A review by jenmaysiereads
The Last True Poets of the Sea by Julia Drake

adventurous challenging emotional funny reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

5 out of 5 stars

Threads of mystery thrum through ‘The Last True Poets of the Sea’, interweaving with the unkempt messiness of heartache, sorrow, grief and hope, tugging the cast of characters through their journey of wreck-hunting.

‘The Last True Poets of the Sea’ follows Violet Larkin after her Year of Wild is cut dramatically short by her younger brother Sam’s (thankfully) failed attempt to end his life. In a bid to keep their daughter out of trouble and focus on helping their son, Violet’s parents parents ship her off to Lyric, Maine, to live with her uncle. 

There, wrecked ships and cursed emeralds and whale song weave their way into Violet’s heart. In the aftermath of her brother’s suicide attempt, Violet is desperate to disappear. Once the focal point of every room, the centre of all attention, she craves nothing more than to sink in on herself and vanish into the violent, quiet crush of Lyric.

However, it’s only a matter of time before she resolves to find the lost shipwreck of her family’s tangled past—desperate to make amends with her own and prove to herself and her brother that their lives meant something. Desperate to heal the notorious shipwreck gene that drags at their heals, sinking them deeper and deeper into sorrow.

The best books, in my opinion, contain an unnameable, unfathomable magical quality which lifts the prose from the page. The best books make you feel as you’re stood, toes wriggling into the sand and the cool water of the ocean pooling around your ankles, right alongside the protagonists. 

And that’s precisely what ‘the Last True Poets of the Sea’ feels like.

This book is heavy with the scent of warm summer nights and saltwater tides; the smell of campfire sweet s’mores and cigarette ash clings to your fingertips as you turn the page. There is a finality and honesty that grants the book this bittersweet goodbye; it’s a tribute to lost shipwrecks and lost girls and the hope that they can be found once more.

Julia Drake plays with form, tense and perspective in a whimsical and soul-crushing way that I really admired. The lyricism of her prose coupled with the innovative way she utilised narrative structure made for a spell-binding read.

Moreover, ‘The Last True Poets of the Sea’ snags on the haunting nature of family, mapping out the bruising brilliance that such relationships can have on your heart. It’s magical and beautiful and agonising all at once, and Julia Drake manages to convey that complexity perfectly here.

While Sam’s suicide attempt is the catalyst for their family’s fallout, it is nevertheless treated with the utmost care and dignity within the narrative. The portrayal of mental illness within the novel overall is nothing short of wonderfully nuanced and respectful; the experience of the characters is never tokenised, used for cheap drama or conflict and is always, always treated with kindness.

Violet’s attempts to grapple with her self-loathing is heartbreaking—her sorrow runs bone deep, deep enough to swallow you wholly and fully. ‘The Last True Poets of the Sea’ captures so well some of the most vulnerable parts of my heart; the weight of isolation and the twisting, poisoned blade of self-hatred and the fear that, no matter how hard I try, how much I want to be better; I will never be good enough.

It’s hard to bare those aspects of your soul to someone, harder still to see them reflected back at you on paper.

This is truly a beautiful book and I highly, highly recommend picking up this absolute work of brilliance. What a magical read. 

(Notable content warnings for ‘The Last True Poets of the Sea’: suicide, suicide ideation, discussions of suicide, disordered eating, loss of a loved one, panic attacks, underage drug/alcohol use.) 

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