Start reading Lighthousekeeping on your Kindle in under a minute. Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here.

Deliver to your Kindle or other device

 
 
 

Try it free

Sample the beginning of this book for free

Deliver to your Kindle or other device

Read books on your computer or other mobile devices with our FREE Kindle Reading Apps.
Lighthousekeeping
 
 

Lighthousekeeping [Kindle Edition]

Jeanette Winterson
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

Print List Price: £7.99
Kindle Price: £4.99 includes VAT* & free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: £3.00 (38%)
Unlike print books, digital books are subject to VAT.
This price was set by the publisher

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Kindle Edition £4.99  
Hardcover --  
Paperback £5.99  

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought


Product Description

Michele Roberts, Financial Times

'Winterson has reverted to the accessible narrative of works such as The Passion. Lighthousekeeping is all the better for it.'

Independent

"...brilliant, glittering piece of work that makes you gasp out loud at the sheer beauty of the language."

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 248 KB
  • Print Length: 243 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0676976867
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial (8 July 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B003U2T7IG
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #43,716 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
  •  Would you like to give feedback on images?


More About the Author

Jeanette Winterson
Discover books, learn about writers, and more.

Visit Amazon's Jeanette Winterson Page

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
64 of 70 people found the following review helpful
Lighthousereading 4 May 2004
Format:Hardcover
If ever a book warranted the over-used (and usually optimistic) critical phrase "a return to form," Lighthousekeeping is it. After the brilliant but dense and closed Art & Lies (of which Winterson now says "It was written at a time when I was looking inwards, not outwards ... sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't"), the patchy Gut Symmetries and the (in my view) atrocious The PowerBook, Lighthousekeeping - supposedly the beginning of a new cycle in her writing - is a breath of sea air.

As a new cycle in her writing (she says her first seven novels were a complete cycle in themselves), it doesn't half look a lot like the old one. But this is to be expected: all writers revisit their old turf throughout their lives: as Martin Amis said when pre-empting such criticisms of Yellow Dog, "the perspective is like a shadow moving across a lawn." So Lighthousekeeping retains Winterson's abiding interest in love ("the greatest human achievement"), storytelling ("Trust me. I'm telling you stories"), the multiplicity of history, parentless children and boundaries of desire, but puts them in the service of something lighter and brighter than we have seen from her probably since Sexing the Cherry.

The story is narrated by Silver. Silver's gender remains undeclared through most of the book, as a ten-year-old child, which I thought was an echo of Written on the Body where Winterson did the same thing, although I have never been able to read the narrator there as anything other than a woman, and a Jeanette-shaped woman at that. Anyway towards the end we discover that Silver when fully grown wears a bra, so we can - probably - put paid to that theory. Silver is orphaned when her mother, roped to her to climb the slope to their home, falls.

"Up she went, carrying the shopping, and pulling me behind her like an after-thought. Then some new thought must have clouded her mind, because she suddenly stopped and half-turned, and in that moment the wind blew like a shriek, and her own shriek was lost as she slipped.

"In a minute she had dropped past me, and I was hanging on to one of our spiny shrubs - escallonia, I think it was, a salty shrub that could withstand the sea and the blast. I could feel its roots slowly lifting like a grave opening. I kicked the toes of my shoes into the sandy bank, but the ground wouldn't give. We were both going to fall, falling away from the cliff face to a blacked-out world.

"I couldn't hang on any longer. My fingers were bleeding. Then, as I closed my eyes, ready to drop and drop, all the weight behind me seemed to lift. The bush stopped moving. I pulled myself up on it and scrambled behind it.

"I looked down.

"My mother had gone."

And so Silver ends up, via the obligatory narky old maid character, living with Pew, keeper of the Cape Wrath lighthouse. Pew, of course, is blind, and may or may not have lived for hundreds of years. He keeps Silver entertained by telling her stories, mostly of the 19th century clergyman Babel Dark (no shortage of symbolic names here, no sir), who visited Cape Wrath and knew Robert Louis Stevenson and betrayed his wife with a scarlet (literally; the old Winterson obsession with redheads is back too) woman. The lighthouse is a richly suggestive symbol itself of course: "a known point in the darkness", part of "a string of lights" on "the coasts and outcrops of this treacherous ocean."

But for all its open-to-interpretation symbolism, Lighthousekeeping, like most of Winterson's books, doesn't really leave you in any doubt about where the author is coming from. She still values love over all else ("But today, when the sun is everywhere, and everything solid is nothing but its own shadow, I know that the real things in life, the things I remember, the things I turn over in my hands, are not houses, bank accounts, prizes or promotions. What I remember is love - all love - love of this dirt road, the sunrise, a day by the river, the stranger I met in a café").

But what is missing in Lighthousekeeping is the bitterness and ranting - one might almost say raving - against consumerism, tourists, heterosexual marriage, other people, which increasingly marred everything from Art & Lies onward. It seems then that Winterson has, miraculously, found a way to express - and boy can she express; only now when looking up these quotes I have been diverted and diverted again by endless brilliant phrases among the pages - her passion for the life she loves without turning it into an attack on Everything Else. Where before she could be a marauding mob brandishing torches of naked flames, burning things down (albeit asking questions at the same time): now she is a kindly light, still bright and powerful enough to be seen for miles but under control, a known point in the darkness of so much contemporary fiction.

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Lighthousekeeping by Jeanette Winterson tells the story of Silver, a young girl who is orphaned when her mother falls to her death as they climb the cliff that leads to their house. Silver moves in initially with a carer and then into the local lighthouse which is run by a man named Pew. Pew is blind but he is an excellent storyteller, and stories form the basis for their bond.

The lighthouse reflects the way Pew sees the world- in darkness: "The darkness had to be brushed away or parted before we could sit down", and also the way he finds light within that dwelling. Pew tells Silver the story of Babel Dark, a local pastor who married two women, one because he loved her and one because she was pregnant. His tale is foreboding and enchanting and Dark is revered as an almost legendary or mythical figure, however his life is based on lies and deceit and these are eventually his undoing.
Silver feeds on Pew's stories as an escape from her mother's recent death and since she has no companions besides Pew and her dog. When Pew has to leave his role as lighthousekeeper, Silver is left to fend for herself in the reality of the world and create her own stories.

Winterson's writing style in Lighthousekeeping is charmingly poetic and even lyrical at times. This is a story about stories and the importance of storytelling. This book is not an easy read as it is so rich with the nuances of storytelling, blurring fact with fiction and crossing time to bring characters from different eras to life.

Lighthousekeeping is both experimental and unusual. I felt that it slipped into the fairytale genre halfway through the book, and left a lot of its plot for the reader's imagination to unravel. It is a short read and by the end I felt nourished by its refreshing method of storytelling.
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Silver lined 11 Jan 2011
Format:Paperback
'Lighthousekeeping' is a joy to read, with the language washing over you like waves. As with many of Winterson's books, this is a book about stories - historical stories, legendary stories, and the self as a series of story beginnings - the point being that all are stories without ends, as they're always being retold, becoming again in each retelling.

A lovely book about Silver, DogJim, Pew, Babel Dark, and the lighthouse at Cape Wrath.
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Recent Customer Reviews
Hard Going
Beautiful writing, but much too much of it. The narrative seems to jump about. Ultimately it ends in the same subject that appears to obsess this writer. Read more
Published 9 days ago by RL Cloherty
TRADING ON HER PAST REPUTATION
I picked up this book on an impulse, not having read anything by the author before, and therefore I did not have any pre-conceived idea of what I was going to find. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Barry McCanna
A Children's boook???????
I write this review because of the reason I read the book. I loved the book and wish I was clever enough to unwrap all its layers. Read more
Published on 8 May 2009 by Fiona Watson
Pure Craftsmanship
One of the best pieces of modern literature I have recently read. Beautiful language, intelligent imagery, simple truth and credible magic.
Published on 17 April 2009 by Joanna Jones
Lighthousekeeping
I read this as part of a book club read and was therefore recommended by one of our club members. We had the meeting last week to discuss it and the general feeling was no one had... Read more
Published on 8 April 2009 by Mrs. A. J. Harris
Touches the Soul
A beautiful, lyrical, poignant, book which moved me to tears and made me feel glad to be alive. Winterson captures the essence of being and is able, with so few words, to evoke... Read more
Published on 6 Sep 2008 by Ms. E. J. Cowley
Beautiful!
I must admit never having read Jeanette Winterson before, not being a fan of chick lit.
The version I have is an Audio book. Read more
Published on 13 April 2008 by S. Pesante
"I can feel the way the sea feels her"
Jeanette Winterson's, Lighthousekeeping is a richly imagined, highly stylized collection of memories, recollections, and stories. Read more
Published on 2 Jun 2005 by M. J Leonard
"My life is a hesitation in time, an opening in a cave."
Operatic in its construction, Jeanette Winterson's magnificently descriptive, impressionistic novel, tells two interconnected stories, each of them asking who we are as humans, how... Read more
Published on 15 April 2005 by Mary Whipple
Dreadful stuff
It's hard not to be amazed at the British reading public's continuing fascination with the self-important waffling of this mediocre writer. Read more
Published on 13 Dec 2004
Search Customer Reviews
Only search this product's reviews

Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
Were here, there, not here, not there, swirling like specks of dust, claiming for ourselves the rights of the universe. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
&quote;
The continuous narrative of existence is a lie. There is no continuous narrative, there are lit-up moments, and the rest is dark. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
&quote;
spanning time. And in every still-life, there is a story, the story that tells you everything you need to know. &quote;
Highlighted by 3 Kindle users

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   
Related forums


Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject


Amazon Media EU S.à r.l. GB Privacy Statement Amazon Media EU S.à r.l. GB Delivery Information Amazon Media EU S.à r.l. GB Returns & Exchanges