logo
An Island Family Faces Rising Waters and an Unexpected Guest

An Island Family Faces Rising Waters and an Unexpected Guest

New York Times01-03-2025

Charlotte McConaghy's third novel, 'Wild Dark Shore,' opens vividly, with a shipwrecked woman named Rowan washing up on Shearwater, a remote island off the coast of Antarctica. She is nursed to health by the island's caretakers — Dominic Salt and his children, Raff, Fen and Orly, the last inhabitants of an abandoned research base and seed bank — but her unexplained arrival soon upsets the Salt family's delicate balance, which is already strained by grief amid a series of personal and professional disasters.
Dominic, his family and the precious seeds they have been safeguarding for the past eight years are meant to be retrieved by ship six weeks after Rowan's arrival, a timeline they're unable to accelerate after their radio is destroyed. As her injuries heal, Rowan pursues the secret agenda that brought her to Shearwater, while also joining the Salts in their increasingly desperate bid to secure the seed vault and the botanical diversity it preserves.
Fierce cold and wind are a constant threat, and the sea is rising so quickly that Shearwater's beaches are collapsing, endangering the native seals and penguins as well as the base's buildings. (Also, there might be ghosts.) It's a rare novel that has so many simultaneous sources of trouble, and it's to McConaghy's credit that her plot's many interlocking escalations only rarely seem forced. But even when the action veers toward the melodramatic, it feels fitting enough: Should we be surprised when a tale about family bonds and doomed love at the end of the world occasionally becomes a melodrama?
In her author's note, McConaghy recounts visiting the real-life Australian research base on Macquarie Island, a place she calls 'surely one of the most precious in the world.' Even as she borrowed its details for her Shearwater, McConaghy says her experience on Macquarie obligated her to render 'the truth of the island's rich flora, its extraordinary wildlife and its unique climate.' Indeed, 'Wild Dark Shore' abounds with evocative nature writing, including precocious Orly's moving monologues about the dandelion, the buzzy burr, the dinosaur tree and other model specimens of natural resilience.
At 9, Orly has lived nearly his entire life on Shearwater; whatever future comes for the Salts and the imperiled wider world they'll soon rejoin, it's young Orly who may live to see the worst of it. Perhaps his Antarctic childhood will help him withstand the inexorable losses to come. Perhaps he'll have to remake himself in the face of grief as Rowan and his father and siblings already have. If so, he may be buoyed by his many examples of nature's perseverance, like his beloved mangrove seeds that transform as they migrate, seeking an environment where they might thrive: 'Will you change shape and put down roots?' Orly asks. 'Or carry on in search of somewhere better?'
The Salts and Rowan cannot hope to stay on Shearwater, but where should they go, and with whom? As the climate crisis accelerates, the assurance of loss may make retreat ever more attractive, even if it costs us connection with the human and nonhuman worlds we've loved. In 'Wild Dark Shore,' we're shown why a person might withdraw from the messiness of life after tragedy and trauma: 'It's not a good idea to fall in love,' Rowan warns Fen, 'not with people and not with places.' The novel also offers its injured characters a path back to connection and community, a risk McConaghy argues must be worth taking, no matter how fraught the future, no matter how temporary the family. As Rowan reflects later in the novel: 'What is the use of safety if it deprives you of everything else?'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Callan Ward turning heartbreak into inspiration sums up all that is wonderful about AFL
Callan Ward turning heartbreak into inspiration sums up all that is wonderful about AFL

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Callan Ward turning heartbreak into inspiration sums up all that is wonderful about AFL

AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon would have to rank among the most wooden media performers I have seen or heard. Many in the industry speak highly of him and his ability to distil and diffuse, the sort of operator every leader wants by their side. But he is no frontman. Last week, he did the radio rounds justifying the latest executive shakeup. As always, it sounded like he was reading off well-thumbed, suggested speaking notes. Look, he droned; crowds, ratings and revenue are all up – we're doing so much right! It was an AI response to a very human sport. The best of Australian rules football can't be explained in media releases, or in org charts, or in SEN Fireball Friday hot takes. The best of this sport can be found at the grassroots level, or on hall of fame night, or in thousands of little moments around the country each weekend. Advertisement Related: From the Pocket: AFL players are taught to conquer their fears but some need saving from themselves One of those occurred late on Saturday afternoon, in front of bugger all people, in a part of the country where footy hasn't yet taken hold. The best of the sport was probably the worst moment of Callan Ward's career. The GWS Giants inaugural co-captain lay on a massage table, sobbing. Lachie Whitfield, a teammate of 13 years, crouched down to Ward's level, hugged him, and kissed him on the cheek. Sentimental slop, you may say, and it is to a degree. But in an industry of grind and grift, it was a tender, human moment that said a lot about both the injured player and his club. When Ward first went to Greater Western Sydney, some saw him as a traitor. He had grown up in Melbourne's inner west, the son of a man who played VFA for Yarraville and the grandson of a former South Melbourne captain. He was booed by Western Bulldogs supporters when he was still playing for them. The Herald Sun devoted its front page to the story, under the headline 'Money Rules', with a photo of Ward's mother Kerri and his three sisters holding a framed photo of their brother in action for the Bulldogs. Don't blame Callan, his mum said. Blame the AFL. 'The days of the one-club player are really dying out, particularly when you have clubs being set up like this where they come along and offer ludicrous amounts of money to play football.' But Ward was no cheque collector, no mercenary and no flight risk. There was a swagger, a competitiveness and a camaraderie at the Giants that was distinct from what the Gold Coast cultivated. No one personified that refusal to yield more than Ward. Even when they were being trounced by 20 goals, they'd be mouthing off, putting their heads over the ball, and rallying around one another. Yes, plenty of players left to return to their home state, but they never had the player drain of the Suns, especially among their leaders. Advertisement There were a lot of flashy, preternaturally talented players on that list. But Ward was a proper footballer. He didn't do many interviews, didn't rant or rave, and was a completely different personality to his co-captain Phil Davis. But he was the sort of leader people were drawn to and rallied around. He was rarely out of the top half dozen players. He was a reliable big game performer. He excelled in the often brutal Sydney derbies. But there was more to his game than a headfirst bulldozer. Martial artists often speak of 'heavy hips and light feet' and Ward had the ability to get down low, to evenly distribute his weight over the ball, and accelerate out of a stoppage. Ward has had some rotten luck. He played in five losing preliminary finals, and several of them could have gone either way. In the 2016 preliminary final, one of the best games of this era, his head collided with Zaine Cordy's knee and he was left twitching on the turf. He wrecked his knee early in the 2019 season, the only year the Giants have played off in a grand final. Late in last year's qualifying final, another classic, he charged through a stoppage, split a pair of Swans and banana kicked a goal to put them up by two majors. But the Giants lost that game and coughed up a seven-goal lead to eventual premiers Brisbane a week later, putting Ward's retirement plans on hold. He's been a remote footballer this year, living in separate states to his wife and his three gloriously named sons, Romeo, Ralfie, and Rex. There have been better and more talented footballers than Callan Ward. There have been footballers with more accolades, blazers, votes and medallions. There have been footballers who racked up bigger numbers, who looked better on a stats sheet. But there aren't many footballers who've been more admired, or meant more to a single club. His injury and his three-quarter time address summed up everything that is hard and wonderful and meaningful about the sport. They were moments where football spoke for itself, where nothing needed to be defended, or sold, or spun.

'Talk to Me' directors tackle grief and gore with 'Bring Her Back'
'Talk to Me' directors tackle grief and gore with 'Bring Her Back'

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

'Talk to Me' directors tackle grief and gore with 'Bring Her Back'

'Talk to Me' directors tackle grief and gore with 'Bring Her Back' Show Caption Hide Caption 'Bring Her Back' trailer: Sally Hawkins is a secretive foster mom A foster mother (Sally Hawkins) takes in two siblings after the death of their father but also harbors a dark secret in horror movie "Bring Her Back." Spoiler alert! We're discussing important plot points and the ending of "Bring Her Back" (in theaters now), so beware if you haven't seen it yet. Making a visceral, gory, emotional roller coaster of a horror film is a good way to navigate some personal tragedy. Three years after scaring the summer box office with the hit 'Talk to Me,' Australian filmmakers (and twin brothers) Danny and Michael Philippou return with another, very different possession film. 'Bring Her Back' was already on tap to tackle grief, love and cycles of abuse when a family friend of the Philippous died before filming started. Their "sadness" affected the movie, though they turned into a positive, Danny Philippou says. 'It is so therapeutic. It did feel like saying goodbye.' Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox 'Bring Her Back' stars Sally Hawkins as Laura, a social worker and foster mom who takes in Andy (Billy Barratt) and his visually impaired younger sister Piper (Sora Wong) after their father dies. But Andy discovers something stranger than the weird white painted circle around the house: Laura is using her foster son Oliver (Jonah Wren Phillips) as a conduit for a supernatural being to resurrect her recently drowned daughter Cathy. (Her exhumed corpse is lying in a shed out back. We'll get to why in a bit.) The Philippous dig into how they pulled off the gnarliest scenes, why the ending changed and how 'Bring Her Back' connects to 'Talk to Me': Jonah Wren Phillips gets the most squirm-inducing moments in 'Bring Her Back' 'Talk to Me' showcased the brothers' gift for gore, and 'Bring Her Back' takes it to a whole other hide-your-eyes level as the possessed Oliver begins to act out in terrifying fashion. First, he grabs a butcher's knife and tries to eat it, leaving his mouth a bloody, scraggly toothed disaster. In that sequence, a rubber knife was used with a fake head, though 'it's the sound design that really sells it, which was me actually chewing on a knife,' Danny Philippou explains. And then the hungry child begins to chow down on the countertop, taking out huge pieces with what's left of his teeth. The filmmakers let Phillips go to town on super-soft custom-made balsa wood laced with chocolate. He's 'the toughest kid ever,' Philippou says. "Every day he came to a set with a smile on his face.' Sally Hawkins' occult-leaning mom has a ritualistic reveal Laura has somehow obtained mysterious VHS tapes with grainy footage of people creepily coming back to life, and subtitles explain to the secret to her plan. The possessed person consumes the soul of a deceased person (Oliver eating Cathy), and a third body (Piper) can become the host for the dead by repeating the manner of death and having the possessed regurgitate the soul into it. Laura also has a healthier way to grieve – watching home movies of Cathy – and Danny Philippou says these found tapes are 'an inversion" of that. (He and his brother built out a lore and backstory by reaching out to real occultists.) Like the teens using an embalmed hand to conjure dark spirits in 'Talk to Me,' 'Laura's completely out of her depth,' Philippou adds. 'She's struggling with what she's doing, and doesn't even 100% know how to execute it.' The death of a friend changed the 'Bring Her Back' ending In the film's climax, Andy tries to show another social worker that Laura's out of her mind, but Laura murders them both, desperate to complete the ritual. She attempts to drown Piper in the backyard pool but when the frightened young girl yells "Mom," Laura can't do it and stops the ritual. Piper escapes and when she's confronted by Oliver, she kicks him in his bloated belly, and she runs off as Oliver pukes brown muck that's assumably Cathy's soul. Piper is picked up by some good samaritans, the cops find Laura embracing her daughter's corpse, and Oliver escapes the white circle surrounding the property, freeing him from possession. 'The sad part is he's going to be scarred for life,' Danny Philippou says. Michael Philippou reveals that they considered 'a few different endings,' including one where Cathy actually did end up in Piper's body. But a bigger, scarier planned finale was scrapped when their friend died and it switched to a more emotional one. (The end of the movie includes a dedication to Harley Wallace.) 'Death is really unfair and it's really sudden. People don't get a resolution,' Danny Philippou says. 'Harley died at 22, 23. His story wasn't finished." The film's ending "goes against the conventions a little bit but it feels more true to life.' Is 'Bring Her Back' a sequel to 'Talk to Me'? No, but they're connected! 'Talk to Me' puts social-media spin on the possession film Sophie Wilde stars as a youngster haunted by dark visions after she allows a spirit to possess her body in the Australian horror movie "Talk to Me." USA TODAY The Philippous want to do a third horror movie and are currently 60% done with a documentary about death match wrestling. They're also writing a sequel to 'Talk to Me,' and Danny Philippou says he's found a 'small way' to tie their breakthrough hit with "Bring Her Back" where they exist in the same world. (He hints that something is coming soon that will tease that connection.) 'It all happens on this one street,' Michael quips. 'Don't buy a house in that neighborhood!' Danny warns, laughing. The demons that possess people in 'Talk to Me' are predatory spirits and lost souls. But in 'Bring Her Back,' Laura says it's an angel that's in Oliver, and the Philippous tend to agree. 'Oliver is not good or bad,' Michael says. 'He's committing this miracle. He's bringing back a lost loved one.' Also, 'he's not there with evil intentions,' Danny adds. 'He's like a genie in a bottle. You rub the lamp, he's going to come out.'

Brooke Shields Celebrated on Her Milestone 60th Birthday as 'Everyone's Favorite Girl Boss'
Brooke Shields Celebrated on Her Milestone 60th Birthday as 'Everyone's Favorite Girl Boss'

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Brooke Shields Celebrated on Her Milestone 60th Birthday as 'Everyone's Favorite Girl Boss'

Brooke Shields is the big 6-0! The model and actress celebrated her milestone 60th birthday on Saturday, May 31. To mark the occasion, Shields' daughter Rowan Henchy shared a series of posts on her Instagram Stories. "Happy birthday to my role model, partner in crime, and best friend. Thank you for always being my rock," Rowan, 22, wrote alongside a red carpet photo of the mother-daughter pair. Then sharing a photograph of herself, her mom and sister Grier Henchy, Rowan called Shields "everyone's favorite girl boss," later writing, "Love you mama," alongside a summertime snapshot of the duo. Rowan concluded her social media tributes with a throwback image of herself and her mom that had a white heart drawn across it. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Shields has been in the public eye ever since she was a child star. She speaks candidly about aging in her recently released memoir, Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old: Thoughts on Aging as a Woman. Per the book's official description, Shields often felt 'scrutinized' and 'judged' while in the spotlight, but, as she's gotten older, she has learned that time can provide a new sense of freedom and independence. The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! Shields, the description added, now lives life feeling 'more comfortable, more empowered and confident." Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old also covers a range of other topics, including the star's rise as the CEO of haircare company Commence, as well as what she described as "this collective feeling of being overlooked." Back in January, Shields revealed how she wanted to mark her milestone 60th birthday as she spoke on stage at the Flow Space Presents an Evening with Brooke Shields event in New York City. At the time, the Mother of the Bride star told audience members, "I'm going to do something special with groups of friends." "I have friends that I laugh like that with. I have my boozy friends, I have my granola friends,' Shields continued. 'They each serve a different part of my soul and psyche.' is now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! The mother of two also explained that she wouldn't be in a rush to wrap her birthday celebrations up once they began. 'I'm going to try to take experiences that I really want to have and spend the time and the money on them,' she said. 'And just celebrate the year of this big year that I'm walking through.' Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store