Dark Earth
Books | Fiction / Cultural Heritage
3.9
Rebecca Stott
‘Magical and evocative’ Imogen Hermes Gowar, author of The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock ‘Heartachingly poignant’ Lucy Holland, author of Sistersong ‘An ancient tapestry of legend brilliantly rewoven’ Francis Spufford, author of Light Perpetual The new novel from the Costa-Award winning author of In The Days of Rain. AD 500. An island in the Thames. Isla has a secret: she has learned her father’s sophisticated sword-making skills at a time when even entering a forge is forbidden to women. Her sister, Blue, has a secret, too: at low tide on the night of each new moon, she visits the bones of the mud woman, drowned by the elders of her tribe who wanted to make a lesson of someone who wouldn’t hold her tongue. When the local Seax overlord discovers Isla's secret there is nowhere for the sisters to hide, except across the water to the walled ghost city, Londinium. Here Blue and Isla find sanctuary in an underworld community of squatters, emigrants, travellers and looters, led by the mysterious Crowther, living in an abandoned brothel and bathhouse. But trouble pursues them even into the haunted city. Dark Earth takes us back to the very founding of Britain to explore the experience of women trying to find kin in a world ruled by blood ties, feuds and men in quest of a nation. ‘Superb ... radically new and beautiful’ Observer ‘Thrilling’ Alice Albinia, author of Cwen ‘Pulses with the energy of a brave new world, a world as beautiful as it is dangerous, where a belief in myth and magic can save your life’ Katherine J. Chen, author of Joan: A Novel of Joan of Arc
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Author
Rebecca Stott
Pages
352
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Published Date
2022-06-23
ISBN
0008209243 9780008209247
Community ReviewsSee all
"Strong start and good ending, I loved seeing the world of Londinium before it became...well everything up until what it is today and I love feeling like I got to see a moment in time all based on finding a single broach. Also, the levels of history found in marshes and peat bogs are fascinating and a little terrifying. It's exactly the kind of object history I love to see put together to create a fuller picture."
"This is set in a post-Roman England weaving together bits and pieces from history with tales of magic and the bond of sisterhood. Isla and Blue are the daughters of the Great Smith and are imbued with legendary talents of their own. When their father dies they realize that the local warlord only wants to use them as women throughout history have always been used. The surprise comes when they are given refuge in the abandoned Roman city of Londinium by a group of wild outcasts who have all been left to survive the wild (or not survive- that was more the point of them being left) and have instead made a home and a thriving little community for themselves. In the true bond of sisterhood they take on the plights of Isla and Blue and it becomes a fight for the survival of them all. The romance in the novel was perfect- hinted at (sapphic and straight)- but never is the main point of the story. This was an uplifting, hopeful tale that follows a story through the turns of history to show how a modern man holding a Roman broach might connect across the centuries to a woman creating the broach in the Dark Ages. "