Rage the Night

by Donna Morrissey

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At once the intimate tale of one man's quest to discover the truth of his birth and a riveting account of a real-life Newfoundland tragedy from 1914, brilliantly and sensitively imagined by one of Canada's most beloved and bestselling authors.
When a deathbed confession uncovers secrets about his birth, twenty-year-old Roan—who has always believed himself an orphan, with no last name—sets off on a quest to discover the truth of his origins. His journey takes him across the snow-covered show more landscape of Newfoundland from the remote Northern Peninsula to St. John's and then onto the Newfoundland, one of the rickety and poorly equipped ships heading out to the sealing grounds for the spring hunt.
Between his farewell to Dr. Grenfell, the man who raised, educated, and cared for Roan since his toddlerhood, and the final discovery that will alter his life forever, Roan is tossed both emotionally and physically into harrowing situations that he could never have imagined. The people Roan meets along his journey are vivid and unforgettable, from young Ila, isolated and desperate as her mother coughs her life away in a frigid cabin, to the hulking, volcanic, unknowable Ashur Genge, whose own heartbreaking secret may hold the key to Roan's deepest desire.
As Roan's personal story entwines with the historical tale of the Newfoundland disaster, it is “the b'ys”—the simple men who risk their lives year after year on the ice—their brotherhood, their resilience, their heart, and their humour that carry him through tragedy and beyond.
Rage the Night showcases Donna Morrissey's extraordinary empathy, her remarkable characters, and her unique literary voice; it is a masterwork from one of our finest storytellers.
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I’ve read and loved all of Donna Morrissey’s novels. She is one of my favourite Canadian authors, and this, her latest book, only adds to my regard for her writing.

It is 1914 in Newfoundland. Twenty-year-old Roan is an orphan who has been raised and educated by Dr. Wilfred Grenfell, the renowned Newfoundland medical missionary. A nurse’s deathbed confession has Roan discovering that his father may still be alive, so he sets out to discover the identity of that father and the truth behind his mother’s death. He travels by dog sled from St. Anthony to Deer Lake and then takes a train to St. John’s. Believing he has found his father, he follows him onto the SS Newfoundland, a ship heading to the sealing grounds for the spring show more hunt.

I didn’t know about the history of the Newfoundland, one of the worse marine disasters in Newfoundland history, but as soon as Roan joins the sealers on the ship, I suspected there would be a tragedy. I’ve read enough about the seal hunt to know of its dangers. The conditions are not favourable as the Newfoundland keeps getting trapped in ice so the captain and the sealers are more and more desperate to find seals; the decision to have the men walk for hours to reach a herd just ramps up the suspense.

The seal hunt is controversial, but it has been part of Newfoundland’s culture for generations. Regardless of one’s position on the hunt, a reader will feel empathy for the sealers. For them, the hunt means making some money to feed themselves and their families. The living conditions on the ship are miserable; food is very basic and there’s not much of it. Once the hunt begins, the dangers increase. The men need to earn money and it is desperation that drives the men onto shifting ice.

I love novels with a dynamic character and this one has Roan. At the beginning, Roan loves solitude: “Quiet. He loved quiet. Loved how it settled around him without shadow.” He even tells a young woman he encounters that “We are best alone, Ila, we are best alone” and believes that “She will learn, as he has, not to fear aloneness. She will learn that it is in solitude where one finds one’s courage.” As a young boy, Roan was sent to a boarding school in Boston where he was an outcast because he was considered an orphan from the backwoods, but on the ship he is accepted by the men and bonds with them. He learns that “our pathways through life are equally shaped by the others who sail with us” and realizes that he gathers courage “from living these past days among a brotherhood that breeds such courage out of misery that all things seem possible.”

Roan has other lessons to learn as well: patience and humility. The ship’s captain, for instance, is described as proud and one of the sealers says “’Men does strange things when they got that drivin ‘em.’” Roan comes to recognize “his own naked pride” and acknowledges the presence of “his old pal vanity.” Watching the sealers help and support each other, he becomes more compassionate and realizes the truth of Dr. Grenfell’s words that “What we give to others is the rent we pay for our room on this earth.” Roan does uncover the truth of his birth, but it’s the other lessons that more profoundly affect his behaviour.

Characterization in the novel is excellent. Characters are flawed like real human beings: keeping secrets, telling lies to themselves and others, and falling subject to misunderstandings. Though there are few women, they are memorable. Ila, though the same age as Roan, seems so much more mature, probably because of her life experiences. But the most authentic for me are the sealers. They speak in distinctive Newfoundland accents which I love, but it’s their supportive fellowship, resilience, and humour that stand out. Even when miserable, they break out into song to bolster morale. They watch out for and help each other. They share equally what little they have, unlike captains who keep the best food for himself and unlike Roan who in the past succumbed to the “greed of hunger.”

There is so much to recommend this novel: a suspenseful plot, authentic characters, lots of local colour, lyrical descriptions, and thematic depth – all things I’ve found in all of Donna Morrissey’s novels.

Note: I received an eARC from the publisher via NetGalley.

Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) and follow me on Twitter (@DCYakabuski).
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There are two aspects of this book. The first is the story of Roan, who at age 20 discovers who his mother was. He was taken from her when he was born and given to another woman. At four years of age, he was taken to an orphanage and raised by a missionary doctor. Roan sets out to find out more about what happened during his early years -- and why.

Following the man he believes to be his father, Roan goes on a seal hunt that turns into a disaster. This is the second aspect of the book: the fictionalized account of the true, 1914, disaster of The Newfoundland ship where many men died on the ice.

The story of the seal hunt was fascinating and very well written. I could feel the cold as the men were stranded on the ice far from their ship. show more I could also feel the warmth that the men's compassion for each other brought. The characters were amazingly well drawn and complex. I'd give this part of the book 5 stars.

However, the story of Roan's search for his past was a let down. Too many moments where someone almost reveals something but stops short. Too much obvious misunderstanding where someone could easily have corrected things. Too much melodrama. A big issue left totally unaddressed (i.e., why Road was moved at four years of age). The reunion about to take place at the end....really? This part just didn't work for me.
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It is 1914 and spring is teasing the rugged island of Newfoundland when a deathbed confession from an orphanage nurse sets 20-year-old Roan off on a quest to find the truth of his birth. Who is his father? Did he fake his newborn son’s death? Why?

That is the premise of “Rage the Night,” the newest novel from award-winning Newfoundland-born author Donna Morrissey....Morrissey’s greatest show more gift as a writer is her ability to render vividly and with respect the rugged life, unique voice and humour of “The Rock” without delving into caricature. ...“Rage the Night” goes some way to explain how the practice helped shape Newfoundland and why it continues to hold a place in the island’s memory and traditions, beyond financial gain. show less
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10 Works 1,129 Members
Donna Morrissey was born in The Beaches, a small village on the northwest coast of Newfoundland that had neither roads nor electricity until the 1960s - a place not unlike Haire's Hollow, which she depicts in "Kit's Law". When she was sixteen, Morrissey left The Beaches & struck out across Canada, working odd jobs from bartending to cooking in oil show more rig camps to processing fish in fish plants. She went on to earn a degree in social work at Memorial University in St. Johns. It was not until she was in her late thirties that Morrissey began writing short stories, at the urging of a friend, a Jungian analyst, who insisted she was a writer. Eventually she adapted her first two stories into screenplays, which both went on to win the Atlantic Film Festival Award; one aired recently on CBC. "Kit's Law" is Morrissey's first novel, the winner of the Canadian Booksellers Association First-Time Author of the Year Award & shortlisted for many prizes, including the Atlantic Fiction Award & the Chapters/Books in Canada First Novel Award. Morrissey lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Rage the Night
Original title
Rage the Night
Original publication date
2023-08
People/Characters
Roan Genge; Ashur Genge; Freem Genge; Lila; Dr. Grenfell; Willett (show all 10); Uncle Jack; Mose; Frances Elizabeth; Nurse Ivy
Important places
Northern Peninsula, Newfoundland; St John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Important events
Vessel 'Newfoundland' disaster, 1914
Epigraph
Lonely one, you are going the way to yourself! And your way goes past yourself, and the past your seven devils! You will be a heretic to yourself and witch and soothsayer and fool and doubter and unholy one and villain. You m... (show all)ust be ready to burn yourself in your own flame; how could you become new, if you had not first become ashes? -- Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Dedication
For Ismet Ugursal, a friend from my sake first
First words
To the far side of the graveyard the knotted white spine of an old birch stands resolute against the night sky.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Roan? Roan!"
Blurbers
Mitchell, Shandi; MacIntyre, Linden; Moore, Lisa; Collins, Gary

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
BISAC

Statistics

Members
41
Popularity
716,546
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (3.69)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
2