When Stella, fresh from her life in the city, arrives to take up her first teaching post in the one-room schoolhouse in a little frontier settlement in the British Columbia interior, she soon finds herself immersed in the stories she is told. Although an outsider in their midst, she sees that for those who dwell in this tiny community, life follows its destined course, amid conditions of extraordinary Depression-era hardship.
Born Sheila Martin Doherty, she grew up on the grounds of the provincial mental hospital where her father, Dr. Charles Edward Doherty, was the superintendent until his death in 1922. After studying at Vancouver's Convent of the Sacred Heart, Sheila Doherty finished her university studies at the University of British Columbia in 1933. She then worked as an elementary and high school teacher throughout British Columbia – including two years in Dog Creek (1935–1937), which served as a basis for her first novel, Deep Hollow Creek. She married Canadian poet Wilfred Watson in 1941.
Watson wrote The Double Hook between 1952 and 1954 in Calgary and revised it during a year-long stay in Paris. It was published in 1959 and was instantly recognized as a modern classic.
In 1976, she and her husband moved to Nanaimo, where they died in 1998.
Deep Hollow Creek records Stella’s astute observations of life in the isolated Cariboo Country where she has been newly hired to teach the children of a small community of ranchers near Boulder Creek. The complexities of human nature are set amidst the harsh environment and the economic hardships of the depression era. Despite efforts to draw Stella into their tangle of social alliances, she remains detached from the town overlords, an unnaturally independent woman in her struggle to withstand the isolation and desolation of the people.
For me the best part of this was knowing it was written in the 1930s. It was not written as historical fiction but as a contemporary story. For a sense of depression era struggles in a small inbred community, it's worth reading.