
The Isle of Lewis is the most remote, harshly beautiful place in Scotland, where the difficulty of existence seems outweighed only by people’s fear of God.īut older, pagan values lurk beneath the veneer of faith, the primal yearning for blood and revenge. We also recommend The Lewis Man and The Chessmen.Get FREE worldwide delivery of THE BLACKHOUSE from The Book Depository This is the first book in The Lewis Trilogy by Peter May. It was easy to imagine how legends of sea monsters and dragons had grown out of such places. It was dark and creepy, with the eerie sound of water sucking on rock echoing from somewhere deep within its blackness like the rasping breath of some living creature. Just beyond our landing point, the rock folded away into one of its cathedral caves.


It’s dark, moving, and sometimes upsetting, but Fin’s humanity keeps it from falling into despair.

Yes, this all sounds pretty grim - and there’s more disturbing detail in the narrative - but somehow, this book isn’t depressing. The hunt is a brutal two-week rite-of-passage for the island’s men, during which a crew of 12 kills, cleans, smokes, and transports thousands of birds in a ritual that reaches back through the centuries. The detailed story of ancient bird hunts that continue on a nearby island today was challenging to read, but also un-put-downable. This is a riveting look at the damage secrets can do to the living and the dead. The island’s terrain and raw, primal weather shape the narrative as much as the people who populate it. No one is happy about it: not Fin, not his disappointed wife, not the commander on the island, and not the native islanders who are wholly justified in their grudges, resentments, and tender feelings when Fin resurfaces.Īs he digs into the details of the crime, Fin is immersed in the dark events of his childhood in this unforgiving landscape. The crime is similar to a killing in Edinburgh, so detective Fin Macleod, a Lewis native, is dispatched back to the island to investigate. The action kicks off with a gruesome murder on the remote Isle of Lewis, just off the northwestern coast of Scotland. Plus, it’s darker than the bottom of a cup of espresso.

It’s filled with messy people you’ll grow to care about, and it delves into fascinating local history. This murder mystery - set in the outer Hebrides - turns into a psychological character study as the crime is being solved.
