This is a near word-perfect and marvellously cadenced tale of contemporary Hebridean life. A fresh, witty and sometimes quite dark novel, every sentence in it sings with verbal ingenuity. (One person is described pithily as 'a fine doorful of a woman', Calvinism is akin to looking at the world through 'morose-tinted spectacles', a concerned letter 'magic-carpets through the letterbox', an aborted child's 'mouth is the unkissed stamp on the condolence card no one knows to send' - and that's just through flicking through the book at random. This book is loaded with pitch-perfect phrasing and even some neat invented words like 'gloominous'). Very few contemporary novels achieve the verbal energy expressed and sustained in this amazing novel.
Narrow-minded people might not enjoy this book, but open-minded readers of literary fiction will love it. It is a funny, heart-breaking, lyrical novel that has moved me to tears each of the three times I have read it. Right now it is a cult classic - in time it will, I think, be regarded as a masterpiece of 21st century Scottish literature. If you like edgy, well-crafted, supremely moving literary novels then this is for you.