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THE BLUE MAIDEN by Anna Noyes

THE BLUE MAIDEN

by Anna Noyes

Pub Date: May 14th, 2024
ISBN: 9780802162809
Publisher: Grove

Noyes’ Nordic gothic follows two young sisters on a small Swedish island shadowed by witchcraft trials four generations earlier.

Berggrund Island in 1825 is a quiet, pious community with a haunting past: In 1675, the village priest coerced two orphans into accusing several women of consorting with the devil in Blockula, the “shadow realm” of an uninhabited nearby island called the Blue Maiden. This kicked off a chain of accusations that culminated in the murders of nearly 30 women. Six-year-old Beata and 10-year-old Ulrika are descendants of the only accused woman spared from death (not by any grace toward her, but because she was pregnant). Their father, Silas, the current priest, is a somber man who dismisses whispers of Blockula as superstition, but Bea and Ulrika become fascinated with witches all the same. This obsession bleeds into the girls’ greatest desire: to connect with their dead mother, Angelique. Both pursuits are forbidden in their father’s home, but, as they grasp at feminine knowledge—rifling through their mother’s things and attempting to cast their own spells—the girls increasingly suspect that Angelique had her share of secrets. It is the arrival of handsome mainlander August that propels the girls into womanhood, a place far less glamorous than they once believed. This debut novel churns with the smell of sea-damp wool, day-old bread, and elderflower-scented smoke. This is a place steeped in tradition, yet, for Bea, who surfaces as the protagonist, “history…is too far removed to feel real. What matters is its lore: Be good, or the witch will take you.” The girls must accept that the hushed stories—the bits of history blotted from the lore—are even more foreboding in their absence. While the narrative is quite fragmentary, Berggrund and its inhabitants are alluring; Noyes’ rich descriptions create a setting that, in all its consuming bleakness, is perfect for a story about the burdens of generational and gendered trauma.

A twisting narrative of the horrors of patriarchal subordination that will appeal to fans of classic gothic novels.