Review: The Last Witch by CJ Cooke

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Fantastic, Truth Based Historical Fiction

The Last Witch is a phenomenal read.  It’s tense, dark, cruel and totally compelling.  I absolutely loved CJ Cooke’s A Haunting in the Arctic, a shocking and highly spooky ghost story that I thought would be difficult to surpass but The Last Witch certainly comes close to doing so.

Put simply I don’t really think I can do this book justice in a review but I’ll give it a shot.

The writing is absolutely beautiful, which is a strange thing to say when so much of the story is composed of misogyny and violence towards women.  It is without doubt a shocking read, not gratuitous I must say, just totally horrifically mind blowing in the way it relates the injustices of the era.

This is a story set in Austria during the 15th century.  Women’s lives were certainly not their own during that period and when the witch hunts began many women became scapegoats, blamed for crops failing to children becoming ill.  Accusations, many from bitter, jealous or thwarted neighbours were treated as hard fact and the women accused were tortured to make them confess.

Helena Schueberin had drawn the notice of a religious zealot, a priest who eventually became one of the most feared witch hunters in Europe and went on to write and publish the Malleus Maleficarum.  Heinrich Kramer makes it his mission to clean up the quiet city of Innsbruck of witches – and apparently the city is overrun.  Taken into custody along with six other women Helena was starved, tortured and treated despicably but remained firm in her determination to speak out against the injustices.

I have to say this is so well written, it’s one of the most gripping historical stories that I’ve read.  It’s so powerful, the writing brings the setting alive, the fear, the appalling conditions, Cooke doesn’t shy away from the bitter truth or the fickle crowds that turn from peaceful and loving to a pitchfork wielding mob hungry for violence.

Helena is a fantastic character to read.  I really liked her and I must say that I was terrified on her behalf for a good deal of the book!  Equally, Kramer is absolutely unbelievably horrifying, to think that a religious man could be so shockingly brutal, to seemingly take such pleasure in inflicting pain and to be so consumed with hate for all women.  It’s difficult to get your head around to be honest.  Fortunately, not everyone was of the same mind and one of the other characters, Bishop Georg Golser, took many personal risks to champion the accused women.

I highly recommend The Last Witch, I would mention again that this doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to the treatment of many women during this period, it is shockingly brutal in its portrayal and might not be for everyone.  Personally, I think it’s a remarkable book.  A dark tale with hints of the supernatural, wonderfully written and with very powerful performances from the central characters.  A book that will stay on my mind for some time.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publishers, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4.5 of 5 stars

The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke

My Five Word TL:DR Review: A Book that will Bewitch

I’m loving CJ Cooke’s work and the Book of Witching is no exception.  A captivating novel  told in two timelines with mystery, witching and history combined.  

As with the other books I’ve read by this author she manages to capture atmosphere aplenty.  Here we have two completely different timelines, one harking back to the late 1500s where a woman is taken into custody and tried for being a witch, the other set in the modern era where a woman has been informed that her daughter has been badly burned and is currently in hospital, one of her friends is dead and the other missing.  

This is a pacy read and utterly compelling.  I practically inhaled this in two sittings.  I loved the mystery elements to the modern day setting.  Clem’s daughter was travelling the remote islands of Scotland when the terrible tragedy occurred.  Initially there’s a sense of horror about the shocking events but when Erin wakes in hospital and seems completely detached, refusing to answer to her name and coming across as less than sympathetic to what has happened to her friends, well, unsurprisingly the police start to take a closer look at her.  Of course her mother Erin and her ex husband are determined to prove her innocence and travel to Orkney to try and uncover some of the mystery – in the process being a bit embroiled with an unusual group of people that initially come across as quite scary.

Meanwhile, flashing back to the events unfolding in the historical storyline, Alison Balfour has been taken into custody and is about to stand trial as a witch.  A trial that is little more than a farce with Alison and her family being tortured until she confesses – after which she will be burned at the stake.  This was a period of unrest, the local inhabitants are being pressed hard and are struggling to live, emotions are running high.  Alison comes from a line of healers, known as hedge witches, people approach her for cures and other types of remedies and yet times are changing and these women that so many have relied on previously will start to be shunned, people afraid to name them friend for fear of the backlash.

I thought both stories were equally intriguing.  I confess I’m a sucker for dual timelines where we jump back and forth and throw in the awful persecution of innocent women that took place during those heinous witch hunts and an equally puzzling mystery on the flip story and I was definitely hooked.

The writing is great, clearly, once again, Cooke has carried out her research and in fact Alison, although with a slightly altered name, is based on a real character who suffered this terrible fate.  

It does take a little while, in fact the link between the two stories doesn’t become apparent until quite late in the tale but I didn’t have any issues with that.

In conclusion a deeply atmospheric read with a perfect combination of history and mystery, both stories clearly demonstrating the love that both these mothers share for their child and the determination to remain true.  I’m very much looking forward to seeing what this author comes up with next.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4 of 5 stars

 

Hell hath no fury – like a woman!

This week over at the Broke and Bookish the topic for Top Ten Tuesday is :

‘Halloween themed freebie’

99187-ttt

With Halloween in mind I thought I’d put forth 10 wicked female characters for us with one main theme:

  1. The White Witch from CS Lewis’ Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe.  Let’s face it – she froze Narnia and forbid Christmas!
  2. The Wicked Witch of the West, the Wizard of Oz by Frank Baum – well, she wasn’t very upset when her sister got squashed by a falling house, she was very mean to the straw man and basically a tyrant to the munchkins!  “oh what a world”
  3. The Three Witches from Stardust by Neil Gaiman- you can’t just go around eating pure and innocent fallen stars!
  4. Ursula from the Little Mermaid – a plotter of nefarious deeds!  Stealer of dreams and voices!
  5. Witch of the Waste from Howl’s Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones, robbed Sophie of her youth because she was jealous!
  6. Bellatrix LeStrange from JKRowling’s Harry Potter.  Very powerful, evil and a death eater.  Not to mention killed various characters.
  7. The Grand High Witch from Roald Dahl’s Witches – she has plans – massive plans – to destroy all the children!
  8. The Queen – from Snow White and the Seven Dwarves by the Grimm Brothers.  She may be a queen, and was once the fairest in the land but deep down she’s an evil witch who wants the heart of snow white delivering to her in a box!  tsk
  9. The Witch who cursed the trolls in Danielle Jensen’s Stolen Songbird.  Can’t say too much for fear of spoilers!
  10. Dolores Umbridge from JKRowling’s Harry Potter.  All dressed up in her pink suits looking like butter wouldn’t melt, drinking tea out of her bone china and surrounded by cats – but deep down (in fact not so very deep) she has a horrible mean streak – and don’t be caught talking in class because she’ll give you lines and they won’t be written on paper.

Tis all for me this week.  Except for a little spell from the Sanderson Sisters:

Twist the bones and bend the back

Itch-it-a-cop-it-a Mel-a-ka-mys-ti-ca

Trim him of his baby fat

Itch-it-a-cop-it-a Mel-a-ka-mys-ti-ca

Give him fur black as black

Just…. like…. that!