Saturday, 28 February 2026

The Night Ship - Heartbreaking!

The Night Ship, by Jess Kidd, encompasses two stories about two different children set more than 350 years apart. In 1628, following the death of her mother, a young Dutch girl called Mayken boards the Batavia and embarks on a long sea journey to reach her father. She is accompanied by her beloved nursemaid and loves the adventure of life on the open water. She wants to investigate every nook and cranny, as well as find out about all the different people who inhabit the ship - both above and below deck. But this is not seemly for a young well-to-do girl, so she goes in disguise as a lowly cabin boy and makes friends with various characters - not all of whom are friendly. Tension starts to build when she discovers that the ship holds dark secrets and things start to spiral when she first loses her nursemaid, and then the Batavia is shipwrecked off the coast of Australia. Meanwhile, in 1989, a boy called Gil who is mourning the death of his mother, ends up in the care of his irritable and reclusive grandfather. He struggles to adjust to his new life in a grim shack on a tiny fishing island off the coast of Australia, where the ghostly legend of the wreck of the Batavia permeates the atmosphere. There's always an undercurrent of trouble and bad feeling and this comes to the fore fairly quickly. Two lives, centuries apart, yet somehow, a strange bond exists between them. This story has many great characters, some of whom are deeply unsavoury, and indeed the two children are not without their faults, but they are written so well that you cannot help but root for both of them, even though you kind of know what the outcome is going to be for Mayken from pretty much the outset. Although brutal at times, we get to experience humanity in all its myriad of shades. One word of warning, this may not be a book to read if you are in the mood for something funny and uplifting! Although I personally didn't feel that all the characters were totally believable and that some passages were overly long, it is definitely a book that is worth the effort and indeed, is one I struggled to put down at times. 

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 400 print pages.

Price I paid: £7.99

Formats available: print, unabridged audio, ebook.


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