Hearn develops each character with exquisite care, the month-by-month narration ratcheting up the tension as Grace’s belly swells and the minister casts about for scapegoats. The spikily independent Nell’s conscientiousness brings her into contact and conflict with the minister’s daughters: Grace, unmarried and pregnant, and Patience, her simple sister, whose imperfect apprehension of the tensions swirling around her form an eerie counter narrative, taken down during the 1692 witch panic of Salem Village. At one margin of her world lurk the piskies and fairies that represent the old ways she follows at the other, the forces of modernization in the forms of the Puritan minister and the English Civil War. The year is 1645, and Nell, the village “cunning woman’s” granddaughter, has been learning the healer’s trade, desperately hoping to conceal her grandmother’s increasing senility until she is able to take her place.
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