Sunday, January 15, 2023

Haven, by Emma Donoghue. Hachette Book Group, 2022.



In the 7th century, an admired scholar and holy man comes to visit a rural monastery. That night, he has a vision; he and two fellow monks sail down the river and out into the western ocean, seeking an isolated island to found a new monastery on. Brother Artt immediately acts on this vison; he requests young Trian and old Cormac as his helpers. Trian was given to the monastery as a child- as a slave? It isn’t made clear- and he is from people who live close to the water- he knows sailing and fishing and exploring. Cormac is an old subsistence farmer and mason; he knows gardening and foraging and building. He lost his family to the plague.

The three of them set sail on the river in a tiny boat made of skins. They all have what they feel is necessary to live on their own, but the boat is overloaded and so Cormac and Trian are forced to discard important tools and supplies. Artt’s Bibles and other books, though, all stay on board. Artt truly believes he has been chosen by God, and that God will provide everything they need. If it doesn’t appear in their environment, obviously God doesn’t think they need it.

After going down the river for several days, the trio comes to the open sea. Trian can sail, but mostly they go where the currants take them. Any place that has people anywhere near is rejected. Then they come across a couple of islands, a huge, bare rock now called Skellig Michael. Covered with birds but obviously untouched by humans, Artt declares this as their new home. They set about finding shelter for the holy books (but not themselves), finding food and fresh water, and setting up an altar. Trian and Cormac both have good survival skills, but, while Artt is very educated, he’s ignorant as to what it actually takes to survive. He puts Trian, who has been fishing and catching birds to eat, to copying part of the Bible. He puts Cormac, who has been foraging and starting a scraggly garden, to building a church of stone. How will they survive come autumn and winter?

Even though the story is almost completely set outside- they have no real shelter- it’s oddly claustrophobic. They are so closely bound by Artt’s demands- Trian and Cormac have taken vows of obedience to Artt- that it feels like they can’t breathe. It’s a very tense tale, as everything that can go wrong, does. By the end, the tension is almost electric.

The writing is gorgeous. The descriptions of the surroundings and their tasks is absorbing. It doesn’t seem like three people with such limited activities could be interesting, but it is. Almost totally character driven, the Brothers come vividly to life. The whole story is a composition in gray and blue, the colors of both the landscape in which they live and of their dispositions. I know some have found this book boring, because of the limited action, but I couldn’t put it down.

1 comment:

  1. Sounds interesting from your review. I think I read something by this author, I'm going to check.

    ReplyDelete