Sandra Ireland is carving out rather a nice niche for herself, taking some of the ancient folk tales of Scotland and turning them into contemporary allegorical stories, full of rich imagery and delicate, poetic accounts. I loved Bone Deep and The Unmaking of Ellie Rook is equally strong.
Ellie Rook is a young woman recently returned home from her travels abroad to her family’s scrapyard business in rural Aberdeenshire after a phone call tells her that her mother has gone missing. The Rook family is a closed one, distant from their neighbours. The patriarch, Lawler rules his household with a rod of iron and it was to escape this stifling, rigid, atmosphere that Ellie originally left home.
Ellie’s mother loved the woods and named her daughter after the huntress Finella, a huntress who, Ellie’s mum used to tell her, was strong and brave. Ellie was encouraged by her mum to believe that she could do anything; her namesake instilling into her the confidence that her father’s upbringing sought to quash.
It was Ellie’s mother who encouraged her to leave the nest and fly away, leaving her brother, River, behind with his parents. Now Ellie’s mother has disappeared, and the fear is that she has been claimed by the woods and the water she loved so much; that she has fallen off a cliff and been swept away in a death that echoes Finella’s end.
Returning home, Ellie finds that little has changed and that her father sees her return as only right, now she can take over the household’s domestic chores that her mother used to fulfill.
Coming home reawakens in Ellie the sense of aloneness and incipient violence that always lurked around the corner when she was growing up. Lawler carries that overweening arrogance that comes from being the master of his household where his word is law and nothing gets in his way. To add to that sense, Lawler employs a long time sidekick, Offshore Dave, whose job is to make sure that Lawler’s business is carried on without any outside interference. The Rook way is to have nothing to do with authorities and the disappearance of her mother will not change that.
Ireland ably creates a tense and dramatic scenario in which Ellie relives parts of her childhood while searching desperately for her mother and trying to make sense of the information she has been given. She sees her brother, River, becoming more like her father every day and fears for his future should that happen.
The reader is drawn into this family’s life and as observers, begins to divine what kind of life Ellie’s mother must have had to live. These are dark and disturbing domestic secrets; the kind where you really don’t want to know what went on behind the closed iron gates of the scrapyard, but you are unable to escape the horrible conclusions that arise in your mind.
The Unmaking of Ellie Rook is a seamless blend of folklore and contemporary storytelling that shines a light on dramatic and dangerous family domestics and the insular behaviour that can characterise those who live on the fringes of rural life.
The characters are well drawn and the sense of menace that she packs into her pages is both palpable and chilling.
Verdict: A beautifully written, well-crafted story that packs a big punch. Full of beautiful imagery and allegory, this is a story that has resonance beyond its pages. Highly recommended.