A review by jesshindes
The Lamplighters by Emma Stonex

dark mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

'The Lamplighters' tells the story of the 1972 disappearance of three keepers from a lighthouse off the coast of Cornwall, doing so through the multiple narrative perspectives not only of the keepers themselves but of the three women left behind them: two wives, and a girlfriend. The narrative also hops around in time, from the lead-up to the men's disappearance to a period twenty years later when an author writing a book on what has happened gets in touch with the women concerned to ask for their side of the story. 

I had high hopes for this one, which came decorated with all the usual quotes about how gripping it was (including one from Hilary Mantel!) but for some reason it never quite grabbed me. The book pivots on the central mystery of the men's disappearance, and there's some question about whether it's supernatural or natural along with the obvious whodunnit element, but the whole thing had strong vibes to me of an ITV Sunday night thriller, maybe a three-part adaptation, a few people from Line of Duty in it, maybe Keeley Hawes, you get my drift. Which is fine, but probably goes to say that all of the characters felt a bit thin - which is a problem in a book which spent a lot of time on character work and relationships. There were some moments that I liked - some stuff about the relationships between the keepers and their wives, the bits that veered closest to the supernatural - but ultimately I felt like the whole thing was a little wishy-washy, that it didn't commit to the weirdness (unlike Our Wives Under the Sea, which does the nautical mystery thing in a much more satisfying, stranger way) and that too many of the revelations fell flat. With that said, I think on TV it might work, so if it pans out that way I will watch it!



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