Saturday, April 4, 2026

Charlotte McConaghy, Wild Dark Shore ***

Wild Dark Shore has an awesome setting: a mostly abandoned research station on a tiny island between Australia and Antarctica. The only human inhabitants are a man and his three children, left behind as caretakers when the scientists left due to encroaching climate change. Until, that is, a mysterious woman washes ashore.

McConaghy offers fantastic descriptions of the island, its abundant wildlife, its challenging weather, and its isolation. The characters, though, are unbelievable. Every one of them acts strangely due to traumatic secrets that will eventually be revealed. McConaghy exacerbates this problem by having the characters narrate chapters in the first person; it makes the withholding of secrets more clearly a plot device.

The plot gets increasingly melodramatic as all secrets are revealed. (The incongruous appearance of a copy of Jane Eyre forecasts one of the twists.) 

Wild Dark Shore is a thriller dressed in the clothes of a literary novel. Character's personalities follow from the demands of the outlandish plot rather than driving the action. I give McConaghy credit for exploring various emotional responses to climate change, but I was never able to accept the characters as real people.

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