16 May 2014

Review - Hild by Nicola Griffith

HildHild by Nicola Griffith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An excellent book that's probably not for everyone, as it is a steady, deliberate sort of read that occasionally provokes confusion (mostly from naming conventions). Griffith evokes 7th century Britain in both setting and character descriptions that slow the narrative greatly but also paint a very vivid picture of a land and culture far removed from our own version of civilization. Yet the genius of the narrative is in the characters, whose motivations are easily recognizable to the modern reader. Hild, in particular, comes alive slowly but surely as she reaches into the role her clever mother creates for her, one of the few where a woman can safely give her opinion. Hild's particular genius is pattern recognition, which she slowly augments with better information gathering as the story progresses. Griffith makes a subtle but undeniable point about the differing powers of written and spoken word and how groups in power use them throughout the plot.

Griffith's tremendous use of relationships between women in the overking's household was the shining highlight of this story for me. She has recreated a plausible world in which higher-born women are expected to run vast households and estates and be conversant in trade, medicine, and husbandry, but where individuals experience the complex ties between themselves and their guests, serfs, servants, and slaves. I was also especially impressed with factual representations of the illnesses that women in particular have battled for millenia; the modern reader will recognize concussions, gangrene, eclampsia, miscarriage, croup, and various children's illnesses, among others.

The reading experience would have been improved with a few more maps (updated as the story progressed to show who was in charge where) and some additional family trees, due to the overwhelming similarity of the names of unrelated figures. The pronunciation guide and glossary provided were both helpful but might have been better placed at the beginning.

I knew nothing about Saint Hilda or 7th century Britain before reading this book. I'm not entirely sure how much I know now, as Griffith is careful to point out that while she did massive amounts of research, it is a work of fiction. Nonetheless, a thought provoking book about power, passions, gifts, the stories we tell, and the age old wisdom that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Recommended to readers searching for a meaningful read who are not scared off by a slower-paced book and some minimal language barriers.

View all my reviews

No comments:

Post a Comment