The Hamilton Spectator

Supernatur­al Scotland

A 19th-century farm girl’s life is complicate­d by her uncontroll­able visions of accident and disaster.

- DAISY LAFARGE is the author of a novel, “Paul,” and a poetry collection, “Life Without Air,” which was shortliste­d for the T.S. Eliot Prize. Her latest book is “Lovebug.” By DAISY LAFARGE

LIZZIE CRAIG HAS A GIFT: She sees “pictures” of events before they take place. It happens first when she’s 10, with a vision in which her grandfathe­r’s scythe slips from a whetstone and injures his leg. It’s the tail end of the 19th century in Fife, rural Scotland, where Lizzie is brought up by her grandparen­ts on Belhaven Farm. Her pictures, more often than not, are premonitio­ns of accidents and disasters: a hurt leg, a wheel coming off a cart, a tree hit by lightning. They tend to arrive “a few weeks before the accident,” giving Lizzie time to prepare, and sometimes, intervene accordingl­y.

That’s the magical concept behind the Scottish writer Margot Livesey’s new novel, “The Road From Belhaven.” But the book is not a tale of supernatur­al intrigue and suspense. Lizzie keeps her gift secret, anticipati­ng disapprova­l after she witnesses her grandmothe­r’s reaction to a visiting fortunetel­ler. “We all want to know the future,” she says, “but only God can know what’s coming. It’s the devil tempting us when we try to find out.” Similarly, the novel sidelines the supernatur­al; Lizzie’s visions appear occasional­ly to kick-start various plot points but otherwise the story focuses on a familiar and subtle historical coming-ofage story.

The book follows Lizzie through youth and young adulthood. She is preternatu­rally sweet, and growing up, she wants nothing more than to inherit her grandparen­ts’ farm and care for them in their old age. As a child, she attends the local school, reads Lewis Carroll, helps at home and is praised for her skill at drawing. As a teenager, she watches her older sister bloom into sexual curiosity, tell lies, desire adventures and covet what others have. But Lizzie experience­s few of these adolescent eruptions herself, later reflecting, non-euphemisti­cally, that “she had thought nothing mattered besides plowing a straight furrow.”

It’s naïveté, rather than lust, that leads her to have premarital sex with Louis, a friend of her family’s farmhand and an apprentice tailor, when Lizzie is a young adult. She first meets him when he comes to work at Belhaven for the summer and, smitten, she eventually follows him to Glasgow, where she finds work and lodgings. Not knowing about sexual precaution­s, Lizzie becomes pregnant while an increasing­ly evasive Louis swears he will marry her when he finishes his apprentice­ship. “Soon we’ll have our own home, not a blanket on the floor.” Lizzie is initially happy to wait, but a series of visions changes everything, setting her on a course that will shape not only her life, but the lives of those around Belhaven.

The contrast between Lizzie’s childlike innocence and her status as a fallen woman offers rich material for an immersive and emotionall­y complex narrative. At every turn, it seems, all Lizzie’s options end in sacrifice — family estrangeme­nt, relationsh­ip breakdown, separation from her child. Yet Lizzie often appears to recite her despair and emotions, rather than experience them. The third-person narration, often charmingly populated with historical detail, exposition and dialogue, leaves little space for Lizzie’s interiorit­y to develop on the page. This makes for tricky reading, because “The Road From Belhaven” seems like an ode to 19th-century character-driven novels. But “Belhaven” is lacking either a contempora­ry reflexivit­y or an urgency that would propel us through the emotional tribulatio­ns of its heroine.

Lizzie’s emotional remoteness seems compounded by certain narrative omissions. Violence and destitutio­n are only occasional­ly glimpsed on the margins of her world as she paces the streets of Glasgow, a stone’s throw from slums, brothels and poorhouses. The novel breezes in the span of just a few pages from Lizzie learning she is pregnant to the sudden appearance of her daughter months later, a choice that sidesteps potential sources of physical, social and emotional tension, given the heightened risks of childbirth at the time and the added stigma of illegitima­cy. (We briefly see Lizzie’s grandfathe­r’s rage and disappoint­ment when he learns Lizzie is expecting, but that’s about it.) Lizzie’s “pictures” merely steer the plot, and are never explored beyond their surface. The novel doesn’t mine them for their supernatur­al potential, nor for the danger they put Lizzie in as a lower-class woman with occult powers.

Lacking intensity or suspense, Livesey’s novel is most accomplish­ed in its presentati­on of history. The story brims with vivid observatio­ns of 19th-century Scottish life. A skilled draftswoma­n, Lizzie finds work as a locomotive tracer. There’s also a rich evocation of the era’s cultural tapestry, including the local Celtic-Rangers rivalry and the influence of literature such as “Kidnapped” and “Jane Eyre.” Yet there’s a sense that the novel’s deluge of historical detail is present to compensate for the lack of drama or atmosphere.

“The Road From Belhaven” is Victorian Scotland seen through heather-tinted spectacles, and its heroine is unfortunat­ely wrapped in a layer of narrative cotton wool. Livesey has landed on an intriguing premise, but I felt myself yearning for something to help the book’s emotional arrows land. Without that, the novel risks reading like a sketch, awaiting embellishm­ent and texture to bring it alive.

 ?? WESLEY ALLSBROOK ??
WESLEY ALLSBROOK

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