[Coda: Patricia McKillip died on May 6, 2022. A wonderful writer! Rest in peace, and thanks for all the pleasure you gave us!]
The Bell at Sealey Head by Patricia A. McKillip (Ace, 978-0-441-01756-0, $14, tpb, 279 pages) September 2009 (originally published
September 2008).
A review by Rich
Horton
(Cover by Kinuko Y. Craft) |
I think of Patricia Mc Killip a little like I think of Van
Morrison in music. Which is really not a terribly useful comparison, because I
don’t mean it to apply to their mutual styles … rather, I mean to say that
McKillip is one of those writers who reliably issues a novel every year or two,
always enjoyable work. In the same way I look for a new Van Morrison album
every year or two, and they are always enjoyable. Now it can also be said the
McKillip’s novels, as with Morrison’s latter period works, are fairly small
scale affairs, and while they show a certain range and a willingness to try
different things, they aren’t groundbreaking masterpieces, either. (But as
McKillip has the Riddle Master books
early in her career, and the utterly gorgeous Winter Rose somewhat later, so Morrison has Astral Weeks and Veedon
Fleece. Though here the comparison rather breaks down, because fine as The Riddle Master of Hed is, it’s no Astral Weeks. Which is hardly an insult
– Astral Weeks being arguably the
greatest album ever to come out of the pop/rock idiom.)
But I’m getting a bit silly and off track. As I implied, the
latter day McKillip novels are not earthshaking. But they are still lovely, and
sweet, and involving. Sometimes there are no villains at all, and even when
there is a villain (as with The Bell at
Sealey Head) he’s not very much the focus (and he has at least one
redeeming quality).
The Bell at Sealey
Head features three viewpoint characters. Judd Cauley is the innkeeper for
the Inn at Sealey Head, a place that’s seen
better times. His aged father is blind, and Judd barely keeps the Inn going while caring for this father and coping with
his old retainers, particular the cook, who is quite awful. Meanwhile Gwyneth
Blair is the bookish daughter of Sealey Head’s leading merchant. Her mother is
dead, so she keeps tabs on her younger siblings – adolescent twins and a
toddler – with the not always welcome help of her Aunt, while spending what
spare time she has writing stories. And Emma is a maid at Aislinn House, the
seat of the dying Lady Eglantyne. Emma’s mother is a wood witch named Hester. But
Emma’s real secret is Ysabo, a young woman she sees through various doors in
the house. Ysabo seems to live in an alternate Aislinn House, occupied by her
mother and grandmother and a crowd of knights, all obsessed by rigid ritual.
We quickly learn that Judd is sweet on Gwyneth, and that
Gwyneth returns his affection, though neither really knows how the other feels.
Gwyneth’s Aunt is determined to match her with Raven Sproule, the local gentry,
and Raven’s sister Daria is also in favor of the match. Emma’s household awaits
the arrival of Lady Eglantyne’s heir, Miranda Beryl. And Ysabo is being forced
into marriage with one of the knights, whose name she doesn’t even know. Then
Judd gets a rare guest – Ridley Dow, a young scholar from the big city (Landringham),
who is interested in magic, and in particular in the mysterious bell that rings
at Sealey Head every sunset. Legend has it the bell was on a ship that sunk off
the Head, but Ridley has other ideas, ideas that involve Aislinn House. And now
Miranda Beryl is finally coming to her Aunt’s house, with a pile of idle
Landringham friends, many of whom will stay at the Inn ,
which means Judd need a real cook …
And so the real action begins. Which I don’t propose to
further summarize. Of course we will learn Ysabo’s secret, and that of her
version of Aislinn House. And we get to read Gwyneth’s newest story, which
concerns the Bell .
And the lives of Gwyneth and Judd and Raven and Daria and Emma and Ysabo and Miranda
and Ridley all change, mostly for the better …
So what do we have? A very sweetly enjoyable book. A
pleasure to read through and through. Not to oversell it – it’s nothing
earthshaking, it’s nothing really terribly new, it won’t convince people who
haven’t much cared for McKillip’s work to date to convert, any more than, say, Hymns to the Silence likely caused any
huge swell of support for Van Morrison. But not to undersell it – as ever with
McKillip, the prose is elegant, limpid, lovely – if not as astonishing as in
for example the incomparable Winter Rose;
the characters if perhaps mostly just a bit domesticated remain quite real; and
there are some nice fantastical ideas, particularly the otherworldly Aislinn
House and its strangled routine.