The family ship A novel

Sonja Ingrid Yoerg, 1959-

Book - 2021

"Chesapeake Bay, 1980. Eighteen-year-old Verity Vergennes is the captain of the USS Nepenthe, and her seven younger siblings are her crew. The ship - an oyster boat transformed into a make-believe destroyer - is the heart of the Vergennes family, a place both to play and to learn responsibility. But Verity's had it with being tied to the ship and secretly applies to a distant college. If only her parents could bear to let her go. Maeve and Arthur Vergennes already suffered one loss when, five years earlier, their eldest son, Jude, stormed out and never returned. Now Maeve is pregnant again and something's amiss. Verity yearns to follow her dreams, but how can she jump ship now? The problem, and perhaps the answer, lies with J...ude. When disaster strikes and the family unravels, Verity must rally her sibling crew to keep the Nepenthe and all it symbolizes afloat. Sailing away from home, she discovers, is never easy - not if you ever hope to find your way back." -- Publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Domestic fiction
Published
Seattle : Lake Union Publishing [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Sonja Ingrid Yoerg, 1959- (author)
Item Description
Includes book club discussion questions.
Physical Description
390 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781542004695
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Yoerg takes the pulse of a Navy veteran's large family in this keen novel (after Stories We Never Told). In 1980, Maeve and Arthur Vergennes have nine children with a 10th on the way in a small Virginia town on the Chesapeake Bay. The oldest, Jude, left the family under duress five years earlier, so Verity, the next oldest at 18, is considered captain of Nepenthe, the family's dry-docked oyster boat. The vessel came with their sprawling house on a small island property and is central to the children's lives, where every Saturday they head off on imaginary voyages, a family tradition that helps distract the children from the trauma of Jude's departure and, eventually, Maeve's death following a miscarriage. In chapters that alternate from different family members' points of view, Yoerg does justice to their perspectives as they navigate various conflicts. At the center is a sexual assault endured by Verity at 13, and her controlling father's unwillingness to allow her to leave home for college. The author tackles a full range of events with élan: the loss of innocence, the push-pull divide between father and son, and how tragedy can cause a family to implode or come out stronger. This richly-drawn and insightful story demonstrates an exceptionally deep understanding of family relationships. (Feb.)

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