The Familiars

TEST

Stacey Halls makes a powerful debut in this story of sisterhood and justice, The Familiars.

The year is 1612, the place is Lancaster in the north of England, and seventeen-year-old Fleetwood Shuttleworth is pregnant for the fourth time in three years by her husband, Richard. Having experienced so many miscarriages at a young age, she is frustrated at the prospect of experiencing what might be yet another fruitless childbed, and horrified to come upon a letter from her doctor – hidden from her by her husband – which declares that if she becomes pregnant again she will likely die and lose this baby as well.  Her husband has blind faith that she will bear a child, and, when she confronts him about the letter, will not answer the questions Fleetwood poses about her health. In fury, she heads to the woods to express her grief – and accidentally enters the sanctuary of Alice Grey, who has hunted and slaughtered multiple rabbits on her husband’s land.  When, during a hawking party, Fleetwood tells her husband’s friend Roger about the encounter, he informs her of the recent anti-witch hysteria brewing in the area. Fleetwood has experienced darkness – her father married her off when she was just four years old to a thirty year old man, and her mother had the marriage annulled as soon as she could and later re-matched her to Richard – she’s had a miserable childhood and is honest about it. She will not let these rumors of witchcraft swallow her alive.

Fleetwood continues on in poor health, and when she’s thrown while riding through the woods, she encounters Alice again. She quickly finds that the girls’ nursing improves her health, and when Alice vows that she can help Fleetwood finally carry a baby to term, Fleetwood is apt to believe her.  Soon, Alice becomes the manor’s nurse.  But when Fleetwood discovers that Richard has been keeping a mistress – who is also pregnant with his child – she flees with Alice to her mother’s home and ignores his entreaties to return. Fleetwood and Alice soon come to realize that Roger and Richard are eyeing Alice with suspicion; Roger has become one of the witch-hunters who will make the Pendle Witch Trial legendary, and Richard fears that Alice, with her herbal medicines and healing abilities, is a witch who will harm both Fleetwood and her unborn child.

Soon, Alice is arrested for practicing what is presumed to be witchcraft and accused of murdering a child previously in her care. She is hiding some secrets of her own – an abusive drunkard of a father who’s willing to let her hang. Soon Fleetwood is determined to save her life, convinced that only Alice can help her deliver a living child.  Will the Pendle Witch trials sweep them both up and bear them off, or will they beat the charges? Will Richard put aside his mistress? And will Fleetwood’s child live?

The Familiars is a good character study involving two complicated women trying to scratch out a position in the contracted space of the lives they’re forced to live. It is only lightly supernatural in nature, and very much a drawing-room drama.

Fleetwood, with her unusual name and love of horseflesh, is as strong as a woman who was born in the seventeenth century can be. Her belief in justice makes her loveable, even if she’s deprived of much agency by the period in which she lives. By contrast, Alice is louder, and does much more than Fleetwood could dream of doing in terms of physical freedom, and her relative independence is nicely contrasted with Fleetwood’s greater social status and influence.

Fleetwood’s mother is another strong female character, playing by the rules but secretly sympathizing with Fleetwood and Alice. Roger and Richard, with their alliterative names, occasionally blend into one another behavior wise, but Richard’s kindness – even when he’s off sleeping with other women – sets him apart. Both are stuck in the mindsets of their era, and both Fleetwood and Alice must struggle against them to find freedom.

The novel’s themes of motherhood and female solidarity are spellbinding, but while the setting of the story feels period appropriate, the speech of both Alice and Fleetwood sometimes feels too modern; not often, but it’s there. Yet the writing is otherwise wonderful, and immerses the reader firmly into Fleetwood’s point of view. There’s a little bit of magical realism thrown in, and it fits perfectly within the taut mystery/crime element of the story. The book is eerie in its own special, unique way.

The Familiars is spellbinding; lightly flawed, but it will suck you right into the prose and hold you there, like a witch with a powerful charm.

Buy it at: Amazon/Apple Books/Barnes & Noble/Kobo

Visit our Amazon Storefront

Reviewed by Lisa Fernandes

Grade: B

Book Type: Historical Fiction

Sensuality: Warm

Review Date: 20/02/19

Publication Date: 02/2019

Review Tags: 

Recent Comments …

  1. excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.

Lisa Fernandes is a writer, reviewer and recapper who lives somewhere on the East Coast. Formerly employed by Firefox.org and Next Projection, she also currently contributes to Women Write About Comics. Read her blog at http://thatbouviergirl.blogspot.com/, follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/thatbouviergirl or contribute to her Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/MissyvsEvilDead or her Ko-Fi at ko-fi.com/missmelbouvier

guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments