3.5 stars (rounded up, not down)
Captain Jacob Worse, a widower just over 50, (Skipper Worse) returns triumphantly from a voyage to Rio, the first captain in the area to do so. Sara is a devout member of the Haugian Christian sect, and her controlling mother has marital plans for Sara that are at cross purposes with who Sara loves. Sara's younger sister also loves a man her mother disapproves of.
This is a novel of the realism school of the nineteenth century, although by today's standards it is a bit melodramatic at times. It is a scathing criticism not only of the strict, rather off-the-wall Haugian sect, but of faith in general. However, I liked this better than I expected despite the starkness of much of the novel because if there is one thing Kielland, a new author to me, can do, it is write. While his characterization of the religious people is at times shallow and superficial (not always), his characterization of those of his point of view is frequently quite well done.