Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery

Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery

2021 • 320 pages

Ratings111

Average rating4.4

15

I received a complimentary digital ARC of Slewfoot by Brom from Tor Nightfire via NetGalley. Slewfoot is the first book by Brom I've read, but I certainly don't think it will be the last. Slewfoot is set in seventeenth century America among the Puritans, where the widow Abitha is embroiled in conflict with her crafty brother in law over her land. Everything changes when Abitha meets a strange creature called Samson. Is he a forest god or the very devil, or perhaps both? Slewfoot is a story about oppression, injustice, hypocrisy, revenge, and redemption. It is brimming with magic, faith, and a wildness that I found utterly delightful. Some reviewers have complained that the majority of the book was slow, wishing that more pages had been as fiercely exciting as the novel's conclusion. I appreciate this, as it was a bit of a slow burn, but I think Brom has done a marvelous job of tracking Abitha and Samson's respective journeys. In order to create the fulfilling ending the reader may enjoy at the story's conclusion, we must experience the simmering boil from friction to inferno, perhaps even to the point of sympathizing with the devil...or even seeing that if the devil is present in these characters, it may not only be in the forest beast. I believe Brom's character development does just this. I am not a historian, and I cannot comment on the accuracy of Brom's portrayal of New England life, but it certainly felt grounded and fleshed out. I would highly recommend Slewfoot to fans of Eggers' The Witch, Miller's The Crucible, and of course Brom's previous works. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

September 21, 2021