Publishers Weekly
- Publisher's Weekly
When starry-eyed Matilda Fiona O'Roarke (Mattie) meets burly, romantic Proteus Nicholas Blue (Nick), she's a clerk at a Tallahassee convenience store and he's working for a logging firm. He tells her he comes from a long line of rugged Greek-American fishermen who believe they're descended from dolphins and, as such, are destined to die at sea. Nick hopes to thwart fate, but when a fellow logger is killed on the job, Nick realizes that land is just as dangerous as water and returns with Mattie to his home on Lethe, the Florida coastal island his forebears settled. Initially, Mattie finds the extroverted Blue clan overwhelming, but her shyness disappears when Nick's widowed mother takes her under her wing. Soon Mattie is a fishmonger like Nick, and she learns more about the Blue family's heritage and their belief in myth--Nick is named for Poseidon's son, and the island recalls the mythological river of forgetfulness. Domestic traumas unfold, with Nick's black-sheep brother, Zeke, abandoning his teenage son to Mattie's care, while another brother, Demetrius, struggles with his infant son after his wife's desertion. Nick is strong and sensitive, a loving husband to Mattie, a man who cries when she reads him Hemingway and who saves the lives of stranded baby turtles and butterflies. Mattie is haunted by her own sad history of paternal abandonment and maternal neglect. She tries hard to be perfect, tending house, earning an accounting degree, harvesting vegetables and culling shrimp. When the inevitable Blue curse claims Nick, newly pregnant Mattie remains with the family she has come to love. Though much of the narrative is awash in nostalgia, and the allusions to Greek mythology are forced, Fowler writes lyrically of the Florida coast. The love story carries strong appeal, and Fowler's tender portrayal of Nick and Mattie's idyllic relationship will please romantics everywhere. BOMC selection; national author tour. (Feb.) FYI: Fowler's previous novel, Before Women Had Wings, was made into an Oprah Winfrey Presents TV movie and won the 1996 Southern Book Critics Circle Award. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
The story of a Greek American family living on an island in the Florida panhandle is told through the journals of Mattie, who has become a member through marriage. Nick Blue, her husband, had left the family business but returns again to take out his shrimp trawler. Mattie, who has come from a broken home without much love and affection, is gradually integrated into this closely knit group. Her chronicles convey the century-long family history in America, beginning with the arrival of Nick s great-great-grandfather. Mattie makes astute observations concerning each member and their interactions with one another, seeing how important these ties are in good times and bad. She recalls her developing relationship with Nick and how it has changed her. The author has created a realistic atmosphere of life dominated by the sea, with its ever-changing face from extreme calm to furious storminess. As reader, Fowler aptly portrays the variety of colorful characters she has developed. Highly recommended. Catherine Swenson, Norwich Univ., Northfield, VT Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.