High Tide at Noon by Elisabeth Ogilvie

High Tide at Noon cover

High Tide at Noon by Elisabeth Ogilvie was first published in 1944. It’s one of the many books which Peggy brought from America for me to read. The setting is Maine, an island called Bennett Island where the inhabitants earn a living from lobster fishing. It’s a harsh environment with the wild winter weather meaning that often no fishing can be done for ages.

It can be a hand to mouth existence but Joanna Bennett loves the island and can’t ever imagine living anywhere else. She’s the only girl in the Bennett family and with five brothers she’s a bit of a tomboy, so she’s not happy when her father decides that the time has come for her to stop hanging around the harbour with the boys. The islanders live for gossip, like most small insular communities.

I started reading this book at bedtime and it seemed to me that within about the first ten pages or so something like 30 characters were thrown at me. I must have been tired because ma heid was fairly birlin’ but I stuck with it as I knew that Peggy had loved this book, and I came to love it too.

The setting felt very much like that of a Scottish island, the same problems, similar scenery and her descriptive writing is so reminiscent of Scottish authors, where the location becomes as important a character as the people inhabiting it. If Ogilvie hadn’t had a Scottish surname I would still have guessed that she was of Scottish descent anyway.

I’ll keep this book for you Peggy!

Yet More Books

Peggy is now thinking about her journey back home to Pennsylvania, she only has a few more days here in Scotland with us. She has been trying to pack her bags and unfortunately she has discovered that she is now way over her baggage allowance.

She did go a bit crazy in the secondhand bookshops and charity shops, coupled with the fact that she packed far too many clothes (who doesn’t?) it was inevitable that she’d be in trouble. I think she said she has bought 54 books. You can read about her book dilemma here.

I’m feeling virtuous though because I’ve bought far fewer than she has, however, she did bring me a pile of books from the US, all by authors new to me, apart from Patricia Wentworth.

1. Case for Sergeant Beef by Leo Bruce
2. Mount Vernon Love Story by Mary Higgins Clark
3. Murder Scholastic by Janet Caird
4. The Sound of Insects by Mildred Davis
5. The Suspect by L.R. Wright
6. High Tide at Noon by Elisabeth Ogilvie
7. The Silent Pool by Patricia Wentworth
8. The Taste of Murder by Joanna Cannan
9. Daniel Plainway by Van Reid

These are all books which she thoroughly enjoyed reading herself so I have high hopes of them – when I can get around to reading them. I’m reading the Leo Bruce one now, I chose that one first as Eric Bown is a Leo Bruce fan, but I don’t know which one I should go for after that, any recommendations?

books