cover image THE WIDTH OF THE SEA

THE WIDTH OF THE SEA

Michelle Chalfoun, . . HarperCollins/Cliff Street, $25 (320pp) ISBN 978-0-06-019908-1

Earnest and closely observed, Chalfoun's second novel (after Roustabout) chronicles the lives of a small crew of fishermen and their families, who endure the demise of the fishing industry. Times are tough in the fictional New England town of Rosaline. The seas are overfished; the reconstruction of an antique schooner, the Shardon Rose, forces the fishermen off the piers; and the government announces an Emergency Buyback Package, which encourages fishermen to scuttle their boats and quit the business. Struggling to make it are the men of the Pearl, a fishing vessel owned by Warren Fitz and crewed in part by his son, John, and John's best friend, Chris Albin. Pride-bound, Warren Fitz is loathe to take "The Package," so John—prodded by Chris, a longtime but functioning junkie—tries to run drugs from one of the French islands off the coast of Newfoundland. It's here, as Chalfoun sets her characters on a collision course, that the novel's slowly churning engine kicks in and builds real, satisfying momentum. Chalfoun—who has worked on boats and in shipyards—has a strong documentary impulse. She takes great pains to represent every angle of the fishing economy and is careful to portray in exacting detail her characters' every action. Unfortunately, the surfeit of facts obscures more than it reveals. Chalfoun's dialogue has an authentic ring, however, and character dynamics are convincing. While she tends to hammer home each point, those hungry for an accurate, if glum, picture of the New England fishing industry will find this unblinking novel compelling. (May)

Forecast:Chalfoun may emerge on readers' radar when the movie version of Roustabout, starring Winona Ryder, is released by New Line Cinema.