Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Nesbit (The Wives of Los Alamos) cleverly recasts pilgrim history in this deeply enjoyable novel of murder in Plymouth Colony, Mass. To those living in Plymouth in 1630, the colony is not the land of freedom they'd envisioned. The Puritans hold an iron grip on religious observations, alienating the Anglicans among them, while the colonists haven't received the benefits promised to them, such as land. John and Eleanor Billington, former indentured servants, distinguish themselves as rebels in the colony, never hesitating to point out inequities and hypocrisy, particularly those of prominent settlers William and Alice Bradford and the storied Myles Standish. After the arrival of John Newcomen, a new settler who's been promised land belonging to the Billingtons, more than one person ends up dead. Capturing the alternating voices of the haves (the Bradfords, Newcomen) and the have-nots (the Billingtons), Nesbit's lush prose adds texture to stories of the colony's women, and her deep immersion in primary sources adds complexity to the historical record. Fans of Miriam Toews's Women Talking will eagerly devour this gripping historical. Agent: Julie Barer, The Book Group. (Mar.) Due to a production error, this review originally published without a star.
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Review by Library Journal Review
Ten years after its founding by the Pilgrims, Plymouth, MA, is led by rigid Puritans who don't want the Anglicans to worship as they wish, and Anglican families are approaching open rebellion. A stranger arrives, murder follows, and these tense events are related by two women of different status whose voices would never have been included in standard histories. From the author of the best-selling The Wives of Los Alamos, a finalist for the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize.
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Ten years after founding the first Pilgrim settlement, the colonists are forced to address the strife that roils beneath their utopian dreams.It's an August morning in the Plymouth colony, the year 1630. It's been 10 years since a group arrived on the Mayflower to start life afresh, and today is a day of great anticipation: A fresh wave of people is expected to arrive. Alice Bradford, wife of the colony's governor, William, is especially anxious. On this new ship will be her stepson, the child left behind by William and his first wife, Dorothy, when they undertook the perilous Mayflower journey. Alice remains haunted by Dorothy's death, which occurred under mysterious circumstances, and feels guilt for having usurped her childhood companion for the powerful role of William Bradford's wife. But the day is full of anticipation in other ways, too. Nesbit (The Wives of Los Alamos, 2014) uses alternating narrators, chiefly Alice Bradford and Eleanor Billington, the wife of a disgruntled, disillusioned colonist, to show the tension and unrest building among those in charge of the fledgling settlement and those who are chafing against the powerful. A murder will be committed by the time this August day has come to a close, and by the time it does, the settlers will question whether or not they are truly "fashioned in God's favor," as they once believed. Although the pacing here can be off-putting (the buildup to the promised disaster is long; the climax, too short) and the sensitively rendered but still peripheral role that the Wampanoag Tribe plays could have used more development, Nesbit's novel has all the juicy sex, lies, and violence of a prestige Netflix drama and shines surprising light on the earliest years of America, massive warts and all.A dramatic look at the Pilgrims as seen through women's eyes. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.