The Commercial Appeal

‘The Summer Wives’ explores secrets of insular community

- Emily Choate | Chapter16.org

For Miranda Schuyler, the protagonis­t of Beatriz Williams’ “The Summer Wives,” Winthrop Island is more than an obscure, elusive place off the coast of Connecticu­t. From the moment of her first arrival in 1951 — on the eve of her mother’s wedding to one of the island’s wealthy summer residents — this insular community draws her into its coded world of secrets, gossip and cross-cultural tensions. Right away, Miranda learns from her new stepsister, Isobel, that she will need to learn a subtle-seeming but airtight set of rules. This code will govern her behavior and her relationsh­ips with a range of island personalit­ies, including Joseph, the handsome, thoughtful son of the lighthouse keeper. Through Isobel’s love of risk-taking and her own ambiguous bond with Joseph, Miranda finds herself lured into myriad power struggles among her glamorous new family’s moneyed crowd, as well as the struggles of people like Joseph — who comes from one of the island’s workingcla­ss Portuguese families.

The novel follows Miranda’s entangleme­nt with Winthrop Island over many years, both before and after a pivotal disaster that lands Joseph in prison and transforms her from the community’s favorite newcomer into a scandalous troublemak­er in social exile. No matter how far she travels, though, her business with Winthrop remains unfinished. At the outset of the novel’s main action, which takes place in the late 1960s, Miranda learns that Joseph has escaped from prison, his whereabout­s a mystery. After years spent building a life elsewhere, Miranda returns to Winthrop to claim her place there, whether its refined coterie wants her back or not.

Williams plays up the novel’s many allusions to Shakespear­e’s “The Tempest,” including Miranda’s name, which was given to her by her father, an art teacher. After his death in World War II, Miranda takes on his love of Shakespear­e, Beatriz Williams will discuss “The Summer Wives” at 2 p.m. today at Novel in Memphis. growing up to become a wellknown actress. And Winthrop Island, with its perilous surroundin­g waters and mysterious inhabitant­s, is meant to evoke the strange magic of Prospero’s island.

More than a backdrop of lighthouse­s and lobstermen, Winthrop emerges as a vibrant presence. For all its tangled plot and crowd of characters, the novel’s most intriguing element turns out to be the island itself.

Deep cultural contradict­ions persist between Winthrop’s wealthy summer residents (known as the Families) and the year-round Portuguese inhabitant­s who own local businesses, run lobster boats, and clean the summer houses. The contrasts between these population­s form the most interestin­g tensions in “The Summer Wives.”

A local woman named Bianca, who works at the island general store, observes these difference­s in terms of how the shelves are stocked, in particular the prepackage­d and unadventur­ous food the summer crowd prefers — especially canned soup, to Bianca’s bafflement: “She prefers the soups Tia Maria makes from scratch and simmers all day in an iron pot on the stove, full of herbs and vegetables and shellfish, whatever’s fresh from the sea, but the Families like their food bland, apparently. Bland and stale and rich, just like themselves.”

“The Summer Wives” spins a memorable world to surround its complex plot of family intrigue and long-buried secrets. Miranda must navigate this peculiar environmen­t to get to her own past’s wilder truth, where it waits at the water’s edge.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

By Beatriz Williams. William Morrow. 384 pages. $26.99.

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