*4.5* Stars.
This lovely book transported me to rural Cape Breton. Ranging from humour to sadness and back again, there was heartbreak and also heartwarming passages. It encompasses love, grief, generational differences, sorrow, regret, the ageing process, guilt, forgiveness, teenaged pregnancy, childhood physical and emotional abuse. It also touches on topics of spirituality and religious beliefs, unhealthy working conditions and deforestation. So much that is thought-provoking in this small, delightful story.
John Alex is 80, and deeply missing his wife, Eva, who died decades before. Each morning he sets the breakfast table for her. At times he not only feels her presence but sees and talks with her. He loved her dearly, but is she a manifestation of his guilt and sorrow over her death, a vision of happy times, a presence due to his loneliness? Could she actually be a ghost?
He is cantankerous, believing in the rights of freedom of expression gives one the right to be themselves. Often contrary to the villagers’ popular thought and rules. He had been taken to court for his unsightly property but won that case. Now he is worried he is losing his mental faculties and slipping into dementia. He has occasions when his mind has gone blank. The final straw was when he stopped his car to pick up a hitchhiker and realized it was a neighbour’s mailbox. John Alex states that he usually picks up any hitchhiker who doesn’t look like an axe murderer or Brian Mulroney.
He visits the local, eccentric doctor, ‘Shaky’ Fedder, who has Parkinson’s. John Alex considers the doctor to be young (he is in his 70s), but experienced. The doctor gives him a clean bill of health, dissuading him of any evidence of mental decline.
One day a 16-year-old pregnant girl, Emily, shows up at his home. She is estranged from her parents, especially her mother, and has no place to go. Her parents insist on her being sent to Halifax for the remainder of her pregnancy, and the baby put up for adoption, The doctor has sent her to John Alex in the belief that the old man needed a restored purpose in life and that Emily needs adult support and sympathy. Together they develop a caring household, built on mutual respect and understanding, despite their age differences.
When she refuses to follow her parents’ wishes, there is much turmoil and suspense. Her parents turn her custody over to the Province, leading a lawyer, Mounties and a social worker to John Alex’s door. Their goal is to remove Emily to Halifax for the birth and adoption of her baby. To do so, there is also the aim to prove John Alex incompetent. What will happen? In the meantime, John Alex’s estranged brother is dying and needs help. He has never forgiven him for a past betrayal, and both Emily and the doctor want reconciliation, but John Alex refuses.
The characters are quirky but believable. There is Brian, who is always protesting for various causes. He is Emily’ boyfriend, but not the father of her baby. He is distraught and confused. This time he is protesting deforestation and goes to live like a hermit in the forest to think about the situation.
There is a beloved and popular priest, Father Wes Welenga, a man from Africa, who has seen how deforestation destroyed his village in Cameroon. He mixes Catholic doctrine with some beliefs in native spirits from his homeland.
Sheila, the bookmobile librarian, flirts with John Alex, and as a former nurse is scheduled to attend Emily for the birth of the baby.
This was a poignant story which involved me emotionally. The sense of place and its characters brought the story to life for me.