Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be part of The Witchfinder's Sister Blog Tour
What's it all about ...
1645. When Alice Hopkins' husband dies in a tragic accident,
she returns to the small Essex town of Manningtree, where her brother Matthew
still lives.
But home is no longer a place of safety. Matthew has
changed, and there are rumours spreading through the town: whispers of
witchcraft, and of a great book, in which he is gathering women's names.
What did I think about it...
Some years ago I went to a
Halloween fancy dress party dressed as witch, with my pointy black hat, long
black dress and black boots I thought that I looked suitably ‘spooky’. Today we
take the idea of witches in a very light hearted manner but back in the seventeenth
century being accused of witch craft was a very different business.
In 1645, Alice Hopkins returns
home, from London, to Manningtree in Essex where after a change in her
circumstances she is a widow, pregnant and penniless. She now has the need to
fall upon the mercy of her half-brother, Matthew, to give her bread and board.
However, Alice finds out, to her cost, that Matthew is involved in a mysterious
and unholy business, which keeps him out late and brings him into contact with
some influential and dangerous people.
The book is a beautifully written
observation of human nature with all its many facets and disguises. On one side,
we have Matthew, who is utterly convinced that what he is doing is ridding the
world of evil, whilst at the same time we have the creeping terror of women
being wrongfully accused and woefully represented. There is no doubt that witch
finding was a deadly occupation, and the book doesn’t shy away from the
scurrilous and uncomfortable detail of how witch examinations took place and of
the unwholesome justice that allowed lonely and vulnerable women to be
exploited in such a dreadful way.
Time and place is captured
perfectly and for the short time it took for me to read the novel I felt like I
was fully immersed in seventeenth century life. The stifled and gloomy
atmosphere of living at the old Thorn Inn with Matthew comes vividly to life as
does the subservient nature of those women who Matthew employs to keep his home
in order. Alice very quickly became an integral character and I think that her
relationship with her half-brother and that of the family dynamic was finely
examined and utterly believable.
There is much to take in, not
just about the perverse superstition of a country very much in a state of
instability, as the English civil war was still raging, but also in the way
that people’s attitude towards each other was uncomfortably wary and so often
irrationally distrustful. In many ways this made it easier for Matthew Hopkins
to go about his deadly witch finding business as communities were all too eager
to point the finger of blame towards those defenceless women who had no hope of
ever redeeming themselves.
Filled with superstition, secrets,
gossip and innuendo, The Witchfinder’s Sister brings to life a shameful part of
our past in a story which lives on long after that fabulous last sentence which
made my blood run cold.
Best Read With...a platter of cut bread and cheese and a mug of ale
Follow on Twitter @bethunderdown #TheWitchfindersSister
Find on Facebook
Beth Underdown lectures in Creative Writing at the University of Manchester. Her first novel, The Witchfinder's Sister, is based on the life of the 1640s witchfinder Matthew Hopkins. Beth's interest in seventeenth-century England was sparked by the work of her great-uncle David Underdown, one of that period's foremost historians. She came across a brief mention of Matthew Hopkins while reading a book about midwifery, igniting an interest which turned into an all-consuming hunt for the elusive truth about this infamous killer.
Blog Tour runs until the 26th March 2017 @Viking BooksUK
#The Witchfinder'sSister
#The Witchfinder'sSister
My thanks to Josie at Penguin for the invitation to be part of this exciting blog tour
~***~
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for taking the time to comment - Jaffareadstoo appreciates your interest.