Showing posts with label Celia Rees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celia Rees. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2019

Sovay by Celia Rees


Rating: WORTHY!

I enjoyed Celia Rees's Witch Child which was one of the earliest novels I blogged since I first began blogging reviews. I'm happy to report I enjoyed this one, as well.

It's set in renaissance Italy, and Sovay is the bastard daughter of a well-to-do Italian, who had an affair with a seamstress. He loved his daughter and left her a dowry, which her evil stepmother uses to buy not a husband, but a berth in a convent for her detested stepdaughter.

Sovay has other plans, however, and consults an astrologer who informs her she will find her true love despite events. As extra insurance, she buys a charm which is supposed to heat up(!) when her true love shows up. I have to say I felt that the charm was a bit of a waste of time. I admit a curiosity as to why the author put it in there, because for me, it really contributed nothing to the story which would have worked better without it.

Nevertheless, Sovay, something of an artist, attends the convent and starts learning the rules. There are mean rich girls there who bully her - again that's a trope that could have been omitted, but once Sovay's art is discovered, she's taken out of normal convent life and assigned as an initiate into the art department - which is run by a renowned female artist, inventor of the prized and secret 'Passion Blue' pigment, and who helps fill the convent coffers with commissions for her art. Sovay begins learning much, but is not willing to give up her pursuit of true love, and forms an attachment to a boy who is working on restoring a mural at the convent.

Needless to say, things do not pan out the way Sovay was hoping for or expecting, but they do pan out and the story reaches a satisfying conclusion. I enjoyed it very much and will probably seek other work by this author since she continues to bat a thousand with me. I commend this as a worthy read.


Thursday, November 14, 2013

Witch Child by Celia Rees





Title: Witch Child
Author: Celia Rees
Publisher: Random House Audio
Rating: WORTHY!

I picked this audio novel for two reason, first because it sounded interesting, of course, but what really won me over was that it's narrated by Jennifer Ehle. She does a fine job, too, of relating the tale of a fourteen year old girl, Mary Newberry who supposedly wrote this in her journal, which is how the story came to us - via its cozy little hiding place.

It would seem, from her website, that Rees has made a career out of telling similar stories (Sovay, Sorceress, Pirate!), and while I personally don't feel any irresistible urge to pursue them all, if they're as good as this one - as involved, as well written, as educational, and as surprising, I don't doubt that they are as worthy as this one is turning out to be. I don't do covers, because the author has no control over that whatsoever unless they self-publish, and this blog is about the novel, written by the author, not about publishers, editors or cover artists, but I have to ask, does the woman on this cover have the most amazing face or what?!

I have to say, the more I listen to Jennifer Ehle, the more she is giving Emily Gray a run for her money as my most adored narrator. Ehle has an advantage because I fell in love with her in Pride and Prejudice, so it's a compliment to Gray that she's still in the lead! Anyway, the young girl, Mary, is living in central England in 1659, and she sees her grandmother "tried" (and summarily, but not so merrily, hanged) for witchcraft, but she's spirited away right then by a mysterious woman who has the same color eyes and who Mary eventually realizes is her own mother. She's been rescued so she can be sent away to "the colonies" unfortunately, because it's not considered safe for her in England if Charles comes to the throne replacing the brief Cromwell lineage.

That seems a bit of an insult as well as Ironic, that May is sent from England to the new world almost like it's declaring England to be backward and primitive in its hanging of witches, and the USA is of course the most fabulous place ever. The irony lies in the fact that the ship Mary travels on docks in Salem, Massachusetts! However, it's some forty or fifty years before the witch trials, so she's safe for now, although her children may not be! The odd thing about this is that, after telling the story in a way that makes it look like Mary and her grandmother were perfectly normal people being very badly done to, we learn on the cross-Atlantic voyage that Mary does indeed have some power: the gift of foresight.

The voyage is a laugh as well as an interesting exposition of ship-board life and social interaction. I don't know what religion Rees follows if any, but it seems to me she is subtly slamming religious hysteria, as well as its blinkered intolerance and bigotry here when she describes the Reverend Johnson's insane blathering. Indeed, given that Johnson is a euphemism for penis, he's really the reverend Dick, and he's a decidedly nasty piece of work: a study in the worst aspects of blinkered religious intolerance. Eventually, they arrive safely in Salem (ahem!) and start life in the New World, but it's to be a short stay, because hardly have they "settled" there than they're heading west, inexplicably following the footsteps of Johnson and crew.

Mary's life seems to be one of endless journeying: from her home to a ship, on the ship to North America, from Salem to Beulah, from childhood to adulthood. She is under the charge of one of her fellow travelers (arranged by her mother) and makes a couple friends with other young people on the voyage. She also saves the life of a newborn baby, but not through any witchery, merely through smarts and experience, from helping her grandmother. We learn a lot, in a painless way, of how life treated people back then, and it's a little bit preachy, a little bit info-dump, but in general the story is very easy on the ears, especially with Jennifer Ehle reading it.

In Beulah, she finally starts making a life as an assistant to an apothecary, gathering plants, seeds, bulbs and herbs for him in the extensive forest, befriending a young native boy, and relaxing into her life, but even that's to be screwed up by Johnson and his narrow-minded dogmatism. The ending was a little sad, but I'm not going to tell you more than that! It was a bit like I expected, but not in the way I expected. I did enjoy this novel immensely.