I have read other novels by Homer Hickman about the coalminers and rocket boys but for some reason had set this one aside on my shelf until now. Published un 2003, 420 pages, paperback. It is fiction but just maybe of some historical truth too. I was fascinated by the subject involving the people of the Killakeet Island in the Outer Banks and the German U boats that were along that coast. Maybe because of my father's flight disappearance into that deep Atlantic with his entire flight crew and plane, WWII. This is a well told tale with great characters.
Jack Thurlow returns in the Coast Guard to his home roots on Killakeet Island where his father Jack is the last in a line of lighthouse keepers. Joh has not interest in continuing that line. When he is a young boy he is out in a boat with his toddler brother Jacob who is swept away and never found, not a trace. This will haunt Josh and his father through life.
Dosie Crossan has returned to the Killakeet home of her family seeking to restore something of peace and determine her future. Otto Krebs is a famous German submarine U-boat captain with another back story of heartbreak. .
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| Back Cover |
However, Josh Thurlow, the Keeper's son, has forsworn his heritage to become the commander of the Maudie Jane, a small Coast Guard patrol boat operating off Killakeet. Josh is still tortured by guilt, seventeen years after losing his baby brother at sea. Then his life is complicated by the arrival of the beautiful Dosie Crossan, who has journeyed to lonely Killakeet to escape the outside world and perhaps find a purpose in life. While Josh's heart is stirred by the often-vexing Dosie, he continues his search for his brother, even after a wolfpack of German U-boats arrives to soak the island's beaches with blood and oil.
One of the U-boats is captained by Otto Krebs, a famed and ruthless undersea warrior. Krebs, a man also scarred by lost love, comes to Killakeet, however, with more than torpedoes and plans for war: He may also have the answer to the mystery that haunts Josh Thurlow. The Keeper's Son is a rousing, romantic tale of the power of the human heart forever searching for redemption. "

First page prologue
There is a historical interweave about Ben Franklin, and penance and the Founding Fathers on pages 146--155.
Page 68Josh thinks about the snapping turtles he caught from the creek as a young boy, " they were always so angry. ..he couldn't imagine going through life always mad at everything. Keeper Jack had explained it to him. Anger is sometimes just another way of being afraid..."
The townspeople, the sailors whom Josh is training for war despite their and their mothers' protests, the UBoat Captain who begins to doubt himself, the island Preacher, and there are so many more characters.
This was a very good read, 5 *****. Although it was not a fast read for me, it took concentration and was not something that I could whiz through. Well worth the time.


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