Sue Roebuck’s 2018 novel Joseph Barnaby is an engaging romance
set on Madeira. It begins with a prologue flashback to March 2016 when Joe
Barnaby is offered a lucrative job as a farrier to a successful trainer, Bobby
Shaw. The chapter ends with a friendly warning by an acquaintance for Joe to ‘watch
his back’…
The story then shifts to
August 2017 and we meet Sofia who lives with her aunt and uncle on a small
island off Madeira itself. She’s twenty-six, sure-footed like a goat on
vertiginous cliff faces, tends a number of bee hives, is beautiful, and is
deaf. She communicates with her family by sign, though she can speak; her
affliction was as a result of contracting meningitis when she was eight.
Working on the island as
labourer and general helper is Joe, who has escaped from England for some
reason still to be revealed…
For several months Joe had
worked in a bar in the Madeiran town, quickly learning Portuguese. He proved
popular with the regulars and made the acquaintance of a distinctive lady
called Lua: ‘Her hair had always looked like unruly red serpents as if she used
the same hairdresser as Medusa’ (p110). And then Joe was hired by Sofia’s
uncle.
The scene is set. Gradually,
and enchantingly, the pair get to know each other – the reticent Joe and the strong-willed
Sofia. A fly in the ointment is Dário, who wants Sofia as his sweetheart. But
he doesn’t like to hear her speak, and would rather she stuck to gestures,
though he never bothered to learn sign-language. Sofia wasn’t comfortable with
using basic gestures ‘because it amused onlookers and made her feel like an
amateur Marcel Marceau.’ (p14)
Dário is deluded, however,
even as he wondered why Sofia would be reluctant when he was such a good catch.
‘They were made for each other, soul-mates, kindred spirits. She’d soon realise
her mistake, he was sure.’ (p106)
There are light-hearted
moments and humour as well as mystery and suspense. When Joe is being driven by
a local doctor with a car-load of deaf passengers, he foolishly asks a
question. Whereupon the doctor takes his hands off the steering wheel to sign
to his passengers! ‘Joe decided that if he valued his life on this twisty road,
then he wouldn’t ask any more questions.’ (p186)
It’s also a book about
relationships – not just the Joe-Sofia pairing. The Joe and Lua scenes are at
turns mysterious and amusing. The fondness of Sofia’s aunt and uncle for Joe is
exhibited subtly, with a light touch.
The accomplished storytelling
of Sue Roebuck is bolstered by her strong affinity for Madeira and its people which
shines through in descriptive passages that put you in the scene. And as a
result I definitely cared about the characters.
2 comments:
Thank you so much, Nik
A pleasure. Good luck with the sales!
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