Luna, Liv’s youngest daughter, returns to the island as an adult when one of her missing sisters miraculously reappears—unaged since the day she disappeared.
Below is an essay discussing the themes, narrative structure, and significance of C.J. Cooke's The Lighthouse Witches . Download Lighthouse WitchesCJC02oo epub
The Intersection of Folklore and Feminism: An Analysis of The Lighthouse Witches Luna, Liv’s youngest daughter, returns to the island
The arrival of Liv Stay and her three daughters, who are commissioned to paint a mural in the lighthouse before two of the girls vanish. The Intersection of Folklore and Feminism: An Analysis
C.J. Cooke’s The Lighthouse Witches is a gothic mystery that weaves together three distinct timelines to explore the persistent nature of trauma, the dangers of superstition, and the resilience of women. Set on the rugged Scottish island of Lòn Mhòr, the novel uses the atmospheric isolation of a lighthouse to examine how history repeats itself when fear is allowed to govern a community. The Triple Narrative Structure
The phrase appears to be a specific search string or file identifier often associated with online libraries or file-sharing repositories for the novel The Lighthouse Witches by C.J. Cooke.
The origin of the island’s dark history during the Scottish witch trials.