Tidelands. (The Fairmile #1) Philippa Gregory. 2019. 448 pages. [Source: Library]
First sentence: The church was gray against a paler gray sky, the bell tower dark against the darker clouds.
Premise/plot:
Tidelands is an historical novel set in England in 1648/1649. It is
Philippa Gregory’s newest novel and the first in a new series. The
premise is that the main heroine, Alinor, comes under suspicion by her
neighbors for witchcraft. Why? She has been abandoned by her seafaring
husband, (a husband that took not a care about preserving her
reputation). She should be poor, desperately poor, starving, unable to
support herself and her son, Rob, and daughter, Alys. Yet she is not.
Somehow between selling herbs, attending births, fishing, etc. she is
making enough money to survive—even saving back a little for her
daughter’s dowry. Her son—who should have no future ahead of him because
he is a nobody who comes from nothing—is first chosen to be a companion
to the lord’s son and then is gifted an apprenticeship. Her neighbors
have only one explanation: she is a witch descended from witches. She
could never deserve such good fortune otherwise. The problem? Readers
get the story from her perspective from start to finish and she simply
is not a witch. So those readers hoping to find a witch-themed story
will be disappointed. The explanation is much simpler. Bribery. Alinor
meets a Catholic priest on his way to the lord’s house and she discovers
the family’s religious and political leanings. She doesn’t ask for
money, opportunities, etc. in exchange for her silence. But she’s given
them and doesn’t refuse. Sadly she finds herself falling in love with
this priest-traitor, “James Summer.” It does not go well...
My
thoughts: I might have yelled at this book. Okay I did yell at some of
the characters. I wasn’t surprised at the direction this one took—I
could see what was coming almost from the start. But I also felt there
were scenes—bits of dialogue—that were dropped in perhaps with an
agenda. Unwanted pregnancies are nothing new. Perhaps one could
eavesdrop on any decade in human history and find women talking about
how they “need” or “want” or “must” get rid of the baby. How “it” will
ruin their lives. But this one went out of its way perhaps to state that
while she—the heroine—would never, ever, ever end the pregnancy, she
would never ever judge another woman for choosing differently. Making
the argument that women have the right to do whatever they want,
whenever they want, with their body. No one has the right to force a
woman to have a baby she doesn’t want. No one has the right to force a
woman to end a pregnancy. Only one voice counts. There were several
conversations that made me squirm a bit. Her daughter—who is also
pregnant and unmarried (though betrothed) begs and pleads with her
mother to have an abortion; she stands in judgment of her mother for
having sex outside of marriage. The mother never once stands in
judgement of her. The conversation that had me screaming however was
with “James.” There are no words to describe him—words that I would want
to go on record as saying or thinking.
I might be interested in the next book, but part of me hopes it doesn’t pick up where it left off in this family saga.
I was not disappointed at the lack of witchcraft.
© 2019 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing this valuable post. Keep posting more
Read reviews before selecting a novel to read.
Post a Comment