A gothic historical romantasy that takes place in an imaginary North American coastal region and features frontier-esque hardships, feminist concepts, and truly frightening supernatural creatures.
When you grow up in a town named Mistaken, things don’t always go as planned. Greer Mackenzie is 27 and more than ready for this year’s Hunt, a kind of 18th-century Sadie Hawkins Day in which Mistaken’s unmarried people find future mates. Greer and her longtime beau, Ellis Beaufort, heir to the local bakery, can’t wait for their marriage. Unfortunately, Greer’s father, Hessel Mackenzie, owner of the lucrative lumber mill, has other plans—and, unbeknownst to Greer, so does Ellis. There’s hardscrabble survival aplenty, whether it’s Greer’s friend Louise catching rabbits for her underserved family’s stew or Greer heading off beyond the town’s Warding Stones with a canvas sack containing deer jerky, hand-knit socks, and other provisions to keep her safe in the land of the Bright-Eyed and the Gathered. The Bright-Eyed turn out to be shape-shifting, blood-sucking beasts; the Gathered an isolated group of zombified survivors. No one seems to fully understand this new world, even if the Bright-Eyed have managed to instill fear in both Indigenous people and European settlers. Toward the end, Greer learns more about the origin of the Bright-Eyed. She’s told they’re ruled by a queen who was "intrigued by the idea of a new world, a new continent to see, to explore, to feast upon. She had an insatiable hunger for more." Unfortunately, Greer’s story and the background information on Mistaken take so long to tell that once the violence and battles for the souls of humans versus demons begin, it’s difficult to remember that at one point the novel centered on the cruel inequality women in early colonial societies faced. Instead, the action turns to teeth, talons, and turncoats, with an intriguing but strangely unsatisfying strand about how evil came to the shores of a land so bounteous and yet unexplored.
Fascinating worldbuilding with a strong and surprising feminist twist.