Book Description
"Lenore Hart's story of love and betrayal yields as many surprises as the sea itself." -- SOUTHERN LIVING". . . reads like a Greek tragedy crossed with Peyton Place . . . Hart reaches surprising emotional depths with her exploration of sibling rivalry, familial commitment, and social taboos." -- PUBLISHER'S WEEKLY"Annie's strength carries the novel, without resorting to cloying moments or tear-jerking cliches." -- WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL"[Her] skill as a novelist lies in the respect she has for the form and for the words themselves . . . " -- Salisbury NC POST". . . utterly convincing and beautifully sensual. You feel the shell cuts, the pull of the nets." -- BALTIMORE SUN". . . Hart creates a believable world where tragedy does not always equal hopelessness, a place where you don't always get what you want , but if you're strong, you find reasons to go on living anyway." -- Ft. Lauderdale SUN-SENTINELEven as a child, plain, boyish Annie Revels had everyone's role in life figured out. Everyone's, that is, except her own. Her mother was sickly and needed to be taken care of. Her little sister Rebecca was remarkably beautiful, and she was not. Her father was a waterman, a free-looking life Annie deeply envied and could've had, if only she'd been born a son.Tiny, remote Revels Island, a barrier island off the Eastern Shore of Virginia, knows nothing of the partying, gin-soaked Roaring Twenties which grips the rest of the country. The Revels family depends on the coastal waters to make a living, and tragedy is always only a bad storm away. As Annie notes, "In order to live on the Shore, you need to understand that good weather always follows bad." But when her father dies suddenly and unexpectedly, it falls to Annie to take his place aboard the oyster boat and support what's left of the family. Out there, though it came at a greater cost than imagined, she Annie falls easily into the only life she thought she could ever really fit: as a waterman. Until one day, out on the water, she meets Nathan. . . .