Summary
The protagonist of The Shipping News (for he could assuredly not be called a "hero") is Quoyle, a big man with a huge chin who is an established loser. Unappealing in appearance and uninspiring in personality, Quoyle is pegged as a wretch from day one by everybody, including his parents. At 36, he's a college dropout and a third-rate newspaperman who is caught in an endless cycle of firing and rehiring, forced to take demeaning temporary jobs at his editor's whim. He is married to an unashamedly philandering woman who has borne him two children she almost never sees, a heartless bawd who never misses work but brings her boyfriends home to have sex with them in the living room while Quoyle listens, silently weeping, in their bedroom. At the head of Chapter One, Proulx defines "quoyle" as "a coil of rope," and proceeds to quote The Ashley Book of Knots:
"A Flemish flake is a spiral coil of one layer only. It is made on deck, so that it may be walked on if necessary."
It it the perfect introduction to Quoyle; he is, in more familiar terms, a doormat.
Quoyle's life is suddenly and forever changed by a rapid succession of momentous events. His parents, both diagnosed with cancer, commit suicide -- his father leaves a final announcement of the decision on Quoyle's answering machine in his last conscious moments. Quoyle's editor again informs him that he is fired, but that this time it is likely permanent. His wife, after taking and selling their two girls, dies in a car crash while running away to Florida with her latest boyfriend. And Quoyle finally meets his Aunt Agnis, who convinces him that the best thing would be to relocate to his family's ancestral home in Newfoundland. An old (and only) friend of Quoyle's secures him a job writing the shipping news for a paper there, and Quoyle packs up his recovered daughters, his aunt and her dog, and leaves New York for Newfoundland.
They arrive to find the ancestral home in tough shape after years of standing empty. A mysterious white dog plagues daughter Bunny's imagination, while a mad cousin asserts his claim to the house by leaving charmed bits of knotted twine everywhere. The road to the house will be made impassable soon by winter weather, so Quoyle, who cannot swim, is urged by his new coworkers to buy a boat. He makes mistake after mistake in arranging his new life, but also makes a few good moves along the way, and he begins to make a place for himself and his family in this odd little community that lives off the sea.
The denizens of Quoyle's newly claimed bit of coast are at least as eccentric and endearing as the characters of television's "Northern Exposure": the owner of the paper calls in sick almost every day to go fishing instead, yet rules with an iron fist; an old bachelor writes the women's-interest page; an Englishman marooned here on his trip around the world in a modified Chinese junk rewrites stories pulled off the wire of crime and sexual abuse. The old man who builds Quoyle's new boat sings a never-ending song of wrecked ships with rhyming names. And a tall, quiet young widow who plays accordian for her "special" child to dance to leads Quoyle to wonder and hope that there might be more than one kind of love, and that it might come more than once in a lifetime.
http://www.curledup.com/shipping.htm