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Island of Wings
Island of Wings | Karin Altenberg
1 post | 1 read | 3 to read
Longlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction July, 1830. On the ten-hour sail west from the Hebrides to the islands of St. Kilda, everything lies ahead for Lizzie and Neil McKenzie. Neil is to become the minister to the small community of islanders, and Lizzie, his new wife, is pregnant with their first child. As the two adjust to life on an exposed archipelago on the edge of civilization, where the natives live in squalor and subsist on a diet of seabirds, and babies perish mysteriously in their first week, their marriage -- and their sanity -- is threatened. Is Lizzie a wilful temptress drawing him away from his faith? Is Neil’s zealous Christianity unhinging into madness? And who, or what, is haunting the moors and cliff-tops? Exquisitely written and profoundly moving, Island of Wings is a richly imagined novel about two people struggling to keep their love, and their family, alive in a place of terrible hardship and tumultuous beauty.
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Bevita
Island of Wings | Karin Altenberg
post image
Mehso-so

This book is about a minister and his wife who are stationed in the Outer Hebrides, on the island of Hirta. I didn‘t love the book — felt too much like something I‘ve already read — but did enjoy the geography lesson. Skimmed to the end.