Publisher's Synopsis
"'Nicolson's chronicle is a fine book. Readers will be duly awed by his delicately layered story'--The New York Times Book Review; In 1937, Adam Nicolson's father answered a newspaper ad for a small cluster of three islands--The Shiants (Gaelic meaning 'holy' or 'enchanted')--which lie east of the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. Sheer black cliffs drop five hundred feet into the cold, dark, rip currents of the Minch, lounging seals crowd at their feet and thousands upon thousands of sea birds swarm overhead in the sky. Nicolson inherited the islands when he was twenty-one and in this spellbinding and luminous book, he recalls his keenly deep connection to the wild, windswept, and yet enchantingly beautiful property. Not merely a haven of solitude, the islands, with a centuries-old past haunted by restless ghosts and tales of ancient treasure, came to be for Nicolson his heartland and a 'sea room'--a sailing term he uses to mean 'the sense o