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Menewood

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Named a Best Book of the Year by Vox and Autostraddle

Making a much-anticipated return to the world of Hild, Nicola Griffith's Menewood transports readers back to seventh-century Britain, a land of rival kings and religions poised for epochal change.
Hild is no longer the bright child who made a place in Edwin Overking's court with her seemingly supernatural insight. She is eighteen, honed and tested, the formidable lady of Elmet, now building her personal stronghold in the valley of Menewood.
But old alliances are fraying. Younger rivals are snapping at Edwin's heels. War is brewing—bitter war, winter war. Not knowing whom to trust, Edwin becomes volatile and recalls his young advisor to court. There Hild begins to understand the true extent of the chaos ahead—and realizes she must find a way to navigate the turbulence and fight to protect both the kingdom and her own people.
She will face the losses and devastation of total war, and then must summon the determination to forge a radically different path for herself and her people. In the valley, her last redoubt, Hild draws strength from the fierce joy she finds in the natural world, as, slowly, her community takes root. She trains herself and her unexpected allies in new ways of thinking, learning what it means to gather and wield true power. And she prepares for one last wager: risking all on a single throw for a better future.
In the last decade, Hild has become a beloved classic of epic storytelling. Menewood exceeds it in every way.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2023

      The eponymous heroine of Nebula/World Fantasy honoree Griffiths's Hild returns, now 18 and married to the childhood love she was once denied. Though evidently no longer possessed of supernatural insight, she's still a valued adviser to her king in seventh-century Britain, important in a time of regal and religious rivalry. With a 100,000-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2023
      Griffith picks up Hild's story where her eponymous 2013 novel left off. When last we saw Hild, she had just been made the Lady of Elmet. She and her new husband (and half brother), Cian Boldcloak, are responsible for holding southern Northumbre for her uncle Edwin, the king. The 7th century was a tumultuous time in Britain. Regional rulers like Edwin clashed as they sought to control the whole island and Christian priests vied with old gods. Hild survived a perilous childhood by making a reputation as a seer and, later, by becoming a fierce warrior. What she wants isn't power; it's a safe home for those she loves and those in her care. She knows that war is coming, and leading her people through it will require foresight, cunning, and terrible sacrifice. As she did in Hild, Griffith offers a richly textured vision of life in early-medieval Britain. She takes incredible care in the language she uses, avoiding modern metaphors and generally choosing words of Germanic or Celtic origin over Latinate words. She also dots her text with terms straight from Old English, which has the wonderfully paradoxical effect of pulling the reader into Hild's universe while reminding us that this place is, for us, strange and ultimately irrecoverable. And there are moments of exquisite poetry throughout the text, particularly in descriptions of the natural world. Where this book falters is in its length, its pace, and a list of characters that will be unmanageable for most readers. For example, the first quarter of the book--almost 200 pages--describes the lead-up to a war between Edwin and rival kings. The political machinations are not easy to follow; nor are they, ultimately, very enlightening. Most of the conversations among Hild, Edwin, and other powerful players are about what they don't know and, given that the text seldom strays from Hild's point of view, the reader receives no insights that she doesn't have. There's also a tremendous amount of repetition. The word "seax"--a type of knife--occurs 92 times in this novel and, in most instances, Hild is grasping hers or adjusting hers or drawing attention to hers because she feels uneasy or wishes to assert her power. And every time she does it, she becomes more of a figure from pantomime than a real and singular woman. Overlong and slow-paced, but compelling despite its flaws.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 9, 2023
      Griffith follows up Hild with a transportive second volume inspired by the life of St. Hilda of Whitby (614–680), known for advising kings as an abbess and portrayed here as a canny royal leader and fierce warrior in the years before she’s recruited by the church. In the first installment, Hild was a precocious child; now, in 632, she’s 18 and recently wed to her half brother Cian Boldcloak, with whom she’s tasked to protect the highland of Elmet for their king and uncle Edwin, in whose court Hild was raised. Their lives are dictated by the constant threat of war, and by the end of the first act, Cian is killed in battle. Along with descriptions of bloody violence, Griffith colors in the customs and language of early medieval England (“Tide turns as æfen turns to niht,” a ship captain tells an impatient Hild while she’s on her way to a diplomatic mission in Colud). Though accounts of Hild’s vengeful battles drag on a bit too long, there’s no shortage of visceral prose (as Hild mounts her mare, Griffith writes: “She felt herself swell, blood coursing rich and thick in her veins, and her heart rose like a great bubble”). Admirers of the first bookwill not be disappointed. Agent: Stephanie Cabot, Susanna Lea Assoc.

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  • English

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