Tuesday, 6 August 2019

Book Review: St Kilda Fever

















St Kilda Fever
by FMT Macdonald (2019)


An intriguing mystery thriller set on the Outer Hebrides in the 1970's, with the Cold War as backdrop. 

It is 1975. Dr Helen MacAllister has recently moved to the Isle of Lewis to work as the first female GP on the island; and is temporarily living alone in a croft house belonging to her cousin.

One day in the village, she hears the news of a body having been found in the sea. However, it is not she who gets called out to certify the death, but some doctor from the mainland; which suggests that there is something extra suspicious about it. 

Helen gets involved in another way, though, when shortly afterwards, in the midst of a storm and a power cut, she finds a wounded man lying unconscious in her own barn...

"St Kilda" is a small island (or group of islands) off the west coast of Lewis/Harris. It was inhabited from the Bronze age into the early 20th century, but then deserted from around 1930 until 1955 - when the British government decided to use it for certain military defense purposes (playing a part in this fictional story). 

I enjoyed the novel both for the story "as such" and for the general Outer Hebrides atmosphere, as I have also come to know it from other sources in recent years - like Peter May's Lewis trilogy (The Blackhouse, The Lewis Man and The Chessmen) + a certain blog that I've been following for almost exactly ten years now... (I know that many of my readers here follow that, too - I am of course referring to Eagleton Notes.)  Sometimes I almost feel like I've been to these islands myself, although I haven't...  (I did visit Scotland in the early 1970's, but not the islands. Loch Ness  and Inverness was as far north as we got.)

I got a printed copy of this book sent to me straight from the island, which of course makes it all the more precious to me. But I just checked, and I see that it is also available as e-book for Kindle at a fair price. 

A little teaser:


'Right, Helen, let's get a grip. What do we do now?' Speaking to yourself is usually frowned upon by my profession. In fact, it sometimes results in sectioning or removal to a mental hospital if the patient persists. But I'd always found a one to one conversation with myself useful when I'd a problem. No confidences were ever breached, there was no waiting list and you didn't have to explain your problem to a nosey receptionist. (page 58)


8 comments:

Ginny Hartzler said...

Sounds good. How did you happen to get a copy straight from the island, that is so special.

DawnTreader said...

A gift from a friend! :)

Librarian said...

I have not yet managed to read any of Peter May Lewis' books, but they and this one sound like something I'd enjoy.

DawnTreader said...

Well it's always good to know that there are some good books left to read... :)

Graham Edwards said...

I'm not sure how I managed to miss this post but I was just reading your latest post and saw this in the side archive. I'm glad that you enjoyed it because I did too.

DawnTreader said...

I liked it and it also had a plot unusual enough to be easy to pick up again after having been away from it a week! (I started it before I went on holiday in July, but did not bring the book with me as I knew I would hardly have any time to read while we were away. But no problem to just get right back to the story when I got back home again.)

Jill said...

This book was brilliant. Have you heard about book 2? Lewis Amnesia? Picks up right where this one left off .....

DawnTreader said...

Jill, I'm actually in the middle of reading it now :)

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