cover image The Outer Banks House

The Outer Banks House

Diann DuCharme. Crown, 25 (304pp) ISBN 978-0-307-46223-7

In Ducharme’s strong debut, 17-year-old Abigail Sinclair arrives at the Outer Banks with her family, whose fortunes are on the wane after the defeat of the South in the Civil War. Abigail is being courted by a doctor’s son, the foppish Hector Newman, and though she knows a marriage to him will please her family, she finds is drawn to a local fisherman, Benjamin Whimble, whom she is teaching to read and write. As her attraction to Whimble grows, she realizes what’s important to her and what she is willing to fight for when revelations about her father complicate her relationships. Characters are not terribly complex—Ben is a quintessential earthy blue-collar hero, and Hector an overprivileged dandy with a controlling streak—but Abigail is a good heroine. Ducharme’s extensive use of dialect will enrich the experience of some readers and irritate others, but despite its flaws, this novel brings to life the difficult and uncertain world of Reconstruction North Carolina with a romantic but unsympathetic eye. (June)