Now That You Mention It

How is Scupper Island described in the novel, Now That You Mention It?

.

Asked by
Last updated by Jill W
1 Answers
Log in to answer

Nora describes Scupper Island, which is named for a Whaling captain from Nantucket, as naturally beautiful. On Main Street, there are apple trees and gray-shingled restaurants and shops, and throughout the island there are sanctuaries of nature, such as Lookout Rock, with its oak trees and its salty air, “sometimes thick with the promise of rain sometimes carrying smells of pipe tobacco” (64). There are also picturesque coves with wooden sailboats and rocky cliffs where the rich people live. Despite its aesthetic charm, however, the island is cold and removed from civilization and can only be reached by ferry. The residents earn their living either by lobstering, fishing, or catering to tourists, and they “[pride] themselves on survival and toughness, bonded together by hurricanes and nor’easters, drownings and hardship” (28). Of late, many residents have relocated, “slipping away to bigger waters” (29).

Source(s)

Now That You Mention It