Hargrave’s prose is visceral and immersive the muddy, cold life and politics of a fishing village leap to vivid life. In addition to its beautiful writing, its subject matter is both enduring and timely, New York Times Book Review A gripping novel inspired by a real-life witch hunt. For the novel’s long middle, Hargrave slows the narrative down to explore the fascinating daily lives of a matriarchy isolated in the frozen north. The Mercies is among the best novels I’ve read in years. “The Mercies” (Little, Brown and Co., 328 pp., ★★★½ out of four stars) begins with the frenzy of the storm and its deadly aftermath and finishes on a similar crescendo as the trial reaches its culmination. In her elegant and chilling new novel, British writer Kiran Millwood Hargrave spins a hypnotic tale out of a historical witchcraft trial. For three years, they live as “a town of women.” As word gets out about Vardø’s unusual all-female society, a prominent witch hunter from Scotland arrives to investigate the suspicious evil that doomed the men of the town. The mothers and wives that remain have little time to grieve, as surviving the brutal arctic conditions means scrambling into the roles the dead men have left behind: sailors, farmers, leaders, lovers. In 1617, the menfolk of an isolated Norwegian hamlet have just set off on a whaling expedition when a tempest swamps their boat, drowning every one of them.
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