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Cover
of Darkness by Sian Ann Bessey
Reviewed
by Jennie Hansen
Cover
of Darkness
catches the reader's attention from the first glimpse of the striking
cover, featuring a lighthouse along the rocky Welsh coastline where
the author Sian (pronounced Shawn) Ann Bessey grew up. From there,
what begins as a peaceful vacation for two American teachers turns
into mystery, intrigue, and a bit of romance. A story that could
be just another travel/mystery turns into a delightful, sometimes
tense, tale as Sister Bessey uses her first-hand knowledge of Wales
to add depth and realism to the book.
The story opens
with two school teachers from Jackson Hole High School in Wyoming
starting their day with breakfast on the patio of a hotel in the
small coastal village of Menai Bridge on the North Shore of Wales.
The teachers, Megan Harmer who teaches history and her friend, art
teacher, Fran Brown, are cramming all the history and scenery possible
into a three week vacation. After ten days of frantic sight-seeing,
they take a planned break in Wales to relax and each do her own
thing for a few days. Fran will paint and Megan will visit the ancient
castles in the area.
Two other Americans
are also staying at the hotel, but not together. Both are young,
attractive men who draw the women's attention and are both somewhat
mysterious. Joe Marks doesn't make a good impression to begin with,
and neither girl is comfortable around him until Megan meets up
with him on one of her sight-seeing tours, where she discovers he
is extremely interested in a large power boat that seems unfamiliar
with the treacherous water and rocky shore. Richard Garrett, the
other American, seems more personable and becomes acquainted with
Fran while Megan is away visiting one of the castles in the area.
On Megan's return, she introduces the two.
Sister Bessey
fills in details about the Welsh countryside, landmarks, and history
as the two women's lives become entangled with the compelling motives
driving the two men. One man is intent on delivering contraband
weapons to Irish rebels, while the other is equally intent on stopping
him and learning the identity of his accomplices. The differences
that have divided Ireland and the continuing warfare that separates
the various factions play a role in the intrigue the young women
stumble into. Circumstances throw Megan into a situation where she
must battle not only evil men but the sea for her life. From being
stranded on a small island to a nightmare experience on a burning
boat floating on the Menai Straight, which separates Wales from
Ireland, her faith is tested in more than one way. Her physical
survival depends on faith and using her wits, and her emotional
survival is tried as she faces the growing suspicion that she's
losing her heart to a man who doesn't share her testimony of the
gospel.
Once the vacation
adventure ends and the teachers return to the States, the story
shifts gears to become a conversion story and the romantic angle
receives more prominence.
Bessey's style
is unusual in that she writes an action-packed story, yet manages
to convey a sense of innocense in her heroine and her friend. There's
an element of formality to her writing, too, and she commands a
rich vocabulary, at times revealing her European roots with her
word choices such as, "limbs" instead of "arms and legs", en route
instead of "on her way," "parking facility" in place of "parking
lot," "chocolate drops," "fecund hillside displayed its verdant
offspring," and "vertiginous view." Though the style is fairly formal,
it is far from stuffy. In fact there's a great sense of youthful
vitality to the story. Bessey uses description well to give the
reader a real sense of place without bogging down the story, and
if her word choices occasionally catch her American readers by surprise,
that only adds to the story's charm rather than detracts.
Cover
of Darkness presents some interesting contrasts and a depth
of realism that probably wouldn't exist in the story if the author
had only visited Wales. First, the story is written from an American
girl's point of view by a woman who lived most of her life in the
country her young heroine is only visiting. Second, her observations
and knowledge of the area exceed what a mere visitor would perhaps
notice, yet provide authenticity. Bessey also addresses the IRA
terrorist threat with a knowledge and the emotions of one who grew
up with only a narrow strip of ocean separating her home from Ireland
and the turbulence there.
With less than
two weeks of their vacation left when Megan and Fran meet the two
mysterious American men, there isn't much time for missionary lessons
or falling in love, but I still would have liked to see the conversion
process and the romance develop more as the intrigue progresses
instead of following after. Though both are hinted at, they don't
go far until after the crisis situation and the vacation end.
Sian Ann Bessey
is a relatively new writer; this is only her second book, but I
believe readers will enjoy her style and be intrigued by her grasp
of language and the picture she paints of a land rich in history
and natural beauty. Members of the Church will appreciate the author's
testimony of the gospel which shines steadily through the faith
and commitment of her leading characters. Cover of Darkness
is well worth reading.
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