This is an older work of Shreve’s, published in 1991, but a timely one, what with the “Me too” movement and the controversy involving freedom of the press and fake news.
The novel takes place in 1971, twenty years prior. It is told from the perspective of several individuals acquainted with the main character, Maureen English, aka Mary Amesbury, fleeing from an abusive husband, taking her infant daughter with her. She stops in a small coastal town in Maine for the night at a motel and signs in as Mary Amesbury. It is below freezing weather. She then decides to rent a small cheap cottage and stay until she can figure out what to do with very little cash that was in her husbands pocket when she abruptly took flight. She needs a few groceries and stops at the only place available in town, picks up a coffee cake, milk and a 6-pack of beer. An odd selection, I thought. She is a nursing mother, so the beer gave me pause, not to mention it’s freezing outside. Coffee anyone? I then remembered that this is the 70s and the no-drinking rule for nursing mothers wasn’t yet as well focused on as it is today. She evidently didn’t worry about it anyway, as through-out the novel she partook in hard liquor as well. The proprietor of the store is also the only law-enforcement the town has. He notices her bruised face and cut lips. She says she was in a car accident, but that’s just the beginning to this complex story. I won’t say more. Read it.
I’ve had this in my personal library for some time but hadn’t read it as I find the topic of domestic violence hard and depressing to read at times. Knowing Shreve’s talents I was sure it would offer more than standard fare in this genre.
Page one however, should have been sub-titled “Helen.” Her other chapters were sub-titled by the person’s perspective of the main character. I thought I was reading comments by the author Shreve because it refers to books she has written and why, but no, it is the novel. The story opens with Helen, a journalist, an investigative reporter, who has gathered notes and information for an article and a book about what went on in the case of Maureen/Mary, who at the opening of the novel is in jail. It goes into what her life was like before coming to St. Hilaire, Maine and how her short residency ultimately affected many of the local towns-people. After you figure that out, you get the rhythm of the writing as it unfolds from past to present.
One thing that bothered me was the summary towards the end referred to as “the article” entitled (in the Maine dialect) as “The Killing Over to the Point” written by Helen Scofield. This is a 19 page summary of everything you’ve already read, which I admittedly had a tendency to skim through until I figured out it had a way of swaying the reader as to what actually was true and what may have not been. It begs to open your mind in question. Appropriately in this day and age of leniencies taken by the press. It gives the reader a good realization of how reporting can influence, sway and determine the outcome of certain situations. The ending did bring some surprises, some closure and a gratefulness for the support of abused women in today’s climate.
A very good read. I’m glad I dusted it off my library shelf.