The Innocents: A Novel
The Innocents: A Novel book cover

The Innocents: A Novel

Hardcover – November 12, 2019

Price
$12.47
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Doubleday
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385545426
Dimensions
5.77 x 1.19 x 8.54 inches
Weight
1.15 pounds

Description

*Finalist for the 2019 Giller Prize, 2019 Governor General's Literary Awards, & 2019 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize * “Imagine Into the Wild with prepubescents, told in the voice of a William Blake acolyte as verbally inventive as Tolkien… The Innocents is a survivor narrative and a psychological thriller, a chilling study in isolation.” —Hillary Kelly, Vulture “Michael Crummey’s ravishing story is raw and intimate and will break your heart.” — People Magazine (Book of the Week)“This is an extraordinary novel, emotionally precise, vivid in its portrayal of nature, and subtle in its exploration of the relationship between life and story.” —Wall Street Journal “Engrossing and beautifully written…A work of lyrical naturalism dressed as an allegory.” —Washington Post “What begins as a gripping survival tale deepens into a psychological inquiry into intimacy, conflictxa0and what it means to be alone together in the world…[a] harshly beautiful new novel.” — USA Today “A gripping and credible page-turner about children surviving in the wilderness, but more than that: this Adam and Eve struggle to make sense of a world that’s somewhere between Eden and Hell. Michael Crummey writes like an avenging angel, never putting a word wrong.” —Emma Donoghue , author of Room "Michael Crummey’s The Innocents is a dazzling and myriad achievement. Set against the unforgiving Newfoundland frontier, this harrowing tale of two siblings eking out a teetering existence is difficult to witness and impossible to put to down.xa0 But what makes this story timeless is Crummey's rich depiction of the human heart in extremis, the unflagging beat of life in a world that is too much to bear. Set aside whatever you’re reading and pick this up— The Innocents is a masterpiece." —Smith Henderson , author of Fourth of July Creek "Michael Crummey’s new novel The Innocents is a fantastic read. Written in graceful and evocative prose, Ada and Evered's story blurs the boundary between the quotidian and the strange until it becomes a meditation on the curious fact of existence itself. A wonderfully provocative and insightful book." —Kevin Powers , author of Yellow Birds and A Shout in the Ruins “Few novels have cast their spell on me as deeply as The Innocents .xa0 I am reminded of Dickens, not just the nineteenth-century setting and the imperiled children, but the artfulness: brilliant plot, unforgettable minor characters, perfect pacing. Yet Michael Crummey’s poetic voice and landscape are his own. The Innocents is brilliant.”— Ron Rash , author of Serena “Page-turning…An unusual, gripping period novel from a much-honored Canadian writer.” — Kirkus (starred review) “The riveting story of an orphaned brother and sister whose relationship is tested by hardship and isolation in 19th-century coastal Labrador…A richly fashioned story told with great sensitivity—one that is as credible as it is magical. The Innocents reminds us of all the reasons we read—to understand, to imagine, to find compassion and to witness the making of art.” — BookPage (starred review) “Heartfelt, extraordinary...Crummey delivers profound insight into how individuals grapple with the forces of nature, not only in the unpredictable environment, but in the mystifying interior of their temperaments, drives, and character. This story of how two guileless youngsters navigate life will have a deep emotional impact on its readers.”— Publishers Weekly “A gorgeous portrait of remote Newfoundland of yesterday with a remarkable story of human resilience at its core.”— Booklist "Moving...The relentless bleakness is alleviated by the cinematic depiction of the surrounding wilderness, with Crummey’s prose recalling that of Jim Crace in its strange, archaic terminology and sense of timelessness.” — Library Journal "Inventive, dark, pathos-evoking, this sensitive novel of survival and discovery asks just how far innocence stretches in a remote cove of Newfoundland...This searing novel will keep readers engrossed in its harsh world long after its hopeful conclusion."— Shelf Awareness MICHAEL CRUMMEY is an award-winning poet and storyteller. Crummey was born in Buchans, a mining town in the interior of Newfoundland. He is the bestselling author of four critically acclaimed novels, River Thieves , The Wreckage , Galore , and Sweetland , as well as five collections of poetry. His novels have won or been shortlisted for many prizes, including the Giller prize, the Governor-General's award, the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the IMPAC Award, and his books have sold over 225,000 copies in North America. He lives in St John's, Newfoundland.

Features & Highlights

  • People Magazine
  • Book of the Week"Extraordinary."--
  • Wall Street Journal
  • "Gripping."--Emma Donoghue, author of
  • Room
  • "Dazzling."--Smith Henderson, author of
  • Fourth of July Creek
  • "Fantastic."--Kevin Powers, author of
  • Yellow Birds
  • and
  • A Shout in the Ruins
  • "Brilliant."--Ron Rash, author of
  • Serena
  • From prizewinning author Michael Crummey comes a spellbinding story of survival in which a brother and sister confront the limits of human endurance and their own capacity for loyalty and forgiveness.
  • A brother and sister are orphaned in an isolated cove on Newfoundland's northern coastline. Their home is a stretch of rocky shore governed by the feral ocean, by a relentless pendulum of abundance and murderous scarcity. Still children with only the barest notion of the outside world, they have nothing but the family's boat and the little knowledge passed on haphazardly by their mother and father to keep them. Muddling though the severe round of the seasons, through years of meagre catches and storms and ravaging illness, it is their fierce loyalty to each other that motivates and sustains them. But as seasons pass and they wade deeper into the mystery of their own natures, even that loyalty will be tested.
  • The Innocents
  • is richly imagined and compulsively readable, a riveting story of hardship and survival, and an unflinching exploration of the bond between brother and sister. By turns electrifying and heartbreaking, it is a testament to the bounty and barbarity of the world, to the wonders and strangeness of our individual selves.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(507)
★★★★
25%
(423)
★★★
15%
(254)
★★
7%
(118)
23%
(388)

Most Helpful Reviews

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NOT UNDERSTANDING 5 STAR REVIEWS

I can't imagine why the high number of positive reviews for this book. It is difficult to read; a lot of reading with very little going on, and at times you have to translate the slang or jargon used - stop and try to decipher what you just read - unfamiliar words & terms, foreign or specific to the time period, or to who knows what. So it takes a lot longer to slog through than a book this size should to finish. Add to this the snails pace at which things progress and the mostly lack of anything happening at all and it seems as much an exercise in frustration as a decent read. Also, the incest (& the slow crawl pace and confusing, unclear manner at which even this unfurls) and it all boils down to something considerably less than highly rated, IMO. It's good enough that I finished it (though several times along the way I wondered why, debated just putting it down & walking away) and it not wholly without merit, but it's sure no 5 star (barely a one) and was not, to me, worth the price I paid. If you're curious about this one, maybe try checking it out from the library.
13 people found this helpful
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Not advised for fun seekers

It's quite interesting and informative to look at some of the reviews. Some dislike it because it is too grim; some find the language challenging (e.g.,have to re-read sentences). Both are largely true, but such objections fail to grasp the gestalt.
To me, the book is almost poetry in prose form. True, some of the language is mildly obscure - neologisms, "Newfie" dialect, terms of nature unfamiliar to most moderns - which reminds one of poetry where words are used in unusual or provocative ways to enlist collateral ideas or impressions. But ultimately the story recounts the strength of human endurance in the face of unimaginable deprivation, vulnerability to "civilized" practice, and especially how true ignorance (of civilization, of physiology, even of written words) would be experienced in the midst of "civilization." For anyone looking for a sweetness-and-light feel-good story about two happy youngsters, this is definitely NOT for you. But if you are willing to endure, along with two young orphans left in a desolate part of Newfoundland confronting through their own determination and energy their issues of survival, evolving sexual maturity, and unimaginable privation, you will enjoy this book deeply.
12 people found this helpful
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Tedious (for me)

THE INNOCENTS is an atmospheric story of survival set in 18th century Newfoundland. It begins with death leaving a young brother and sister ages 12 and 10 orphaned. Alone and isolated, Evered and Ada begin and end each day struggling to feed themselves, stay warm during the severe winters, procure enough food throughout the short spring and summer to trade for supplies, and learn the ways of their growing bodies and the world....together.

Didn't much care for this one or some of the places it took the reader. A tedious read for me....unlike Crummey's SWEETLAND.

Many thanks to Doubleday Books via NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
3 people found this helpful
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Boring and Incestuous

Possibly my least favorite book of the year?

A mediocre survivalist story that is at best boring and at worst horrid.

I fail to understand the merit of exploring sexual relationships between siblings.
1 people found this helpful
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WELL WRITTEN, RAW STORY

After reading the first few pages I thought I couldn't go through this story of 2 siblings isolated somewhere on the coast of Newfoundland. I kept on reading as it is well written but the content is difficult to digest. Extreme isolation, poverty, no education, loss of both parents, this boy and his sister are left to their own fate. There is a ship that comes once a year with some goods that they get in exchange for dried fish. The end is foreseeable and far from pleasant.
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A quick atmospheric read that I could not put down.

I love a story about children surviving in the wilderness, I don't know why but this tale really had me at the edge of my seat as I watched these orphans survive life in Newfoundland Canada. It does touch on some topics that I felt could have been handled poorly but it was done with a lot of grace and I really enjoyed my time with this historical fiction.
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Isolation

I finished reading Michael Crummey’s novel titled, The Innocents, on the day that the mayor of my town declared a shelter-in-place order to slow the spread of Covid-19. That context is helpful, considering that as a result of reading this novel, I had a positive view of the richness of life that can come even from isolation. In the novel, a brother and sister eke out ways of surviving in coastal Newfoundland where they live in primitive habitation far from other people. From the title, readers can expect that the isolation represents innocence on the part of these characters. I found the story riveting and well-told. Whether you are in isolation or not, you may be gripped by this story and how living for another day is rich in and of itself, whether your supplies are sufficient or running low.

Rating: Four-star (I like it)
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Should have been published with a glossary

This is a well written book, even a poetic one. It is not an easy book to read because of the suffering, but life is not always easy, and we often read to find out more about life, and other people.
So why the low rating?
I can only imagine that the people giving this high reviews are natives of Newfondland, or don't mind not understanding large parts of the book. There is so much slang and jargon that is specifically from that area, and the internet is only occasionally any help, that you are often left puzzled as to what is being said. I was able to find out by a 30 min search on the internet, that a tilt is a kind of shack/house with a tilted roof. A stud tilt is a tilt made of logs - I think. But sometimes he calls it a house. (Are there two buildings?) I am still puzzling over, "Go to sleep out of it." And "neither could say if Mockbegger (a town) was fit to eat." And that is only in the first 9 pages. There really should have been a glossary. I enjoyed the book, but I know I missed a lot and it left me puzzled and disgruntled because of that. I would not recommend it without a glossary.
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An interesting, understandably perverse novel

The idea for the subject matter of The Innocents interested me. I have always liked Newfoundland ,and thought the history of the province is unique . So here we have a very interesting idea. To young siblings left to their own devices in the later !800’s in desolate Newfoundland.

Their parents dead, with some skills they had learned about survival ,this novel makes very interesting reading. I must say, I really looked forward to everything that would happened. This book was a real page turner ,as they say.

The relationship between the brother and sister was fascinating. They were left alone to deal with all the complicated feelings that the teenage years have to deal with, and it was the heart of the novel, how they did it

I was not surprised but still disgusted by how they finally ended up having sex with each other. But, then again, I come from a place we’re I view all of us as having many incarnations on this planet. So, what I wondered is what their relationship had been together in previous lives. Well, that’s just me, as well as at least half of the population of the earth, mostly in Asian countries.

All in all, a good read. Would love to see who both the siblings had become when they were 45 and beyond. Well, maybe for a future novel.
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The title was misleading.

I am reading the book right now. It is interesting, different from what I expected and a little creepy.