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Returning Light

Thirty Years on the Island of Skellig Michael

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The Acclaimed International Bestseller

"It is impossible to do justice to the beauty of Returning Light. The whole book is a poem." — New York Times Book Review

By the lighthouse keeper on the remote, otherworldly Irish island of Skellig Michael, a "profound memoir about the importance of place and what it really means to belong" (Belfast Telegraph)

"On Skellig Michael, thousands of birds appear and disappear, erecting towers, coming together in wings of movement which build and unravel over the empty sea. Often, no one else is there to stand beside me on the island. The mind wanders; links with the past are easily made; ancient ways of viewing things come alive."

In 1987, Robert Harris happened upon an unusual job posting in the local paper—a new warden service was being set up on the island of Skellig Michael, and the deadline was imminent. Just weeks later he was on his way to set up camp in one of Ireland's most remote locations, unaware that he would be making that same journey every May for the next 30 years.

Here he transports us to the otherworldly island, a place that is teeming with natural life, including curious puffins that like to visit his hut. From the precipice he has observed a coastline that is relatively unchanged for the last thousand years—a beacon of equilibrium in an ever-changing world.

But the island can be fierce too. It's inhabitable for only five months of the year, and solitude can quickly become isolation as bad weather rolls in to create a veil between Skellig Michael and the rest of the world, when the dizzying terrain can become a very real threat to life.

A beautiful and evocative work of nature writing, Returning Light is an extraordinary memoir about the profound effect a place can have on us, and how a remote location can bring with it a great sense of belonging.

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    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2023
      A memoir from the lighthouse keeper on a remote island off the southwest coast of Ireland. Harris recounts his 30 years of part-time residency on Skellig Michael, a tiny, craggy pyramid more than seven miles off the coast of the Iveragh Peninsula. Despite its size, for the author, it harbors unlimited vistas onto nature and into the soul. Harris seduces with the lyrical opening pages, but the lengthy descriptive passages devolve into overly fanciful rhapsodies. Though he claims there are no words for the fleeting movements of light that play about the ruins of an ancient monastery or other parts of the island, the author never fails to tap oceans of words to express them. As a poet, Harris can be sublime, but his prose too often gets stuck in a single cadence, describing the same vistas and movements of animals over and over with little variation. He continually lets his imagination run away with him, investing both inanimate objects and living creatures with qualities they do not possess. It's almost a shock when he suddenly comes down to earth and writes matter-of-factly about the island's history and ecology, a respite from verbal pyrotechnics. To say Harris is imbued with the place is putting it mildly, but it's not strictly a love affair. In addition to beauty, delicacy, and fortitude, he also shows nature's indifference and a measure of spiritual darkness. One of the strongest features of the book is the author's exploration of monastic histories, myths, and legends. Yet there are also wonderful personal interludes when he is transfixed by "magical" visitations, like a strange flight of butterflies finding their way into his lonely hut, drawn by lamplight. The power comes from describing it simply. Those enamored with the ethereal will be captivated; those with little patience for repetition are in for an endurance test.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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