Haven

A Novel

Hardcover, 272 pages

Published Aug. 23, 2022 by HarperAvenue.

ISBN:
978-1-4434-6684-4
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4 stars (6 reviews)

10 editions

Goodreads Review of Haven by Emma Donoghue

5 stars

Haven by Emma Donoghue is a quiet, but harsh examination of the way religious devotion to institutions or individuals can mislead and lead good people to do awful things in the name of God.

In 7th century Ireland, Artt is a saintly priest visiting a local abbey and finds himself disgusted at the way the monks have allowed themselves to fall into lives lacking discipline and piety. During his visit, he has a prophetic dream where he and two of the monks live in complete isolation on an unknown and undiscovered skellig off the coast. Taking this as a directive from God, he demands the two monks in his dream accompany him to find this skellig to start their new lives. So Artt departs with his new, small congregation comprised of Cormac, an old monk who formerly had a family and was a fighter in his young years, and Trian, …

descriptions of survival

No rating

This book does a great job of making sure the narrative moves through detailed descriptions of hunting, cooking, planting, building on an island not fit for any of those actions. On top of everything else, the monks engage in the work of creating manuscripts of the bible, and the description of that process shows how the medium sometimes pushes back against writing and sometimes gives in:

"With the ruler and his knife tip, he measures and pricks the margins around the square that will contain his text, with bounding lines to stop the words from spilling. Twenty-seven lines, he decides, just under half an inch each. He rules them in hardpoint, scoring firmly with the back of his knife. (In training, he cut a page right through; Brother Óengus called it an error ever scribe makes once, but that didn't ease Trian's guilt when the page had to be thrown …