When the call comes, Leigh Welles has not been home to the island since she left it. Now her father, the last of the family on the island, has had an accident and died and she must go home to bury him. Leigh's brother, Sam has been a big success but Leigh's experience off the island has been a series of dead-end jobs and shoddy flats. She is not sorry to be returning.
But things seem different. The island has always been inhabited by a population of crows that the islanders call the slaugh. They believe that the birds are otherworldly and carry the souls of the dead. But lately the birds have flocked together and attacked island residents. What does that mean?
Iain MacTavish lives on the island, his father having left him enough money that he doesn't need to work. He was a pilot during the recent world war and that war took both his best childhood friend and his wife from him. He wanders the island spending time with himself thinking about the war and what it meant.
Leigh and Iain come together when Hugo, a young teenager whose big brother was Iain's best friend, disappears. Where could he have gone? What took him away?
This is a debut novel for Emma Seckel and I'm looking forward to reading more from her. She is a Canadian author and photographer and spent four years of university in a small Scottish town which gave her the ability to portray the island where Leigh and Iain live. The writing has a misty feel where nothing is quite as it seems but almost everything has changed dramatically over the years. The characters are all still dealing with the aftermath of World War II and the deaths and tragedies it left behind. The supernatural elements add to the book without overwhelming it. I listened to this novel and the narrator added to the atmosphere of cloudy understanding as the characters grope towards the truth. This book is recommended for historical and literary fiction readers.





























