Literature in the Lymes: A Review of ‘The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill’ by Faulkner Hunt

He has created a land and characters that instantly feel familiar.

Like Faulkner, I was raised at the knee of a storyteller and read everything in every conceivable accent to my children. Some of us were more often amused (me) than others (them) but, I wouldn’t hesitate to do it again.

Nothing. Absolutely nothing beats a story. A tale. A yarn. A ballad … so I  was, naturally, very excited about this one.

Any storyteller knows a tale about an island is a boon. The islands of northern Great Britain especially are remote and historically, literarily magical; a perfect step into The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill.

Skara Skaill is an island, fictional, off the coast of Scotland. It should feel barren and cold and unwelcoming.

It doesn’t.

This is Hunt’s talent, I think. He has created a land and characters that instantly feel familiar. Likable, as maybe vestiges of classic literature or amalgamations of people we relate to; his characters are tangible.

Obviously his work as a screenwriter comes into play (puns away) but not uncomfortably so. It’s more an auditory or visual hint that stands quietly off to the side. It stands just so as a lovely book and we aren’t just flipping through a script waiting for Colin Farrell to step in on screen. 

The setting and the characters are so organic it just flows. The smoke and fog and moss; It’s so quintessentially Scottish island moor yet not brow-beatenly gratuitous. It feels fresh, which is a feat.

It’s also fun.

The four main characters—Hamish, Innes, Rory and Tito—find each other in a plot to unearth and profit from the treasure mentioned in the legend of Skara Skaill. No ordinary ballad this. King Harald mentions a hoard and a hoard there be. It isn’t an ethically ambiguous plot. Each of the four is a good person with well-intentioned desires.

The bad guys are the opposite.

Like any ballad worth its salt; there are solid moral boundaries. 

With a mix of Robert Louis Stevenson meets a tamer Trainspotting (in a good way), the truth outs and I was hooked. The cast of minor characters is also excellent. Hermits, barmaids, conniving mules—Hunt paints a brilliant portrait.

Hunt has taken many familiar parts of literature and made something new. I was so comfortable to be on Skara Skaill. I was so happy to be with these people. It felt so natural and unrestrained that I mention it only because I’m suddenly aware of how rarely, as a reader, I do feel that way. I’d simply never noticed. 

This does not feel like a first novel.

If I had to guess, Faulkner has been writing it in his head for years.

Lucky us that he put pen to paper.

Jennifer Petty Hilger

About the author: Jen Petty Hilger grew up in New York and London, England, but finds herself happily quiet living by the water in Old Lyme.

She and her husband have six children between them and a myriad of rescued animals.

TOP STORY: A Tale for All Ages: Lyme’s Faulkner Hunt Revives the Classic Spirit of Adventure in Debut Novel Published Sept. 23

Author Faulkner Hunt sits down at Ashlawn Farm Coffee in Old Saybrook on Sept. 11, 2025, in the leadup to the Sept. 23 publication of his first book.

LYME–Frustrated screenwriter-turned-author Faulkner Hunt’s first novel is a hardcover story for the ages in an era consumed with 30-second reels and 80-character posts on social media.

Hunt, a Texas transplant whose career spans the media and technology industries, has emerged with a back-to-basics approach that eschews the trappings of the digital world for pure storytelling.

“A book, at its worst, is a beautiful distraction,” he said. “At its best, it’s among the highest forms of art.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill is set for release this month as an adventure story modeled after classics like Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. Those are the bedtime tales he read to two boys and two girls, now grown, whose childhoods spanned decades. 

“I had kids in my house for 28 years,” he said of the 18th century farmhouse shared with wife Ann Lightfoot. “It felt like I was reading nonstop.” 

The couple, who met as students at Wallingford’s Choate Rosemary Hall boarding school, moved to Lightfoot’s hometown in Lyme in 2001. That was several jobs and two children after Hunt packed up his University of Texas degree and moved to New York just to be near Lightfoot again, “even though she may not have known it.” 

Their identical twin girls were born in Lyme. 

He described his own youth and time spent reading to their children as “classic training” in storytelling structure. But fast changing realities forced him to adjust his narrative view. 

“Look, if the world’s attention span is shorter, then you have to adapt to that,” he said. “And so this book is very much designed to be a page-turner. It’s written kind of like a screenplay is written, where there’s no wasted time, space, and you’re not meandering around listening to an author show off. It’s just very straightforward that way. It travels quick.”

Hunt’s years studying English and history at college, where he roomed with the now movie star Owen Wilson and traveled in the same circles as filmmaker Wes Anderson, helped forge an early affinity for screenwriting inspired by the burgeoning cinematic powerhouses. 

But when he couldn’t land a deal on any of several screenplays – including one project with Wilson’s backing about a scofflaw dad assigned by a judge to the Marine Corps – his plans changed. 

“I started thinking, well, maybe just write a book,” he said. After three years of writing, revising and pitching, he had it: 314 hardbound pages with cover art that revealed a Welsh woodcarving of the imaginary North Atlantic island of Skara Skaill. 

“It comes out September 23rd,” he said. “There it is; it’s the shape of a book.” 

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill, published by Regalo Press, tells the story of a bereaved son, who takes up with two young brothers living on the village streets and moors of Skara Heath as they search for fortune and truth in the island’s buried past. 

Describing “a tale for all ages,” Faulkner said he sees the book as a story to be passed through the generations by word of mouth rather than marketed in a social media blitz. 

He admitted to a counter-revolutionary approach that comes at a time when authors, whether they land a traditional publisher or go the self-published route, must sell themselves aggressively online. 

“I have no social media presence, and I won’t,” he said. 

That doesn’t mean he won’t go on podcasts and talk with BookTok influencers. But he emphasized none of that outreach will point back to his own pages on the likes of X, Instagram and Facebook. 

His X account, going back to 2009, remains empty except for a profile picture of a father and child. 

“When I see a line of kids all together and they’re all staring at their phones, it literally just breaks my heart,” he said. “I think, ‘what are you missing?’ Everything! You’re missing it all.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill goes on sale Sept. 23. Visit faulknerhunt.com for more information.

Editor’s Note: Visit this link to order a copy of the book.