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Whale Fall

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A stunning debut from an award-winning writer, about loss, isolation, folklore, and the joy and dissonance of finding oneself by exploring life outside one’s community

In 1938, a dead whale washes up on the shores of remote Welsh island. For Manod, who has spent her whole life on the island, it feels like both a portent of doom and a symbol of what may lie beyond the island's shores. A young woman living with her father and her sister (to whom she has reluctantly but devotedly become a mother following the death of their own mother years prior), Manod can't shake her welling desire to explore life beyond the beautiful yet blisteringly harsh islands that her hardscrabble family has called home for generations.

The arrival of two English ethnographers who hope to study the island culture, then, feels like a boon to her—both a glimpse of life outside her community and a means of escape. The longer the ethnographers stay, the more she feels herself pulled towards them, reckoning with a sensual awakening inside herself, despite her misgivings that her community is being misconstrued and exoticized.

With shimmering prose tempered by sharp wit, Whale Fall tells the story of what happens when one person's ambitions threaten the fabric of a community, and what can happen when they are realized. O'Connor paints a portrait of a community and a woman on the precipice, forced to confront an outside world that seems to be closing in on them.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published May 7, 2024

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About the author

Elizabeth O'Connor

1 book88 followers
Elizabeth O’Connor lives in Birmingham. Her short stories have appeared in The White Review and Granta, and she was the 2020 winner of the White Review Short Story Prize. She holds a PhD in English Literature from the University of Birmingham, specialising in the modernist writer H.D. and her writing of coastal landscapes.

Her debut novel, WHALE FALL, was published in 2024 by Picador in the UK and Pantheon in the US and will be published in eleven other territories. It was chosen as one of the Observer's ten best debut novels of the year.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 705 reviews
May 11, 2024
Set on a fictional Welsh island in 1938, Whale Fall by Elizabeth O'Connor revolves around eighteen-year-old Manod Llan, a lifelong islander, who dreams of a life different from the one expected of girls her age in her community. She yearns for a future that would take her away from the island yet feels a deep attachment to the small community (fifteen men, twenty women, and twelve children), her father and her younger sister Llinos whom she has been taking care of ever since the death of their mother. When a beached whale washes ashore, their isolated island catches the attention of outsiders among whom are two ethnographers who visit the island to study the way of life of the islanders. Manod is a bright girl, well versed in both Welsh and English and thus a natural choice for a translator who could assist Joan and Edward in communicating with the islanders and transcribing their notes. Joan’s friendship and worldliness inspire Manod and Edward’s promises give her hope. But as she follows their research, she is disillusioned by their inauthentic representation of the community she holds dear and is compelled to doubt their motives.

With its exquisite writing, vivid imagery and immersive setting, Whale Fall by Elizabeth O'Connor is a compelling read that I found hard to put down. Manod is an endearing protagonist and I was invested in her story from the very first page. This is a quiet novel, the kind that won’t surprise you because most of us know that people can be exploitative, opportunistic and self-serving, but unfortunately, young girls like Manod who have led a sheltered existence in a close-knit community are not well versed in the ways of the world. We can see what lies ahead for Manod but are unable to look away. The author does not let you. She keeps you engrossed in stories of the islanders, the songs they sing, their traditions and their folklore, not to say their fascination with the beached whale. Manod’s pain, longing and internal conflict are palpable and her love for her sister and community will strike a chord in your heart. Needless to say, this is an emotionally impactful read and you'll need to go in knowing that it will be difficult to remain unaffected. However, despite the bleakness, the author does end this story on a hopeful note for which I am grateful.

Overall, I found this to be an evocative novel - a memorable read that will stay with you long after you have turned the last page. I simply could not believe that this was the author’s debut novel and I look forward to reading more from this talented new author in the future.

Many thanks to Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor for the digital review copy via NetGalley. All opinions expressed in this review are my own.

Connect with me!InstagramMy BlogThe StoryGraph
Profile Image for Cheri.
1,957 reviews2,801 followers
March 4, 2024

This is a quietly lovely historical coming of age tale, set in pre-WWII, a glimpse into another place and time, a small island where the population is dwindling as those who are able move to the mainland. Manod is close to her family, while at the same time, searching for more without knowing exactly what it is she wants for herself, her life. Life on the island is routine, for the most part, but somewhere inside of her is a desire for more, even if she hasn’t yet determined what it is that she wants for her future. Torn between wanting a life that would offer her more than she will ever have on this island, while her heart reminds her of the things she loves about this place, her loyalty to family and how that extends to home and history, all her memories are tied to this place. And yet, still, she is torn.

When a whale washes up on their shore it naturally attracts attention, not only from the locals, but as time passes it draws in others who come from the mainland and beyond. Soon a man and woman arrive on a boat, and seemingly befriend her for a time, but their motives prove to be questionable.

A beautifully written, quietly lovely story that was impossible to put down and one I won’t soon forget.


Pub Date: 07 May 2024


Many thanks for the ARC provided by Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor, Pantheon

Profile Image for Henk.
970 reviews
August 6, 2024
An island with just 12 families and a few miles across is vividly brought alive. An 18 year old daughter and her family find out that visitors from the main land does not just offer supplies and potentially escape, but also risk
It is hard to know how the world works when you are so far away from it here

An assured debut by Elizabeth O'Connor that brings a fictional island to life. We follow an older sister and a widowed father. He mainly hunts for lobster while she takes care of her little sister. Conditions are hard, doctors are a 5 to 10 mile boat ride away, depending on the weather. A mondaine English Oxford educated woman and man start to document the island life, which more and more feels like fabrication to our partially complicit narrator.

Soon she discovers she wears 20 year old clothes from the perspective of the visitors (You look just like queen Victoria is shouted to her when her mom visits a doctor on the mainland). Conditions are harsh; if no fish is reeled in people eat from cans and having an indoor toilet is the highest mark of sophistication someone who has gone over to the mainland to marry can put in her letters. These letters take months to arrive, news is in scarce supply, even with the Second World War brewing within the novel.

The main character’s voice in the book is excellently done, belligerent at times, stubborn, incredulous and naive but also very perceptive at times. Her relationships with the mainlanders change as does her relationship with moving away from the island or not. The opportunity for female alliance, in getting an education and opportunity is well drawn, even if gulfs and rifts, and awakening sexuality play a part just as well.
Relationships are icky and shifting, and our main character seems to have the weaker hand regardless. And then there is the matter of fascism in England and the rationing of critical supplies, including whale blubber left from the event which gives the novel its name.

For a short novel Whale Fall is impressive, I normally am not super keen on historical settings in fiction but here I felt emerged and almost sprayed under by the rough waves, and I gladly round up my 3.5 stars!
Profile Image for Luvtoread.
563 reviews389 followers
July 7, 2024
In the year of 1938 on a small island off the coast of Wales resides a young woman of eighteen named Manod,who struggles between her feelings of leaving her family and isolated existence on the island to finding a better life for herself and to see what the world is really like and not just from just from things she has read.about the outside world.

Never any excitement on the island until the day a whale washes up on their beach Day in day out many of the islanders visit the whale especially the children who talk to him or play games around it. Soon after more excitement comes about when two fancy people come to the island to study the inhabitants and their way of life. Since all the residents speak mainly Welsh, the couple hires Manod to be an interpreter for them as they visit the people in their homes and work. Manod is attracted to the couple's worldliness and mannerisms as well as they style of dress. Soon Manod is seduced by the couple's glamor and stories of their travels as they encourage her that she is capable of enhancing her own life if she would leave her island. As time goes on Manod begins to see and understand that the couple may have had ulterior motives that could harm the naive, hardworking community in many ways that none of them could have foreseen except for the foreigners who only had their own interests at heart.


This was a lovely although bleak story told through Manod's eyes. Strictly a fishing island, the men and women work from sunrise to sunset from the men out in their fishing boats to the children collecting mollusks and clams while the women clean all the aquatic life to prepare to be sold to the mainland. The author Elizabeth O'Connor does a wonderful job in her atmospheric writing of the sights, sounds, smells and in showing the isolated and droll life that the islanders face and accept every day of their lives. The population decreases every year due to many of the teenagers who leave for the mainland after they graduate school from their small little classroom. I enjoyed the character of Manod very much but I wish she was a little less robotic with her thoughts and actions.

The parts I did not like were the paragraphs were not separated and I would find times and days confusing since some thoughts seemed incomplete and then I would be in a different place or time of day and that was annoying to me since it took away quite a bit of the fluidity of the storytelling which was very interesting and I just felt disconnected at times. I also enjoyed all the characters especially Manod's spitfire of a little sister. A little folklore and superstitions were blended in well and all in all this was a very engaging, dark, gloomy and emotional book that many people will enjoy.

I want to thank the publisher "Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage and Anchor" and Net galley for the opportunity to read this book and any thoughts or opinions expressed are unbiased and mine alone!

I have given a rating of 3 1/2 BLEAK AND MOROSE 🌟🌟🌟🌠 STARS!!
Profile Image for Daniel Shindler.
290 reviews129 followers
July 17, 2024
In “Whale Fall,” two closely linked events disrupt the rhythm of an island off the Welsh coast. The first disruption occurs when, in 1938, a dead whale washes onto the island’s shores.This event attracts two English ethnographers who are intent on writing a book about the island’s customs and culture. The intersection of these two vastly different visitors triggers actions that alter the arc of island life.

Manod Llan,the eighteen year old first person narrator, is the centerpiece of the novel.Her family is one of twelve that live on the island.She lives with her lobsterman father and younger sister and serves as the family matriarch after the death of her mother several years earlier. Her world is one of uncertainty and transition, as World War Two approaches and young people leave the island in search of less constricting opportunities.Manod occupies an uncertain emotional space that teeters between adherence to island traditions and pursuit of more wide ranging aspirations.She is fluent in both Welsh and English. She dreams of an existence that is not totally defined by marriage and children on an island struggling to preserve its way of life.

The beached whale is a harbinger of change for Manod and her community. The locals wonder if the whale is an omen that portends future disruptions.Soon thereafter, the two ethnographers, Joan and Edward, arrive and embark on their study of the island. They need a translator to communicate with the residents and Manod is an obvious choice to fill the role.

The relationship between Manod and the outsiders is grounded in extremely divergent expectations for each side. Manod is initially entranced by the ethnographers’ sophistication and views the relationship as an avenue to leave the island and explore the outside world.Joan and Edward have much less lofty motives. The dynamics of this three sided relationship eventually reveal the consequences of conflicting expectations that culminate in cultural exploitation and appropriation.

The novel is told in concise, spare prose that combines Manod’s inner thoughts with the folktales and rhythms of the island’s life, creating an aura that shimmers between lush and stark. The metaphorical and actual presence of the dead whale hovers throughout, serving as a reminder of life, decay, change and uncertainty.These elements combine to create a portrait of a young girl and her community that are struggling to discover a viable path to survive a world on the cusp of great change.4.5 stars
Profile Image for Rebecca.
185 reviews9 followers
May 2, 2024
You’re telling me this is a debut?? Whale Fall had some of the best writing I’ve read in a debut in ages. I truly believe that it is much more impressive to be able to tell your story in a short, succinct way as opposed to a long, meandering way and Elizabeth O’Connor does it so so so we’ll. It feels like every word she picked was carefully chosen and in just around 200 pages she was able to capture the feelings of longing, grief, and heartbreak so vividly. This was a joy to read and I absolutely recommend.

ARC provided by NetGalley.
Profile Image for Sue.
1,346 reviews605 followers
May 12, 2024
Whale Fall is a debut novel from Elizabeth O’Connor set on a small island off the coast of Wales during the late 1930s. We learn of life there through the eyes of Manod a late teenage girl who is now feeling the trap that island life can be, with its limited expectations and possibilities. Manod lives with her father and younger sister in a small home that is constantly damp. Everything on the island is damp and most often cold. It’s a difficult life for the men who work at sea and the women who work on land.

The whale washing up on the island’s shore marks a change in routine for everyone, child or adult, and is also a wonder. Some question if it may be an omen of some kind. Then there is the arrival of the English man and woman, come to study the island and its people, how they live, what they think. Here is Manod’s chance to become familiar with people who live “over there” and have been to university, have lived some of her dreams.

The prose is spare like the island but so captures the emotion, the color of nature and wildlife, the life of the sea and weather. And the culture of the island is slowly revealed in word, song and story. This is a quiet novel with quickly passing moments of happiness, lingering sadness. Recommended .

Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for an eARC of this book.
Profile Image for Vivian.
2,888 reviews472 followers
June 22, 2024
Issues of exploitation, decline of rural communities, so many lost to the Great War and more young, few left going off to WWII. How outsiders see things but don’t observe or purposefully misrepresent for their own gain.

Follows a young woman on a Welsh island visited by two English university scholars. Everyone has an agenda, but some lose more than others. Quiet, but harsh as the icy windswept shore of winter.

Yes, the “Whale” is a catalyst.

I loved the folk songs and stories and the underlying themes especially as they pertain to women. As bleak as one expects from a literary read. Recommended for those interested.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
3,890 reviews3,232 followers
April 30, 2024
The remote Welsh island setting of O’Connor’s debut novella was inspired by several real-life islands that were depopulated in the twentieth century due to a change in climate and ways of life: Bardsey, St Kilda, the Blasket Islands, and the Aran Islands. (A letter accompanying my review copy explained that the author’s grandmother was a Welsh speaker from North Wales and her Irish grandfather had relatives on the Blasket Islands.)

Eighteen-year-old Manod Llan is the older daughter of a lobster fisherman. Her sweetheart recently left to find work in a mainland factory. It’s 1938 and there are vague rumbles about war, but more pressing is the arrival of strangers here to study a vanishing culture. Anthropologists Edward and Joan learn snatches of Welsh and make recordings of local legends and songs, which are interspersed with the fragmentary narrative. Manod, star-struck, seeks the English researchers’ approval as she helps with translation and other secretarial duties, but becomes disillusioned with their misinterpretations and fascist leanings.

The gradual disintegration of a beached whale casts a metaphorical shadow of decay over the slow-burning story. I kept waiting for momentous events that never came. More definitive consequences? Something to do with Manod’s worries for her little sister, Llinos? A flash-forward to the abandoned island’s after-years? Or to Manod’s future? As it is, the sense of being stuck at a liminal time makes it all feel like prologue. But O’Connor’s writing is quite lovely (“The milk had formed a film over the surface and puckered, like a strange kiss”; “All of my decisions felt like trying to catch a fish that did not exist until I caught it”) and the book is strong on atmosphere and tension. I’ll look out for her next work.

Originally published on my blog, Bookish Beck.
Profile Image for Ellery Adams.
Author 64 books4,695 followers
May 25, 2024
It's hard to believe that this beautifully written novel is the author's debut. Thanks to @praudio, I was able to listen to this gem, and I highly recommend this format as the narrators sing these haunting Welsh folk songs, and they add to the already-pronounced atmosphere of the narrative. On this isolated island, nature rules the lives of the few islanders who haven't left for the mainland. Our protagonist, Manod, is an old teenage soul. Motherless, she raises her younger sister while dreaming of a life beyond fish and folklore. This is a quiet, lyrical book, which might not appeal to those looking for dramatic scenes, but I was lost in the writing and setting and would happily read anything produced by Ms. O'Connor's pen.
Profile Image for Samantha.
99 reviews3 followers
September 27, 2023
Thank you to NetGalley & the publisher for this ARC in exchange for an honest review! I loved Whale Fall by Elizabeth O'Connor and I think this book is for anyone looking to experience some heartfelt emotions. I started reading it late in the evening, planning to only read a little. Two hours later I'd finished after not being able to put the book down. I immediately found myself connecting to the main character Manod. Her experiences and feelings are just so moving, and I certainly felt her emotions very deeply. That's a testament to how believably Elizabeth O'Connor can write real & human stories. I also cannot praise enough how well Manod's home is described. This fictional, remote island was brought to life for me. I don't know how it's possible to describe a location in such a way that I'm absolutely in love while at the same time longing to see what's beyond it for Manod's sake, but that's what happened here. Definitely incredibly done. This wasn't a long read but there is such a rich story here! Whale Fall is an absolutely brilliant debut novel!
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,654 reviews409 followers
April 20, 2024
Manod lived on a small island off the coast of Wales. There were twelve families, plus a minister and a lighthouse keeper. The island is austerely beautiful, their traditional life hard and harsh.

Since the death of their mother, she cared for her younger sister. And helped her fisherman father. She was intelligent, had been a good student, and could speak English. She had an offer of marriage, but imagined a different life. Perhaps on the mainland. Perhaps an education and a career. But responsibilities and lack of money and opportunity had kept her on the island.

A whale was beached on the island. And shortly afterwards came two mainlanders, a man and a woman. They brought their notebooks and camera and recording devices to document the islander’s vanishing way of life, the stories they told, and the songs they sang.

Manod was recommended to be their translator.

The strangers lathered praise on Manod, commended her abilities, and told her she could be anything–on the mainland. Women were going to university now. They fussed over her embroidery on handkerchiefs, asked to borrow her work to document.

Manod admired the woman ethnographer. She fell for the man’s golden words. They brought news of the world, the rise of Fascism and war. And hope for a different life.

But as time went on, Manod realized these strangers brought false hope, clearly lying as the staged images of island life, intent on making a splash with their book, using the islanders for their own profit and career.

The writing is gorgeous and detailed, bringing the island and its people to life. Manod is a wonderful character, her internal life driving the story. Inspired by real places and events, the novel captures a moment in time when the future met the past, luring people away from their rich, traditional world to pursue a world of choice and opportunity.

Thanks to the publisher for a free book.
Profile Image for Anna Avian.
588 reviews95 followers
May 16, 2024
"Whale Fall" by Elizabeth O'Connor presents a melancholic tale set against the backdrop of a remote and harsh island. The narrative follows Manod, a young islander who becomes entangled with two English ethnographers studying the island's way of life for a forthcoming publication.

O'Connor's prose, while contemplative and vivid, struggles to maintain a cohesive narrative thread, resulting in a fractured storyline. The plot lacks substantial depth, failing to fully engage the reader throughout. The island itself is depicted as both stunningly beautiful and perilously remote—a fitting metaphor for the characters' isolated existences.

Manod's initial fascination with the scholars' exotic perspectives quickly gives way to disillusionment as their research methods prioritize aesthetics over accuracy. As rumors of war stir on the mainland, the islanders face a precarious future, torn between tradition and the allure of modernity.

"Whale Fall" skillfully explores the theme of vanishing island lives, but ultimately falls short of captivating the reader with a compelling storyline. O'Connor's descriptive skill vividly captures the island's rugged landscapes and the characters' internal conflicts, yet the novel as a whole lacks the gripping narrative cohesion needed to leave a lasting impact.
Profile Image for Joy D.
2,488 reviews271 followers
June 22, 2024
On a remote island off the coast of Wales, eighteen-year-old Manod lives with her father, a lobster fisherman, and younger sister, Llinos. The population is dwindling as more people leave to find work on the mainland. The year is 1938 and there are rumors of a coming war. The storyline features two prominent events: 1) a beached whale appears on the shore, and 2) two anthropologists arrive to study the island’s vanishing culture.

This is both a coming-of-age story and one of cultural loss. The outsiders arrive, intrude upon the lives of the small population, misinterpret many of the customs, and set in motion changes that have a huge impact. Manod tells the story in first person. She has had to become a mother to her sister after their mother died. She has a vague impression that she wants a different life but is unsure how to achieve it. She is a help to the anthropologists, with her knowledge of the island’s history and her ability to speak English and thus can translate for them. She shows them her treasured embroideries, which become a key element in the story and are also symbolic.

At first, she looks up to these outsiders, but starts to feel disillusioned when they view the island from their own cultural background, misinterpreting artifacts, photos, and customs of the local people. Sometimes this misinterpretation seems intentional to tell the story in a way that will lead to greater profits from writing their book about the island’s people and their way of life. It is easy to see the symbolism in the gradual disintegration of the whale’s carcass.

It is a slowly developing story, well-written, and atmospheric in its descriptions of the island’s environment. It is short and poignant. This is Elizabeth O’Connor’s debut, and I look forward to seeing what she writes next.
Profile Image for Emma.
2,622 reviews1,030 followers
February 29, 2024
What a beautiful and evocative piece of writing. Set on a tiny island off the coast of Wales, this is a love letter to a way of life in its dying throes and on the Eve of WWII. Two students come from Oxford come to gather material for their book. Manod, our young protagonist, becomes seduced by the idea of leaving for the mainland and a different type of life. The real stars of the show though, are the nature and creatures which dominate islanders lives, and the old sea faring folk tales. Many thanks to Netgalley for an arc of this book.
Profile Image for Jill.
Author 2 books1,896 followers
July 13, 2024
“The island that’s in your head. I don’t think it exists.”


Whale Fall, set in 1938 on an island off the Welsh coast, might be called “a tale of two islands.”

One of the tales is from the perspective of 18-year-old Manod, who has spent her life on a sparse island with only 12 other families. There, she watches young and old men trying to make a living from the catches of a capricious sea, and sometimes losing their lives in trying. She cares for her younger sister and tries to get along with her taciturn father, a lobeterman. She dreams of the promise of a better life.

And then two English anthropologists from Oxford, Edward and Joan, arrive at the shore, seeking to document the island’s customs—its ancient tales, superstitions, and fishing habits. Their relationship is murky. They hire Manod as a Welsh translator, and she believes the foreigners may be her way out.

But Manod is young and naïve. Both Joan and Edward willfully misunderstand the island’s inhabitants as inferior beings and, in fact, manipulate scenarios to get what the photos and stories they want. In the afterword, the author cites Man of Aran, a documentary filmed in 1931 that later became notorious for its factual errors and fabricated scenes. They will hardly be her salvation.

Interspersed with all this is a giant whale that becomes stranded on the beach. The image is arresting and gruesome: its stench and decomposition pervades the island. Yet the whale analogy is never fully culled. It could be anything the reader wants it to be – a symbol of decaying island traditions, a hint of a heinous war (allusions are made to the impending WW II), or our gradual separation from what is majestic in nature (at one point, a minister suggests that submarine radar is at fault for the whale’s death). A fast and profound read.
Profile Image for Katrina Clarke.
156 reviews13 followers
November 25, 2023
Took a little while to get into this but then loved it. The longing and isolation inevitable for someone living on such an island. An island which is an amalgamation of so many British islands that faced migration and harsh lifestyles. The two visitors who studied the people and culture belittle and romanticise the islander's way of life.

#186
Profile Image for Nike.
463 reviews
July 15, 2024
Op een Welsh eiland met uitdunnende bevolking, ruige weersomstandigheden en een beklemmende desolaatheid, woont Manod, 18 jaar en met frisse goesting om te ontsnappen aan die benauwende omgeving. Als een walvis aanspoelt en in zijn zog ook een antropologenkoppel, wordt de rust op het eiland verstoord. Manod wacht vooral ontnuchtering. 

Whale Fall is een stille en terughoudende roman, vol krachtige beelden. Neem zeeën van tijd om dit debuut te lezen en geniet van de ziltige en winderige trip. Elisabeth O'Connor is er eentje om in de gaten te houden, geloof me.
Profile Image for Corn8lius.
104 reviews639 followers
June 26, 2024
J’ai beaucoup aimé ce roman, tres évocateur, aux allures de Nature Writing.

On y suit Manod, une jeune fille vivant avec son père et sa sœur dans un petite maison sur une île, au large de l’Irlande et du pays de Galle, peu avant le début de la seconde guerre mondiale.
Sur cette île, la vie n’est pas simple, mais elle est belle. Bercée par les embruns, le sel de la mer et les changements de saison. Un jour, une baleine vient s’échouer sur la grève, apportant avec elle deux chercheurs universitaires qui viendront étudier les habitants de cette île fascinante.

Si au début de la lecture j’ai eu peur de m’ennuyer, car il se passe assez peu de choses, j’ai rapidement été charmé par la plume de l’autrice, et je me suis beaucoup attaché à Manod.
Et si c’est avant tout un nature writing, l’ouvrage se veut aussi engagé et dresse une critique acerbe de cette fascination malsaine des européens envers des cultures qu’ils jugent « inférieures ».

Bref, un très bon titre !
Profile Image for Alan.
Author 12 books178 followers
May 16, 2024
Went to the book launch last week, the second in April for members of my writer’s group.

... Now read this beautiful book, full of gorgeous writing - 'The wind made red meat of us'; (at the morgue) - 'She was not my mother, but a dream of my mother'. The tale of an isolated island population (off the coast of Wales) visited in 1938 by a couple of anthropologists from the mainland and a dead whale, which rots on the beach. Both things change the life of Manod, the 18 year old protagonist who suddenly sees the island through the outsiders' eyes and falls for one of them (Edward). Her awakening and shame (at her and the islanders' ignorance) is poignantly handled, but other themes are cleverly threaded through the book: the set ideas of the ostensibly objective anthropologists (eg they stage photographs of fishing rituals that don't exist); the coming war; fascism; beauty; relentless and brutal nature.

It's hard to believe this is a debut novel it is so expertly done and I am not surprised it was chosen by the Observer as one of the best ten debuts of 2024, and has been picking up brilliant reviews everywhere.
Profile Image for Lynn Peterson.
996 reviews117 followers
June 9, 2024
This very short book takes place just before WWII on an English island where 12 families continue to try and live. The main character, Manoud, is a very smart 18 year old and is hired as an interpreter of sorts when two anthropologists come to study the island and the inhabitants. I feel like this book could have been really good exploring the life of Manoud and her dreams and hopes she has. Instead it falls short with disjointed writings and many things left unsaid.
Profile Image for Tamara.
124 reviews14 followers
August 26, 2024
"Walvistij" is het debuut van Elizabeth O'Connor, en daarmee schept ze al meteen een hoge standaard voor haar toekomstige werken.

We bevinden ons in 1938 op een eilandje bij Wales, waar het leven lijkt stil te staan. Er zijn nog slechts enkele gezinnen woonachtig op het eiland, en de jongeren trekken steevast naar het vasteland om daar hun geluk te beproeven en een toekomst uit te bouwen.

Manod is 18 jaar, en woont bij haar vader en kleinere zusje. Een moeder is er niet meer, die verdronk enkele jaren geleden. Wanneer er een walvis aanspoelt op het strand, en er daarenboven ook nog eens twee antropologen aankomen op het eiland om de bewoners en hun levensstijl in kaart te brengen, zorgt dit voor commotie en opwinding onder de bewoners. Zeker bij Manod, die voor de keuze staat om op het eiland te blijven, of ook naar het vasteland te gaan.

We volgen Manod enkele maanden mee, van september tot en met december, wat samenvalt met de komst en het vertrek van zowel de walvis als de wetenschappers. O'Connor doet dit in een bijzondere stijl, klein en gemoedelijk, in een traag ritme waarbij ze je lijkt mee te nemen in de cadans van het eiland.
Profile Image for Novel Visits.
904 reviews278 followers
May 22, 2024
(Thanks to @pantheonbooks #gifted.) Elizabeth O’Connor, a debut author, has written a bleak story of a young woman’s desperate longing for escape in her slim novel 𝗪𝗛𝗔𝗟𝗘 𝗙𝗔𝗟𝗟. Eighteen year old Manod lives on a small island off the Welsh coast. Only 12 families inhabit the island, and, as children grow up, they often leave. It’s 1938 when at the start of fall a whale is beached on the island. Soon after, a pair of anthropologists arrive to study life on this tiny island.⁣

Manod’s life seems to be a looping grind of caring for her father and younger sister, cleaning fish, keeping up a home, but not using her mind as she so loved in school. When the anthropologists hire her to translate and assist them, Manod’s world is opened up. She sees possibilities she’s never truly considered. Her struggle between self and those she loves is one we can all sympathize with.⁣

While I found the entire premise of this book interesting and unique, I didn’t love my time on the island. The setting and the people felt so overwhelmingly grim that even I wanted to flee. I also didn’t love some of O’Connor’s writing style. Conversations were stilted, often ending before they’d really begun. I found it jarring and kept going back, thinking I’d missed something. I appreciate the originality and the atmospheric setting, but I was happy to leave this island. ⭐️⭐️⭐️💫⁣
Profile Image for Nicole (Nerdish.Maddog).
235 reviews15 followers
May 13, 2024
This is a deeply moving historical coming of age story set on a tiny island off the coast of Wales at the start of World War II. The Island has a dwindling population that makes it’s living from sheep and the sea. The people are a simple people with hard work and determination wired into their everyday lives; but the younger islanders have started to move to the mainland to make a better living for themselves without the instability of ocean harvesting. When a whale washes up onto the shore, life on the island changes. Two researchers from Oxford come to study the residents and Manod, our protagonist, volunteers to help them out. Manod has an intelligence about her that sets her apart from her neighbors. She is fluent in English as has plans that don’t involve marrying a man and continuing the life of her ancestors. She is seduced by the two newcomers and thinks that this is her time to leave. The isolation of the island enhances this longing, but the sadness and depth of her roots keep her adrift in her own life. This book is a bit emotionally difficult to read, I was angry and depressed all at the same time. The prose is amazing and completely takes you back in time to a place you never knew existed. This is a very powerful book that packs a punch and makes you look at history in a different way. Whale Fall is one of those Debut novels that sets itself apart, I can’t wait to see what Elizabeth O’Connor comes up with next.

Thank you to the KDPG influencer program for gifting me the opportunity to read a digital advance of this book. It is available now so head to your local independent bookstore or library now to pick up a copy.
Profile Image for Rachel.
306 reviews36 followers
May 29, 2024
3.5-Atmospheric and well-written, Whale Fall tells a story that is becoming more and more familiar in modern literature: a remote island, the loss of a language, the intrusion of outsiders and the changes that their arrival set in motion.

The highlights of this book when listening on audio were the folk songs mixed in that were actually sung by the narrators. They were so eerie sounding, they really did sound like long forgotten tapes of an islander from the past.

It is hard not to compare this novel to The Colony and Clear, both books that explore the same themes, though during different time periods. While Whale Fall’s characters, both the island inhabitants and outsiders, weren't nearly as compelling as those found in The Colony and the writing not as evocative as that found in Clear, it is not without its merits and is certainly worth a read.

Enjoyable and very impressive for a debut, but one that will likely soon slip through the cracks in my memory. Still very eager to see where O’Connor goes from here!
Profile Image for Gedankenlabor.
827 reviews126 followers
July 29, 2024
>>Schon lange betrachte ich dieses Land,
versuche, meinen Platz darin
zu begreifen.<<
(R.S. Thomas, "Those Others")

In "Die Tage des Wals" von Elizabeth O'Connor, aus dem Englischen übersetzt von Astrid Finke, nimmt uns die Autorin mit ins Jahr 1938 auf eine abgelegene Insel vor der walischen Küste. Hier träumt die junge Manod von einer Zukunft auf dem Festland und führt den Leser gleichzeitig in das Inselleben ein, nimmt einen mit an die rauen Plätze, die mich doch sehr bewegt haben. Das Inselleben ist nicht leicht, das wird schnell klar und doch ist die Schönheit der rauen Insel und das Bewusstsein der Menschen die dort im Einklang mit der Natur leben einfach großartig beschrieben und konnte mich wirklich sehr abholen! Mit dem Eintreffen von zwei Wissenschaftlern wird meiner Meinung nach auch sehr deutlich, wie sehr doch in natürliche Lebensweisen eingegriffen wird und wie verquer unser gesellschaftlicher Blick auf die Dinge und das Leben ist... Alles muss irgendwie angepasst werden, komme was wolle... verloren geht dabei der ganz natürliche Weg im Einklang mit der Natur und der intuitiven Art in und mit den Gezeiten zu leben.
Für mich persönlich war dieses Buch ein tiefer Einblick in das abgeschiedene Inselleben, in die Art und Weise wie intuitiv in und mit der Natur gelebt wird und gleichzeitig eben auch, wie sehr wir genau diese Natürlichkeit kaputt machen... das Buch kommt nicht mit erhobenen Zeigefinger daher, aber veranschaulicht sehr gut, wie schnell wir doch im Modus sind alles anpassen zu wollen, anstatt uns selbst zurück zu stellen und UNS an die Natur anzupassen.
Für mich ganz persönlich hätte ich gehofft, dass es ein bisschen poetischer im Erzählstil ist, das ist aber ein ganz persönlicher Punkt, den ich mir hier einfach gewünscht hätte, ansonsten war das Buch wirklich so so lesenswert und wird von mir sicherlich noch das ein oder andere Mal gelesen werden 💖
Profile Image for Synne Sylibris.
153 reviews8 followers
June 24, 2024
Give me a book about some remote corner of the British Isles, Scandinavia, Iceland, or the Arctic, and I'll read it.

No surprise, then, that I enjoyed this book. The writing was beautiful, and it gave me a good sense of the atmosphere and the way of life on this imaginary little Welsh island.

I have been trying to find a Welsh audiobook for quite a while now, to become more familiar with Wales and the Welsh English accents. This book's narrator did not have a very strong Welsh accent though, but she narrated the book well, and gave the different characters appropriate accents.

"Whale fall" reminded me a lot about "The Colony" by Audrey Magee (a book I adore. Read it!):
Both books are about a far-off island that gets a couple of visitors from the "civilised" mainland – in this case, a couple of ethnographers eager to write a book about how the islanders live.
The visitors create their own fantasy version of the island, far removed from how the inhabitants see their own life. The islanders do not recognise themselves in the visitor's version of them.

If I were to criticise anything, I think the book could have had slightly more of a plot or it could have gone even deeper into the relationship between the islanders and the visitors. I also think I would have liked to get to know some of the characters a bit more.

An interesting little book - although The Colony did it slightly better😉😉 But I would wholeheartedly recommend both:)
Profile Image for rachy.
226 reviews35 followers
August 22, 2024
I almost didn’t read this book. Thank god I did! After the last disappointing debut I’d finished, I was a bit afraid to give another one a shot for a little while, but I had liked the premise of this anyway and had (very luckily) managed to hit the library right as it became available, so I ignored my inner hater and gave it the shot I had kind of wanted to all along. God bless the library for fixing my mistakes, because this was truly a wonderful read. Set on a remote Welsh island between the World Wars, it centres around local Manod and her interactions with her home and with English academics Joan and Edward, who appear on the island to study it after a whale washes up on its shores.

This was simply a really good little story. It quietly and expertly captured the exquisitely painful push and pull between tradition and modernity, encapsulated wonderfully by our protagonist who both maintains and defends her traditions and her people, but also desperately dreams of something more. Her increasing attraction and repulsion to Joan and Edward was balanced expertly throughout leading to not only a very nuanced character in Manod, but to a complex and well fleshed out little story, brought entirely alive in less than 200 pages.

It also did a really great job of both capturing that kind of coming of age angst, where everything feels vaguely menacing, vaguely sexual, and compounding it with the equal uneasiness the island its awash with through the appearance of Joan and Edward. This doubling down made each of these elements even more effective. O’Connor also captures setting equally expertly here, with her descriptions of the island itself being beautiful and evocative. The prose was also fantastic, some of the best I’ve read in a debut novel, with the perfect measure of subtlety that is the mark of truly great writing. It both gave enough and left enough on the table. Beautiful and spare and poignant.

So I don’t have a bad word to say about ‘Whale Fall’, and for a debut, it truly is beyond impressive. Every aspect of O’Connor’s storytelling here was nigh on impeccable and I enjoyed my brief (because I blazed through it so quickly) time with it. So my faith in trying debuts was taken away and swiftly, swiftly restored. So thank you for that Elizabeth O’Connor, and for this truly wonderful book. I can’t wait to read the next one.
Profile Image for charlotte,.
3,479 reviews1,067 followers
April 27, 2024
Galley provided by publisher

Actual rating 3.5

Whale Fall is a book I enjoyed and, like with many books I simply enjoy, I struggle to put into words just why. So this will probably just be a quick review!

The story follows Manod, who lives on a small, remote Welsh island. Two things happen at the start of the tale: one, the beaching of a whale, and two, the arrival of two English ethnographers who have come to document the island’s culture. It’s not hard to see where the plot might go from here.

O’Connor is very good at bringing this pre-WWII Welsh island to life, along with its inhabitants. It feels itself a little like, not an ethnography as the English visitors are writing, but a kind of peering into the lives of these characters. It’s only a snapshot, precipitated by the arrival of the whale/visitors (and we leave pretty much as they leave), but one that will stay with you.

Really the only reason I didn’t rate this higher than I did (3.5 stars, actually) was simply down to the fact that, while I enjoyed it, that’s all I felt reading it. It’s a very good book and many other readers will, I’m sure, love it more than me. For that reason, I would definitely recommend it.
Profile Image for Leo Vardiashvili.
Author 2 books144 followers
April 25, 2024
An absolute gem of a novel.

Set in the late 1930s among a dwindling population of a tiny island off the coast of Wales. The novel is knit together like a swallow's nest - from short, beautiful and often devastating snapshots of island life and the events that unfold.

The power of this novel is in its quiet, unassuming nature - which leaves room for Elizabeth to deliver beautiful prose, heartbreaking dialogue and emotional punches you will not see coming, and which will haunt you for weeks after.

Rarely do I come across a novel I would be willing to read more than once (and I have read Whale Fall twice... so far). By that measure, this is the best novel I've read in years.

I hope, no - I expect to see it on serious prize lists this year.
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