AKiCiF: Name that Book

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011 02:26 pm
rolanni: (booksflying1.1)
[personal profile] rolanni
Thinking about old books yesterday reminded me of another novel that I read over and over -- not because I liked it, particularly, but because of the touching belief that, if I read it often enough, it would make sense. Possibly, this never actually happened.

I was, until a few moments ago, abiding under the pleasant misconception that the title of the book was Moonraker. However, this appears to be the title of a James Bond novel, and not at all what I'm looking for. Then I thought perhaps it was Moon Tide, but that's not a winner either.

So! The cover of the book was a large full moon framed by forbidding looking cliffs, and in the foreground two small figures along the edge of a dark sea.

As nearly as I can recall, the hero of the story lived on Moon Something Bay or Something Moon Bay. The defining feature of this piece of water was terrible treacherous currents. How treacherous and terrible, you ask? The entire village lived quite well from the salvage brought ashore from ships that were broken on the rocks of those cliffs out there. When the bodies washed up, they were decently buried, and life in the village went on until the next shipwreck.

I believe what happens very quickly after this pastoral mode of life is established for the reader is that a body washes up that isn't quite yet a corpse and against the better judgment of the Many, this sailor is nursed back to health. Whereupon all of Our Narrator's troubles begin.

He is eventually taken up by a ship that ventures into Moon Something Bay without incident, and he is forced into a life of piracy. Or smuggling. Or accounting. Or -- something. At the end of the book -- spoilers! -- the good ship is caught in a storm, and breaks up on the rocks of those cliffs out there, and Our Narrator (and his companion?) become(s) the second (and third?) man/men to arrive on the shores of Moon Something Bay, alive, from a shipwreck.

Ring any bells?

Edited to add: The Incomparable [livejournal.com profile] malkingrey has the answer: Moonfleet by J. Meade Falkner

Re: Remember Hayley Mills?

Date: 2011-04-04 10:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ramblin-phyl.livejournal.com
Moon Spinners took place in Greece and involved diving for ancient artifacts and fold tales "spun" by old women.

Mooncussers was different, took place on the coast of Maine, and probably only shown on TV not released to theaters.

And yes the Mary Stewart book did make more sense than the movie.

February 2026

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 67
8 9 10 11121314
15161718192021
22232425262728

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags