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Book Reviews of The Exile of Sara Stevenson

The Exile of Sara Stevenson
The Exile of Sara Stevenson
Author: Darci Hannah
ISBN-13: 9780345520548
ISBN-10: 0345520548
Publication Date: 7/27/2010
Pages: 400
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 11

3.6 stars, based on 11 ratings
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

cathyskye avatar reviewed The Exile of Sara Stevenson on + 2261 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
First Line: Somebody once told me that every tower had a ghost, and every ghost had a story.

Nineteen-year-old Sara Stevenson is the daughter of famed lighthouse builder, Robert Stevenson. In many ways, she's the typical spoiled young woman, used to a life of being pampered in the family home in Edinburgh. She knows what she wants, and she usually wants it yesterday. Unfortunately her latest heart's desire has gotten her in trouble.

Sara has fallen in love with handsome young seaman Thomas Crichton. Crichton is missing, and she's pregnant. Her normally indulgent parents are not amused. Sara is exiled to the very remote lighthouse at Cape Wrath, the most northwesterly corner of the British mainland. She is accompanied by her maid (who betrayed her) and her maid's husband. Once at the lighthouse, Sara finds the keeper, William Campbell, to have more than his fair share of quirks and strange behavior.

As time passes, Sara meets and makes friends with some of the locals, learns to do a bit of cooking and cleaning, and begins to appreciate the rugged land on which she lives. Although Crichton never appears, she still loves him and won't hear a word against him, even though she eventually begins to have feelings for someone else. As the days pass, she corresponds with a rather strange antiquarian in Oxford, and when she learns about her parents' plans for her baby, she writes to ask him for help. She learns that he has quite an obstacle to surmount before he can arrive on Cape Wrath.

The major reason why I picked up this book is because of the title. A few years ago, I read an excellent book, The Lighthouse Stevensons by Bella Bathurst, which is ostensibly about Sara's father. I was a bit uneasy about an author giving a fictional daughter to a real person, especially when the character based upon the real person behaves very differently from historical record. Once I started reading, it was simple for me to keep in mind that this, after all, was fiction.

Hannah proved to be very skilled in bringing the remote setting of Cape Wrath to life, and the character of Sara lived and breathed. During the times she behaved like a spoiled young miss, I just wanted to slap her. I was wheeling right along enjoying the setting, the story and the characters when the ending came along and threw a spanner in the works. You may or may not have noticed the "paranormal" tag I put on this review. The ending of the book involves a love that transcends time as well as time travel.

I love well-done time travel. It's one of my favorite genres. However, as it is handled in this book, it felt clunky and cumbersome, and I simply couldn't suspend my disbelief enough to buy into it. The love of Crichton and Sara also didn't qualify in my mind as a love that transcends time because we weren't allowed to see enough of Crichton before his disappearance.

Minus the paranormal elements and the romance, I really enjoyed this novel. Something tells me that, although I didn't care for the way those two elements were handled, many others will. That doesn't bother me. Hannah shows a great deal of promise, and I will definitely look for more of her writing.
loveofjoe11 avatar reviewed The Exile of Sara Stevenson on + 27 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I have such mixed feelings about this book. I absolutely loved the first 3/4 of the book, and then I felt it became a little too far-fetched and at one point forced. It's hard to say much without giving away the book. I really enjoyed Hannah's writing and I thought this was a great first novel. I really wish I could have given this 4 stars, but the last 1/4 of the book did it in.
reviewed The Exile of Sara Stevenson on
Hauntingly Beautiful. This is a great story. The language is a little rough at first, but after the first few pages is gets easier. Sara Stevenson is a rich character with raw emotion and I found myself laughing and crying right along with her. Things are not what they seem in this desolate little light house. This is a great read for Historical Fiction Lovers!!