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Coastliners: A Novel
Joanne Harris

Harper Perennial, 2003 - 368 pages

average customer review:based on 30 reviews
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Going home

"They say you can't go home again, and I guess 'they' should know, But, oh, my heart is weary and I want to go there so...
They say I can't go home again, but maybe 'they' don't know,
I think I'll close my eyes and drift, and just see where I can go... (extracted from the poem "Home Again" by Fleta Aday).

Mado returns home to her village on a French barrier island after the death of her mother in Paris. She finds her home village somewhat in a decline, along with her father who seems estranged from her. There is a rivalry between her home village and the other town on the island, and attempts to divert the tide to steal each others sand. Sand beaches are important both for coastal protection and attracting the tourists. He who has the sand has the tourist trade.

There is the mysterious Flynn, a stranger who has appeared on the island and seems to be helping people in her village. Everyone seems to have their own agenda, whether it is competition for a pretty young woman, or for getting the better of a business rival. Everyone is not who they seem. As the story progresses, various information comes to the surface and hidden secrets are revealed.

This is the story of people fighting to survive, whether the problems come from harsh weather, invading jellyfish, oil spills, or the greed of other individuals. Some younger people leave to look for a better life, but some return, drawn back to their beginnings. Overall, it is an interesting story.


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Not like the others but well worth your time

Unlike some of Harris' other books (_Chocolat_, and _Five Quarters of the Orange_) this one was not as food-oriented. I loved that quality in her other books, but I was also happy with her fiction in _Coastliners_. Although this book differed from her others in plot, the setting remained the same: France. In this case, the small island of Le Devin, lying off the coast of mainland France. The island inhabitants and the island scenes themselves were so well-written and easy to imagine.

The story itself was very entertaining. The main character, Mado, returns to her island home after a ten year absense. She finds that some things have changed, but much remains the same; namely the feud/rivalry between the families on the island. Mado wants to help her family and friends to build up their side of the island, but she encounters hostility and many unforeseen obstacles in the process.

In _Coastliners_, Harris constructs a captivating story with interesting plot twists. I enjoyed this book and highly recommend it.


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Well painted pictures

Joanne Harris writes well in this story of family ties and the importance of place in the lives of her characters - her descriptions painting pictures which keep you reading. I enjoyed this book, and look forward to reading others she has written. If you don't enjoy descriptive writing, this book may not be for you, but I intend to use it in my bookgroup, as I think the themes should lead to good discussion. Some might find it a little slow - but I read it in a couple of sittings and enjoyed the slow ride.






Worth Its Weight in Sel de Mer

Joanne Harris has a wonderful way of creating a novel that revolves around something magical where the main character, although faced with some implacable obstacle, doesn't lose faith and in the process of solving the story's main plot issue, reintroduces him/herself to the new person that has immerged from within. "Coastliners" is just such a story. Mado, has returned to the northern French island of Le Devin whose livelihood relies on the bounty of the island saint who controls the tides and the erosion of the island's beaches. Upset by the dissentigration of Les Salants, her hometown, she devises a way to bring the heart back into the village, by stealing the beach back from the rival village on the other side of the island. With the help of an Anglo drifter, she finds a way to unite the feuding families of her home and infuse them and herself with a faith in the future.

Harris' strong suit is her wonderfully fleshed-out characterizations of the island inhabitants. The Greek chorus of the two nuns, the oldest woman in the community, the old man with the wooden leg as well as Mado's father, Grosjean and the rival merchant Claude Brissmand are all worth their weight in sel de mer. Her weak point however, is her tendency to get a bit preachy still in Mado's voice towards the end of the novel when this character begins to think of herself as a part of the village and not just an instrument of change---the John Dunne quote of "no man is an island" rings a little shrilly here, the bell tolling allusion even used within the story to signal the villagers to connect in action.

If you are a fan of Harris' other novels, you will also recognize a pattern, the protagonist always has a wicked and prosperous adversary, the secondary players squabble like children until the narrator finds a way to use their diversity to create an infallable unit, the love interest has questionable motives and a penchant for bending the law to his advantage---in 'Coastliners' all this works wonderfully well as it did in "Chocolat" and "Five Quarters of the Orange". Also at the conclusion, the islanders face too much strife which detracts from the ebb and flow of the main story. The author's motivation to show too much cooperation during these misfortunes admirably shows the development towards that greater village good, but it goes on too long---one disaster scene would have played just as well. In addition, the focal point of many unknown secrets seems to be given a rather rushed denoument also towards the end of the story--whereas, hints of these hidden motivations, although suggested rather slighly, should have been advertisized a bit more blatantly with more of a sprinkling throughout the entire story.

In spite of these flaws at the novel's end, 'Coastliners' is still a marvelous story in which to get lost. Harris has a way with words, her descriptions take you to the coast where the surf rushes around your ankles and draws you in deep. Listen to the unabridged audio version; the reader does a great job of adding vibrance to each villager's voice.


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