Light Years
Memoir of a Modern Lighthouse Keeper
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- $20.99
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
In 2007, Caroline Woodward was itching for a change. With an established career in book-selling and promotion, four books of her own and having raised a son with her husband, Jeff, she yearned for adventure and to re-ignite her passion for writing. Jeff was tired of piecing together low-paying part-time jobs and, with Caroline’s encouragement, applied for a position as a relief lightkeeper on a remote North Pacific island. They endured lonely months of living apart, but the way of life rejuvenated Jeff and inspired Caroline to contemplate serious shifts in order to accompany him. When a permanent position for a lighthouse keeper became available, Caroline quit her job and joined Jeff on the lights.
Caroline soon learned that the lighthouse-keeping life does not consist of long, empty hours in which to write. The reality is hard physical labour, long stretches of isolation and the constant threat of de-staffing. Beginning with a 3:30 a.m. weather report, the days are filled with maintaining the light station buildings, sea sampling, radio communication, beach cleanup, wildlife encounters and everything in between. As for dangerous rescue missions or dramatic shipwrecks—that kind of excitement is rare. “So far the only life I know I’ve saved is my own,” she says, with her trademark dry wit. Yet Caroline is exhilarated by the scenic coastline with its drizzle and fog, seabirds and whales, and finds time to grow a garden and, as anticipated, write.
Told with eloquent introspection and an eye for detail, Light Years is the personal account of a lighthouse keeper in twenty-first century British Columbia—an account that details Caroline’s endurance of extreme climatic, interpersonal and medical challenges, as well as the practical and psychological aspects of living a happy, healthy, useful and creative life in isolation.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Novelist Woodward's account of her time as a lighthouse keeper argues successfully for the importance of keeping personnel in remote locations as lifelines for seafaring communities everywhere, but the audience may be narrow for a book that soberly conveys the monotony and solitude of lighthouse work, sprinkles the account with simplistic political criticism, and concludes with humorless self-congratulation. Woodward was attracted to the quiet and solitude promised by the life of a lighthouse keeper, and in 2007 she left her day job so that she could work with her husband as a lighthouse keeper on Lennard Island, a small island on the Canadian West Coast. Much of the book is a journal of the author's life, which will mostly be of interest to readers familiar with her other books (Disturbing the Peace, etc.). Interspersed between Woodward's descriptions of the work of lighthouse keeping building maintenance, sea sampling, radio communications and her meditations on gardening on the island are reflections on her previous experiences as publisher, bookseller, and operator of a family farm. A reading list for readers' own lighthouse libraries suggests Woodward believes readers will share her fascination with this life.