(20. – 907.) The Fortunate Brother by Donna Morrissey – Death in the oilfields
of Alberta has reached out to crush the Now family, more than half a continent
away, on the coast of Newfoundland. Lured by high paying work in the oilpatch
young Chris Now left his outport community of Hampten. Six weeks later he was
dead in an accident at an oil rig. The Now family is three years into a grief
that has not eased. Father, Sylvanus, drunk every day refuses to even mention
Chris’s name. Sister, Sylvie, is in Africa trying to safari away from her
sorrow. Brother, Kyle, constantly chews his fingers. Mother, Addie, amidst her
own sadness strives to instill hope but the Now’s remain a family lost in pain.
Hard times have been a constant in
outport life as the cod fishery came to an end and the residents of smaller
outport communities forced to move to larger towns. Sylvanus, before grief
overwhelmed him, had an uncommon spirit:
The story was still told how Sylvanus thumbed his nose at
the relocation money and stayed till the last fish was caught, stayed till they
nearly starved, and then determined not to lose his house, took out his chain
saw and cut the house in half. He then floated both halves up the bay and
landed them atop this wharf and declared to his astonished Addie – This is as far as she goes. By Christ if I
can’t work the sea, I’ll sleep on it. No gawd-damned mortal telling me where I sleeps.
And still the house sits upon that
wharf.
Among their neighbours are Clar and
Bonnie Gillard. Clar, battered as a boy, has become a battering man and Bonnie
the brunt of his abuse. Kyle cannot understand why she continues to return to
him assault after assault. As she does for many Addie provides comfort to
Bonnie accepting her choices.
Nearby is Kate, a middle-aged woman,
who lives a simple life in a small home. Kate moved in a few years ago. Quiet
about her past she has a fire going most evenings outside her home. People come
and go, usually bringing a six pack of beer, while Kate plays her guitar and
works on the songs she is writing of her life.
There is a confrontation between
Sylvanus and Clar over Clar’s provocative disruption at the cemetery where
Chris is buried.
Kyle’s quick tongue lashes Clar over
his loutish behavior.
Sylvanus and Kyle, so caught up in
their grief over Chris, are stunned when Addie tells them she has breast cancer
and will need immediate surgery. My next post will discuss illness and death in
a small Canadian community.
After getting the news Kyle runs off
and gets drunk. Leaving the bar he is sucker punched by Clar. Later he passes out on the wharf outside the house.
During the night Clar is killed. He
has been stabbed with a knife and his body dumped into the ocean. His dog, a
Labrador, has dragged the dead master ashore.
Suspicion alights upon the members
of the Now family. Kyle fears his mother or father may have killed Clar in
self-defence or while protecting Bonnie. Friends rally with stories to protect Kyle.
The RCMP find talkative but not
informative witnesses.
It is a rare book that manages to
have a credible mystery combined with high family dramas. Morrissey meets the
challenge. If anything, I found myself more interested in the Now family than
the murder investigation.
Morrissey in description and
dialogue brings modern outport Newfoundland to life.
The sea and rocky land make for a
striking landscape. The fog is an evening companion.
Morrissey has a keen ear for the language
and rhythms of the islanders. I found myself sitting among the characters
listening to their conversations.
The Now men find they cannot keep
hiding from their grief. Addie’s cancer and Clar’s murder force them to face
their sorrow.
Kyle is told:
Well, I’m grieving a son. Weigh that in your heart when you’re
judging mine. I’m all he’s got. He’s lost his sense of reality. That makes him
the living dead and he’s only got me to fight for him. And he don’t know that
because he’s angry with me. Real angry, and he won’t let me help.
The book is so well written it flows
both gracefully and powerfully. It is an excellent contender on this year’s
shortlist for the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Canadian Crime Fiction Novel.
It sounds like a powerful story, Bill. And I like it very much that it's got a distinctive setting and context. I know what you mean, too, about being as interested in the family as you are in the mystery.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I really enjoyed the vividness of the Newfoundland setting and family life.
DeleteVery interesting story, also sounds very sad. I think I would want to read the first two books in the trilogy, which you mention in your next post.
ReplyDeleteTracyK: Thanks for the comment. I expect the story would be better if you read the first two books in the series.
ReplyDeleteThis does sound good, although bleak. I have read a little about the author and she sounds very interesting.
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. I hope you get a chance to read the book. I hope this is not too contradictory. It is not as bleak as you might expect.
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