile Image for Mischenko.
1,021 reviews96 followers
July 12, 2018
Please visit www.readrantrockandroll.com to see this review and others...

The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman is a heart-wrenching story about a relationship between two people and the risks they're willing to take for each other.

I'm going to say that for me, the story was heart-wrenching. You can feel the love that Tom and Isabel have for each other. Tom, who would do anything for Isabel, is a special character I fell in love with from the start. Is what they do right or wrong? The story is sure to test your moral judgement.

“I promised to spend my life with you. I still want to spend my life with you. Izz, I've learned the hard way that to have any kind of a future you've got to give up hope of ever changing your past.”

I did find certain parts a little boring, but the last half of the book - I couldn't stop until the end. However, I do wish it would've ended differently. The conclusion I was looking for wasn't the one I received, but that's the way the author wrote it, and it's still good.

It's worth reading and I'd recommend it to anyone. I'm really looking forward to reading more by this author and hope she writes more in the future...

4****
Profile Image for jessica.
2,572 reviews43.2k followers
May 25, 2020
i found this story to be rather simple, but theres a certain kind of attractiveness present in its simplicity.

the uncomplicated nature of the storytelling really allowed me to not only imagine, but connect with, the loneliness of being the sole lighthouse keeper on an isolated island, the unforgiving beauty of the sea, and the quaintness of a sleepy seaside australian town.

its definitely the writing and the atmosphere it creates that propels this story. oh, and tom. tom deserves every good thing in this world and i know i would hop on the first boat out to his little island to play lighthouse keeper with him. lol.

i will say i wasnt really a fan of the plot in the second half of the book only because it made me resent isabel, which in turn made me feel bad for tom. but im not a parent, so maybe i just couldnt empathise with her in that particular situation.

regardless, the strong evocative ability of the storytelling definitely makes reading this book worthwhile.

4 stars
Profile Image for Debbie W..
825 reviews691 followers
January 25, 2023
Why I chose to read this book:
1. I saw that this story, set in Australia, was highly rated on Goodreads. Luckily, I found my copy at a thrift shop; and,
2. January 2023 is my "Books That Come From a Land Down Under" Month.

Praises:
1. author M.L. Stedman's powerful and eloquent writing was heartbreaking even before the actual story started;
2. as a mother and grandmother myself, I felt empathy for each and every one of these characters (even the extended family members and mutual friends) and their difficult decisions. There are no villains;
3. this story about love, dilemma and betrayal melted my heart! The plot could have went in so many directions, but I believe Stedman chose the most plausible path;
4. the isolated atmospheric setting of a 1920s lighthouse on Janus Rock off the coast of Western Australia lent itself perfectly to this story;
5. not a "schmaltzy" romance but a true love story (which I prefer); and,
6. little things like the inclusion of a map and descriptions of various local flora and fauna (which I recall seeing during our visit to Oz years ago) just warmed the cockles of my heart!

Niggles:
Nope! Not a one!

Overall Thoughts:
Any book that breaks my heart, reducing me to a puddle of tears, earns a revered spot on my "Favorites" bookshelf. Impressive writing for a debut novel!

Recommendation?
For fans of character-driven novels and/or books that bring all your emotions alive!
Profile Image for Suzanne.
454 reviews272 followers
May 19, 2013
I just can’t do this. Halfway through, but cannot go on. There are people waiting for this library copy, and the library is calling it back in, so I am going to relinquish it to someone who actually wants to read it.

Given the moral choices that form the heart of the plot, this could have been a much better book, if it were, you know, well-written. Apart from the fairly good initial characterization of Tom Sherbourne as a WWI vet suffering from memories of a troubled childhood and PTSD from war time experiences, and some alright landscape descriptions, this book was, on the whole, filled with sappy, simplistic and sentimental writing than rendered the whole thing fairly bad. And the longer it went on, the more the badness grated on me. I had to give up at page 176 because I no longer cared about the consequences of the moral choices the characters had made, even though the intrinsic complexity of the questions at the core of the story remained an interesting dilemma. Getting to any possible answers (if there were any) or even seeing how it played out was just too painful. Thank you, Kerry, for your review that released me and saved me from a few more hours of this.

My Recommendation: Avoid.
Profile Image for Adina .
1,034 reviews4,250 followers
November 3, 2020
Due to its subject, I postponed reading this novel for years although I had it in my library. Since it was on my list of books to read this year I gathered the courage and went for it.

The writing was beautiful and I immediately warmed to the main character, Tom, but I was increasingly frustrated by the decision the couple took. The Synopsis in a few words goes like this. Tom is a WW1 veteran and in order to lick his psychological wounds he accepts to be a light keeper on a remote island on the Australian coast. While on leave in the nearest town, he meets, falls in love and marries Isabel. They move together on the island and soon she falls pregnant. We already know she loves children and she wants nothing more than to have a house full of them so it comes as a special tragedy when she miscarries. The couple is overwhelmed by grief when a boat comes ashore. Inside there is a dead man and little baby, very much alive. Tom should report the baby and the death but Isabel insists to keep her and to hide the dead man and the boat. At that moment, I started to scream at the book that this is wrong, lots of people are going to get hurt and I wasn’t wrong.

As you can imagine, this is a heart- wrenching, tearjerker of a book but it is well written so I will forgive the writer for the drama. It is good example of book club novel that will satisfy readers for a long time. The movie features Michael Fassbender as Tom so it would not be much of a chore to watch.
Profile Image for Nayra.Hassan.
1,259 reviews5,928 followers
September 14, 2022
*كلنا َمحطمون؛ هكذا ينفذ إلينا النور*
عندما تتوافق  لحظة اختيارك مع لحظة انكسارك..فانت في اختبار محسوم
لماذا نقع للابد في مأزق بين ما هو سهل و ماهو صائب؟
Screenshot-20200229-030355
توم و ايزابيل زوجين تعارفا عقب تسريح توم من تجنيده القاسي في الحرب العالمية الأولى؛
Screenshot-20200229-035120
نراقب قصتهما الرومانسية و نتساءل؛ هل بقائهما علي جزيرة استرالية معزولة سيقتل حبهما؟ يتابع توم شعوره بالذنب كناجي من الحرب كما يتابع عمله في حراسة و اشعال الفنار و يشتعل حبهما معه و لكن
Screenshot-20200229-042133
تتوالى الاجهاضات على ايزابيل و لا تساعدهما حقا العزلة و العواصف و قلة خبرتهما؛ و يولد الجنين الأخير ميتا..و تهيم ايزا على وجهها بالجزيرة التي تطل على محيطين؛ لتسمع صوت رضيعة باكية تصل بمعجزة ما للجزيرة؛ مع والدها الميت بقارب
Screenshot-20200229-030523
القوانين وضعوها لتنقذ أرواح البشر"
و نحن سننقذها بمخالفة القوانين"ا
هكذا تتضافر رغبة ايزابيل في الطفلة مع ضمير توم المعذب لانه جلب زوجته لشقاء الجزيرة البعيدة عن المشافي ..فهل يسكت ضميره؟
هل يقبل الطفلة كهدية المحيط لهما بعد أيام من وفاة طفلتهما؟
و هل هناك ثمن سيدفعه الكل لاحقا لهذا القر��ر؟
Screenshot-20200229-043525

*أجهل ماالذي يكسبنا الحق في حياة تم سلبها من اخرين*

رواية ستمزقك تماما بين تساؤلات عن ماهية
الخطأ و الصواب مرارا
ستصرخ كثيرا من قرارات الجندي السابق توم و اسبابه و توقيتاته
ستتسائل
من هو المحظوظ حقا؟ هل هو من نجا؟
ام هو من ارتاح من اتخاذ القرارات بالموت؟

هل يكفي ان يسامح المرء مرة؟ لتسامحه الدنيا بعدها؟
و تمنحه قبس من نور و لو لأيام؟
Screenshot-20200229-043421

رواية شاهدتها كفيلم و راجعتها كرواية اثارت ضجة لأنها العمل الاول لكاتبة استرالية ذات رؤية انسانية عن اللون الرمادي في النفوس كما اجادت وصف جو عشرينات القرن العشرين٠ في طبيعة أستراليا الخلابة
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كانت الطفلة المختارة للدور من أجمل أطفال العالم بالفعل.. سبحان الله
و الأكثر طرافة ان اسم الفتاة المتنازع عليها
رحمة و نور
Lucy_Grace
لتوكد لنا باسمها أن هناك دوما اختيار ثالث في باطنه الرحمة؛ لكن أحمال ماضينا تعمينا عنه
Profile Image for Ninoska Goris.
270 reviews165 followers
August 11, 2017
Español - English

“A veces deseamos tanto algo que nos engañamos y creemos haberlo encontrado.”

Lo que se nos presenta aquí es una historia moral, entre lo bueno y lo malo que conlleva una decisión. Eso sí, muy bien escrita.

Thomas (Tom) Sherbourne después de terminar la Primera Guerra Mundial y queriendo dejar atrás todos los malos recuerdos de su niñez y la muerte de soldados, decide presentarse para el puesto de farero, mientras mas lejos y solitario mejor. Pero cuando llega al puerto de Partageuse para de ahí partir a su destino final, Janus Rock, a la primera persona que ve al desembarcar es a Isabel Graysmark.

Isabel Graysmark es joven, extrovertida, hermosa y sabe lo que quiere: quiere casarse con Tom y vivir con él en la isla del faro. Cuando lo logra vive una vida feliz con Tom en la solitaria isla. Tom es todo lo que una esposa podría desear: es atento, cariñoso y trabajador.

Toda esta felicidad se ve empañada por dos abortos y un parto prematuro donde el bebé nace muerto. Aunque esta es la raíz principal del tema del libro, creo que no se explica bien, no sentí el sufrimiento de Isabel ante su incapacidad para tener hijos.

Un día aparece en la costa un barco con un hombre muerto y una bebé. Isabel convence a un indeciso Tom de no dar parte a las autoridades del hallazgo y quedarse el bebé para ellos.

Cuando visitan a los padres de Isabel en Partageuse se enteran que la madre de la bebé está viva. Isabel se niega a entregar a Lucy, pero a Tom le remuerde la conciencia y decide hacer algo y ocultárselo a su esposa.

Este es el punto en que se afina la línea entre el bien y el mal. Aunque esta tercera parte del libro se alarga mucho, es muy emotiva. El final me pareció adecuado porque, desde mi punto de vista, todo quedó como debió quedar.

---

What is presented here is a moral story, between the good and the bad that comes with a decision. Yes, very well written.

Thomas (Tom) Sherbourne after finishing World War I and wanting to leave behind all the bad memories of his childhood and the death of soldiers, decides to opt for the position of lighthouseman, farther and lonely the better. But when he arrives at the port of Partageuse and then leaves for his final destination, Janus Rock, the first person he sees when disembark is Isabel Graysmark.

Isabel Graysmark is young, extroverted, beautiful and knows what she wants: she wants to marry Tom and live with him on the island of the lighthouse. Where she manages to live a happy life with Tom on the lonely island. Tom is everything a wife could wish for: he is caring and hardworking.

All this happiness is marred by two abortions and a premature birth where the baby is born dead. Although this is the main root of the subject of the book, I think it is not well explained, I did not feel the suffering of Isabel before her inability to have children.

One day a ship with a dead man and a baby appears on the coast. Isabel persuades an undecided Tom not to give the authorities of the find and keep the baby for them.

When they visit Isabel's parents in Partageuse they learn that the mother of the baby is alive. Isabel refuses to surrender Lucy, but Tom regrets his conscience and decides to do something and hide it from his wife.

This is the point at which the line between good and evil is sharpened. Although this third part of the book is very long, it is very emotional. The end seemed appropriate because, from my point of view, everything was as it should have remained.
Profile Image for Chaitra.
3,785 reviews
September 21, 2015
ETA: Sep 20, 2015

Oh, this review. First, I read this book way back in 2012. I don't know that I would write such a review now, whether or not I hate a book. I've had an attitude shift, if not in life, then in review writing. I've wanted to change it for a while now, but I don't remember most of the book. I also can't make any defense against specific arguments from commenters who liked the book, because of the same.

I read this when I had no baby. At some point after I had my own bundle of joy, I considered reading this book again, especially since a number of people I trust mentioned that it was a much better reading experience for them. But the difference was this, they sympathized with Isabelle more than Hannah. I did the opposite. And having my baby wasn't going to change that, if anything I would feel Hannah's pain more keenly. But the main reason I haven't read this book up again is because I couldn't remember the actual language being any good. I might be misremembering all of the above, but I don't care enough to read it again to confirm one way or another. I will watch the movie at some point, because the director made Blue Valentine - with two unlikable characters - and I loved it and understood both of them. Maybe he will bring something to the table that the book, for me, didn't.

Anyway, please read this review knowing that I would not have written it exactly the same today, even though I still dislike the book. I welcome comments from everyone, especially people who liked the book, because maybe enough of those will convince me to read it back - I'm big on second guessing myself.

***

The review:

Profile Image for Starjustin.
91 reviews267 followers
December 4, 2016
this book kept my interest all the way to the end. was hoping for a slightly different ending however, would recommend as a book you 'don't want to miss'.
Profile Image for Kristalia .
394 reviews641 followers
October 5, 2015
Final rating: 5/5 stars

“...or I can forgive and forget...Oh, but my treasure, it is so much less exhausting. You only have to forgive once. To resent, you have to do it all day, every day. You have to keep remembering all the bad things...we always have a choice.”



One word: Beautiful. And also beautiful. and beautiful. and beautiful....

I cannot even begin the review properly. This book crushed my feelings, brought them back together and did it all over and over again. I smiled and i cried. But it was worth it.

The writing style was beautiful. It followed multiply POVs and without them, this story wouldn't have such an impact on me. Everyone in this story is important. Everyone.

The story happens in Australia... And by reading this i kind of fell in love with it ;D (i did before as well, but now, even more).

And it was just wonderful and i loved it to bits.


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

This is a story of forgiveness. Of making difference between right and wrong. Learning from your mistakes.

But it is also a story of a couple. Two people who met one day and fell in love. Tom and Isabel.

“It’s like a whole… a whole galaxy waiting for you to find out about. And I want to find out about yours.”


Tom returned from the war to Australia... He decided the best way to live his life would be to be a lighthouse keeper. But then he met Isabel and all things changed.

“So marry me!”

He blinked. “Izz—I hardly know you! And besides, I’ve never even—well, I’ve never even kissed you, for crying out loud.”

“At long last!” She spoke as if the solution were blindingly obvious, and she stood on tiptoes to pull his head down toward her. Before he knew what was happening he was being kissed, inexpertly but with great force. He pulled away from her.

“That’s a dangerous game to play, Isabel. You shouldn’t go running around kissing blokes out of the blue. Not unless you mean it.”
“But I do mean it!”

Tom looked at her, her eyes challenging him, her petite chin set firm. Once he crossed that line, who knew where he would end up? Oh, bugger it. To hell with good behavior. To hell with doing the right thing. Here was a beautiful girl, begging to be kissed, and the sun was gone and the weeks were up and he’d be out in the middle of bloody nowhere this time tomorrow. He took her face in his hands and bent low as he said, “Then this is how you do it,” and kissed her slowly, letting time fade away. And he couldn’t remember any other kiss that felt quite the same.


They married. And they wanted children. Lots and lots of children. But... fate had other plans. Isabel miscarried three times. They were growing desperate. Until the day when the boat came near the shore. With a dead man and a crying baby.

Isabel and Tom are surprised... and they take the baby to raise is as their own. No one knew Iz miscarried third child...so they said she gave birth to the baby.


Dear Mum and Dad,

Well, God has sent us an angel to keep us company. Baby Lucy has captured our hearts! She’s a beautiful little girl—absolutely perfect. She sleeps well and feeds well. She’s never any trouble.


But Guilt is slowly eating Tom up.... What if the mother of the little girl is still alive? How does she feel? But he can't help it... he became a father... And Isabel has never been happier....

And then.... things go horribly wrong.


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

The characters of this book are faced with so many choices...and mistakes.
One will do anything for the one he loves.
One will betray them.
One will be their friend till the end.
One will face "betrayal" and want revenge.

Some i utterly and totally loved. Some i hated with passion. For some i felt sad and in some i was disappointed. But...i understood everyone.

And the end of the book.... beautiful :D

(i noticed i used too much the word "beautiful", but i just can't help it :D)
____________________________________________

OVERALL :
____________________________________________

I loved it... i will remember it for a long time and i highly recommend it. Its a beautiful love story... story of loss and gain, pain and forgiveness, regret and mistakes. Story about a husband who only wanted to make his wife shine like she did before... Until the moment when everything went wrong.

Beautiful book.

“There are still more days to travel in this life. And he knows that the man who makes the journey has been shaped by every day and every person along the way. Scars are just another kind of memory....Soon enough the days will close over their lives, the grass will grow over their graves, until their story is just an unvisited headstone.”



This review can be found on my blog: infinity-of-time.blogspot.com also known as...
Profile Image for Sharon Orlopp.
Author 1 book830 followers
July 1, 2023
Words are hard to come by. The Light Between Oceans is a literary experience like none other that I have had. I listened to it on audiobook and the narration is exquisite. 5+++ stars.

Imagine being a lighthouse keeper where you live remotely except for once a year where you have one week off. Life decisions that may seem reasonable, at the time, have life-altering consequences and long-term impact.

Character development, tender dialogue, story arc, and scene imagery combine exquisitely to create magic.

Highly recommend!
Profile Image for Michelle.
Author 15 books1,441 followers
September 22, 2012
This is an odd book. It is, in a large way, quite boring not to mention depressing. It’d be like if some woman came up to you and told you about her horrible life but using a monotone voice. You’d be partway falling asleep and partway amazed at the dreadfulness. I’m not sure what made it so dull. Maybe it was the writing style: showing not telling, corny people and dialogue, random backstories, one single plotline without much other noise or complexity. The lighthouse stuff was interesting and as a reader you really get a sense of the desolation on Janus. Other than that – just not into it. Plus it’s very depressing. Everyone lives bleakily ever after. I did finish it though, which says something.
Profile Image for LENA TRAK.
129 reviews124 followers
March 21, 2021
'' The oceans never stop. They know no beginning or ending. The wind never finishes. Sometimes it disappears, but only to gather momentum from somewhere else... ''

'' He watches the ocean surrender to night, knowing that the light will reappear.

What a book... What a lovely story..such wonderful prose.. The Light Between Oceans tells the story of Tom and Isabel, two of my most beloved characters ever! Their unconditional love leads them to the wrong decision. And then there's no going back...

Its been a while since I read something this good... And the ending... So powerful and admittedly not what I expected. I am devastated right now. I havent cried so much since '' The Fault in our Stars''.

In a nutshell, I just loooooved The light between Oceans. Highly recommended my fellow readers!
Profile Image for Dem.
1,217 reviews1,285 followers
November 20, 2019
The light between Oceans by M.L. Stedman is a beautifully written and emotional story which I enjoyed very much. A back to basics Novel with a good plot.

This story is about right and wrong and how sometimes they look the same.

Tom Sherbourne who released from the horrors of First world War is now a lighthouse Keeper cocooned on a remote Australian island with his young wife Izzy, who is content in everything but her failure to have a child.
One April morning a boat washes ashore carrying a dead man and a crying baby. Safe from the real world Tom and Izzy break the rules and follow their hearts.

This is also the story about the choices we make and how we live or try to live with them. Every action has a consequence........

The first thing that drew me to this novel was the beautiful cover and I am happy to report that this book has more to it than just a pretty picture.
This is really a plot driven novel and the author really just gets on with telling her story and does not bog the book down with too many unnecessary adjectives which was refreshing, in other words a good story simply told.
I enjoyed the characters (especially Tom) and felt myself torn in the choices they had to make.

One of my favorite quotes reads.

"You could kill a bloke with rules, Tom knew that and yet sometimes they were what stood between man and savagery, between man and monsters".

I particularly like the ending of this novel and probably would have given the book a 3.5 but the ending bumped it up to a 4 star read.
This would make a great holiday read as its is pure escasism and while I normally love historicall novels rich in facts and information I loved this book just for its story and the emotion of it.

I re-read this one for a monthly bookclub read and it’s just as good second time around.
Profile Image for Maria Espadinha.
1,058 reviews443 followers
September 4, 2019
Entre o Pensar e o Sentir


A distinção entre Certo e Errado começa como um processo meramente mental!
Naqueles casos standard, batidos e estereotipados a mente é quanto basta — compara-os com os seus semelhantes arquivados, fixa-lhes uma etiqueta e espeta com eles na divisória correspondente — Certos dum lado e Errados do outro.

Mas há casos e Casos. Naqueles onde surgem diversas variáveis que parecem lutar entre si, ou na melhor das hipóteses rasteirar-se mutuamente, tudo fica mais bicudo!
A mente esperneia, esforça-se, fatiga-se,... chegando a nenhures! Não consegue mais que descrever círculos sobre círculos, tal como um hamster que gira freneticamente numa roda!...
Há sempre variáveis que sobram clamando justiça, o que conduz inevitavelmente a subsequentes retaliações de consciência...

Esta estória está no grupo dos Casos. Ao confrontar-nos com um leque de variáveis que jogam entre si de tal forma que Bem e Mal se misturam dum modo pouco inteligível, funciona como uma excelente cobaia na pesquisa duma eventual metodologia para discernimento do Certo...

Quanto a mim, sempre que o lado que pensa se revela incapaz de destrinçar o Certo do Errado, há que recorrer ao lado que sente.
Quer isto dizer que se houver Luz, ela estará algures entre os Oceanos Pensar e Sentir!

À laia de conclusão, não posso deixar de referir, que se há livros que prestam um valioso contributo à Expansão da Consciência, este é um deles!
Um 4+++, com toda a convicção!!!

Nota: Este romance empolgante também não passou despercebido à sétima arte:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lk7yw00...
Profile Image for AMEERA.
277 reviews325 followers
December 11, 2016
If you want to cry and see your tears falling in your book read this , it's just heartbroken
Profile Image for PattyMacDotComma.
1,576 reviews934 followers
April 22, 2023
5★
“From this side of the island, there was only vastness, all the way to Africa. Here, the Indian Ocean washed into the Great Southern Ocean and together they stretched like an edgeless carpet below the cliffs. On days like this it seemed so solid she had the impression she could walk to Madagascar in a journey of blue upon blue...

As if to make amends, the island – Janus Rock – offered a lighthouse, its beam providing a mantle of safety for thirty miles.”


Fantastic debut novel
Oh what a tangled web we weave! It’s too easy to justify to ourselves what we want to do rather than what we’re pretty sure we should do – no, that’s wrong – we know exactly what we should do. We just can’t bear to think about it. . . yet. Like Scarlet O’Hara, we’ll think about it tomorrow.

I’m a great rationaliser and pretty handy at arguing either side of a question, so I find it easy to imagine being in the shoes of all these different characters. And they are distinctive, except for the grandparent generation. They had a lot in common, which made the story even more poignant.

Tom has come back from the bloody, muddy trenches of World War One and becomes a lighthouse keeper, escaping from his demons into solitude. He finds a posting at the most far-flung spot he can find, Janus Island. This fictional island is off the Southwestern corner of Western Australia, the dividing point between the well-known Indian Ocean and the wild Great Southern Ocean between Australia and Antarctica.

After being left there alone, he feels settled. He climbs to the top of the lighthouse, and steps out into the force of the wind on the gallery (the walkway around the top).

“He had the impression he was hanging from the sky, not rising from the earth. Very slowly, he turned a full circle, taking in the nothingness of it all. It seemed his lungs could never be large enough to breathe in this much air, his eyes could never see this much space, nor could he hear the full extent of the rolling, roaring ocean. For the briefest moment, he had no edges. He blinked, and shook his head quickly.”

He has trouble maintaining his equilibrium, physical and mental, so puts himself to work. On one of his shore breaks, he meets an irrepressible, bright young woman who takes a fancy to him. She continues to see him when he’s on dry land, and pretty soon, she’s at the lighthouse with him.

I think he’s like the Great Southern Ocean, turbulent and threatening. He can’t believe it when this cheerful, happy, civilised girl (the Indian Ocean?) has such a calming effect on him. It’s 1922 and a new life.

But after a few years and several heart-rending miscarriages or stillbirths, all happening alone with no help, Isabel has descended into depths of despair deeper than his.

He has accepted their heartbreak as some kind of retribution for the killing he did in the Great War, but he can’t understand why Isabel should have to suffer. When a small boat with a dead man and a live baby washes up on their shore, Isabel pleads to keep it. . . at least for now. She’s still producing milk and begins to feed the tiny infant.

Isabel names her Lucy, meaning light, and welcomes her into the family, making Tom very ill at ease. They are back to their original situation - Tom, the brooding Great Southern Ocean, Isabel the calm, warm Indian Ocean. But now they have their little light, Lucy, between them.

Tom’s view of the world has been changed by this tiny creature.

“Existence here is on a scale of giants. Time is in the millions of years; rocks which from a distance look like dice cast against the shore are boulders hundreds of feet wide, licked round by millennia, tumbled onto their sides so that layers become vertical stripes.
. . .

Tom has trouble keeping both time scales in focus: the existence of an island and the existence of a child. It astounds him that the tiny life of the girl means more to him than all the millennia before it.”


They have more shore leaves, and eventually, Tom is placed in a position where he’s damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t.

“Words had a way of getting into all sorts of places they weren’t meant to. Best keep things to yourself in life, he’d learnt.”

When he did choose his words, he chose them well. He says to Isabel about forgiveness:

‘Oh, but my treasure, it is so much less exhausting. You only have to forgive once. To resent, you have to do it all day, every day. You have to keep remembering all the bad things.’ . . .

‘I would have to make a list, a very, very long list and make sure I hated the people on it the right amount. That I did a very proper job of hating, too. . .”


A good thought to end with.

Can’t believe it’s a debut but not surprised at the awards it’s won or that it’s been made into a film.

=========Other quotes I liked=============

About floods:

“The rivers quicken, finally scenting the ocean from which they have so long been parted. They will not be stopped in their urgency to get back to it – to get home.”

Night falls in the forest, and the wildlife reclaim their domain.

“And darkness seeps into the sky second by second, until the shadows no longer fall but rise from the ground and fill the air completely. Humans withdraw to their homes, and surrender the night to the creatures that own it: the crickets, the owls, the snakes. A world that hasn’t changed for hundreds of thousands of years wakes up, and carries on as if the daylight and the humans and the changes to the landscape have been an illusion.”

When discussing how communities gloss over unsavoury events people would rather forget:

“History is that which is agreed upon by mutual consent. That’s how life goes on – protected by the silence that anaesthetises shame. Men who came back from the war with stories they could have told about the desperate failings of comrades at the point of death say only that they died bravely. To the outside world, no soldier ever visited a brothel or acted like a savage or ran and hid from the enemy. Being over there was punishment enough.”

Again: "HISTORY IS THAT WHICH IS AGREED UPON BY MUTUAL CONSENT."

I'd love to see what the history of this part of the 21st century will end up looking like.
Profile Image for Violet wells.
433 reviews3,682 followers
March 7, 2016
Just as well I’m not a commissioning editor as I would have binned this after about sixty pages.

Essentially The Light between Oceans is a novella that has been fattened up on starch and additives to a 446 page novel. You could doze off for 50 page sections and still wake up to exactly the same scenery without having missed a single landmark of importance. Because it’s a novel that is built on a single plot idea with no supporting cast of ideas. The idea is that a lighthouse keeper and his wife illicitly adopt a baby who arrives with a dead man in a boat on their island. It’s not a bad idea and it might even make a decent film because the endless pages of soap opera chit chat, the bland flowery prose, the heavy handed and unfeasible feeding of tension into the plot’s current and the superfluous domestic embroidery will be excised from any film script.

Basically everything that’s going to happen in this novel, bar the happy ending, has already happened by page fifty. Most irritating and time wasting novel I can remember reading for years.
Profile Image for Margitte.
1,188 reviews589 followers
September 27, 2016
This story is so multifaceted it is a tough one to review. I slept over this book, mulling around, wondering what to take from it. It was haunting me! I was waking up several times during the night, thinking about yet another angle to it. The most important question was:
Where did this tragedy really begin?

Tom Sherbourne returned from WWI to Australia, struggling with his own role in the war. He witnessed his friends being shot; he shot people himself. He was a decorated war hero, yet never wanted to harm anybody in his life ever again;

Isobel Sherbourne: Both her beloved brothers died in the war. She was young, bold and happy tempered. But life dealt her three blows she hardly survived on Janus Rock island where she and Tom were stationed at the remote and isolated lighthouse. When a little baby washed up in a boat, she immediately put her to her breast and called her Lucy, "A Gift of God".

Anzac day, April 25, 1926, in Port Partageuse, on the south-western corner of the Australian continent. A spot where two oceans met and little businesses sprang up and clung on like lichen on a rock face.

Frank Roennfeldt was an Austrain-born shopowner who was interned in the war. A decent man, who married Hannah, the daughter of Septimus Potts, the wealthiest man around.

On this day of commemoration, the men in town needed a culprit to pay for the sins against the town's fallen sons in the war. Frank was the perfect candidate for their revenge. A Hun.
The town draws a veil over certain events.This is a small community, where everyone knows that sometimes the contract to forget is as important as any promise to remember. Children can grow up having no knowledge of the indiscretion of their father in his youth, or of the illegitimate sibling who lives fifty miles away and bears another man's name. History is that which is agreed upon by mutual consent.

That's how life goes on--protected by the silence that anesthetizes shame
Who was to blame for the events at the Lighthouse? If there was a crime committed, who were the real criminals. And was it a crime to begin with?
27th April 1926
On the day of the miracle, Isabel was kneeling at the cliff’s edge, tending the small, newly made driftwood cross. A single fat cloud snailed across the late-April sky, which stretched above the island in a mirror of the ocean below. Isabel sprinkled more water and patted down the soil around the rosemary bush she had just planted.
“… and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil,” she whispered.


This is Tom Sherbourne's story. And as the author says in an interview: If I was going to sum up my book in a small phrase I would say it is about a balance between love and duty; how we find redemption when we have done things we can't undo.

MY COMMENTS: I first thought there was a little bit too much melo added to drama. But then, after thinking about the well-developed characters, the picturesque prose, the ambiance of the surroundings, the establishment of the situation, and the moral behind it all, I realized that the melo had to be added to the emotional pipe of both the characters as well as the readers in the effort to smoke this pipe to its fullest. In the end everyone was suffering, including the reader who went along for the ride.

This is a brilliant book! Every aspect of it served a purpose, and in dissecting the whole setup, a lot more pour out than just the emotionally-potent plot.

The final star was given to the realism so perfectly established and the ending that made this experience emotionally true.

PS. One of the multi layers of this book is the importance of the Greek God Janus in the book.
I suddenly understood why the book was haunting me!

description
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janus

What a great discussion point for those who have already read the book.




Profile Image for Barbara.
1,503 reviews1,039 followers
January 10, 2024
Historical fiction taking place after WW1 in Australia. It's about a good man who is a vet who tries to do the right thing, plagued by what he saw and did during the war. He becomes a light keeper on a tiny island off the south coast of Australia. He marries a woman and is the happiest he's ever been. They try to have a family, and she has difficulty keeping her babies. She has 3 miscarriages. One day a row boat with a dead man and a very live baby washes ashore, 2 weeks after the 3rd miscarriage. The woman, Isabel convinces the man, Tom to keep the baby and not report it. She sees it as divine will. The consequences end up blowing them apart and shattering many lives. It's a tragic tale of decisions made with the best intentions, and the harm the decisions cause. Part 2 and especially 3 are the best. It's very sad, and shows all sides of a heartbreaking story.



Profile Image for Jennie Walters.
Author 30 books30 followers
October 7, 2012
I enjoyed this book, particularly towards the end, which was more subtle and unexpected than I'd predicted. My reservations were largely that some of the dialogue seemed a bit clunky, and at first the relationship between Tom and Isabel, the main protagonists, didn't quite convince - the scene where Isabel imitates the other dinner guests, for example, didn't succeed for me. But by the end, I had really warmed to Tom, the hero of the book, who although damaged by his experiences in the war, is such an essentially good and noble person that he lifts this novel into a whole other realm. Unlike other reviewers here, I thought you could tell it was a first novel - eg great chunks of information about how a lighthouse works plopped down into the story - but it had some really interesting things to say about the moral dilemma at the heart of the story (the relative rights of parents and children)and a very tender portrayal of a marriage. Keeps you reading right till the last page!
Profile Image for Diane.
1,081 reviews2,978 followers
July 31, 2015
"You only have to forgive once. To resent, you have to do it all day, every day. You have to keep remembering all the bad things."

This is an engrossing novel in which one person's happiness inadvertently causes misery for another. Tom fought in World War I and returns to Australia to become a lighthouse keeper on an isolated island. He meets and marries a sweet girl named Isabel, who becomes desperate for a child. One day, a baby is found in a boat that washes ashore, and Isabel thinks it's a miracle and wants to keep the baby as her own.

What is the right thing to do? Tom and Isabel have different answers to this question, and their behavior has serious consequences. There is a small mystery to be solved, but the heart of the book is about the ethics of the situation, and how decisions affect the couple's relationship.

The writing is lovely, and I liked the humor the author included in the novel. I will admit to a strong dislike of Isabel, but it's possible to hate a character and still love a book.

Update July 2015
I just learned that this book was made into a movie starring Michael Fassbender, who will be amazing in the role, I'm sure. This was a thoughtful novel, and I hope it makes for a smart film.
Profile Image for Philip.
529 reviews793 followers
January 17, 2017
4.5ish stars.

Typically I'm fundamentally opposed to any book endorsed by Oprah. Having said that I also have a weakness for the occasional weepy melodrama as long as it's classy. I took a chance here. I don't know what's with me lately because this is the second book I've cried over this month and I couldn't even tell you the last time it's happened.

Once (if) you accept that the plot revolves around an isolated couple who find a baby in a boat that's washed up on the shore of the lighthouse where they live and, hey why not, decide to keep it, you find that there's a lovely, heartbreaking story in a beautiful setting with characters you love to hate.

Once (if) you find it within yourself not to automatically write-off the ridiculous moral wrongness of finding a dead body and a baby, burying the body and then raising the baby without telling anyone (among other far-fetched plot points ), you may just find yourself questioning what's right and wrong. There are no easy solutions . You may find yourself sympathizing with various characters at different points and hating them at others.

Stedman fulfilled my wish of classiness in a way that absolutely transcends Nicholas Sparks territory. She has painted a setting that makes me desperate to visit. She did an admirable job of providing POVs from several different characters, even very minor ones, making things even fuller and murkier. I was completely aware that my emotions were being manipulated and gosh dang-it I enjoyed it! This type of book is obviously not for everyone so tread lightly and don't blame me if you hate it. And the pace drags during the first half for sure. Just know it's classier than you probably think!
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1,144 reviews1,015 followers
November 22, 2016
This is too big a novel to do it justice with my poorly articulated review. So, I'll just write down a few things.

First of all, I can't get my head around this being a debut novel.
I was captivated from the first paragraph. The writing has such a beautiful flow, the descriptions are so vivid. The third person narration is used masterfully, there are no unreliable narrators, we get to know the inner thoughts, feelings and history of most characters.

Our main hero, Tom Sherbourne, is an actual World War I hero. Like most men who have returned from the war, he's struggling with living and not letting his demons consume him. So he focuses on living simply, day by day. He'd rather be by himself, which makes becoming a lighthouse keeper the perfect occupation for him.

When he gets to travel all the way to the South West of Australia, he meets a beautiful and very lively young woman, Isabel Graysmark. She takes a liking to him, and he's fascinated with her, and can't quite comprehend that someone like her would be interested in him. Isabel knows what she wants: she wants to marry Tom and have a big family. She's never been on Janus Island where Tom is a lightkeeper, but she's not afraid to live life in isolation.

Unfortunately, the poor Isabel suffers three miscarriages. She's absolutely distraught about it. One day, a boat with a dead man and a crying baby drifts onshore the island. Isabel takes to looking after the baby, while Tom buries the man. She's besotted with the little, sweet baby girl. She persuades Tom not to report it and raise the baby as their own.

The baby enriches their life and gets under Tom's skin, melting his cold and broken heart.

There is so much angst, and pain, and worries and most people involved are suffering. The situation is dreadful for all concerned. At times, it's absolutely heartwrenching.

M.L. Stedman crafted such a beautiful novel, which, I dare say, will become a classic.

The writing, the plot, the characters are exquisite. The setting enhances the sense of loneliness, doom and gives the decisions a different weight.

Tom Sherbourne is one of the most wholesome male characters ever created. Even his name sounds wholesome.

This story will stay with me for a long time.

Cover: 5 stars

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