Fiona Campbell is a newcomer to tiny Ephraim, Wisconsin. Populated with
artists and summer tourists, Ephraim has just enough going on to satisfy
her city tastes. But she is fascinated and repelled by the furthest tip
of Door County peninsula, Washington Island, utterly removed from the
hubbub of modern life. Fiona's visits there leave her refreshed in
spirit, but convinced that only lunatics and hermits could survive a
winter in its frigid isolation. In a moment of weakness, Fiona is goaded
into accepting a dare that she cannot survive the winter on the island
in a decrepit, old house. Armed with some very fine single malt scotch
and a copy of Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, Fiona sets out to win
the dare, and discovers that small town life is not nearly as dull as
she had foreseen. Abandoning the things she has always thought
important, she encounters the vicious politics of small town life, a
ruthless neighbor, persistent animals, a haunted ferry captain, and the
peculiar spiritual renewal of life north of the tension line.