This review will be full of spoilers but I'm so incredibly intrigued and horrified and offended and in love with this book all at once... It's as thought-provoking as it is frustrating, both as pagan lit and as LGBT lit. But as murder-mystery lit it isn't half bad.
This book is full of sexual fantasy in places that it really doesn't belong. On the one hand, the characters have really interesting depth, or the potential for depth perhaps? (Maybe it's just my mind giving them depth where it doesn't actually exist?) On the other hand, they're so sexually one-dimensional that I don't believe anything they say. The main character, who talks like a completely self-actualized feminist, plays right into every lesbian fetish fantasy you can imagine, jumping from partner to partner regardless of gender, playing with wax and whips and ex-boyfriends while supposedly dealing with deep depression and panic attacks. At one point she says, "I'm actually a bisexual, I suppose," (uh, duh?) but to make the rest of her actions believable she probably should have said that a bit earlier on. All I could think through a few scenes is, "This girl is not gay... Does this author know what lesbian means? Why is he still letting her say she's a lesbian and not even making her question it?"
Actually, a lot of the sex in this book seemed completely unnecessary and, for a woman, not all that believable. (Big spoiler here) A woman who has just been held captive for days, raped and frequently attacked with a cattle prod, and then had to take a morning after pill to be sure she isn't pregnant with her attacker's baby isn't likely to go into a skyclad pagan ceremony with a blindfold and a ritual flogging just hours later...
Also, a woman who is questioning her sexuality doesn't start off by grabbing another woman's inner thigh... And, "Are you saying what I think you're saying?" is lame no matter who says it and should probably be deleted from all fiction everywhere.
And then there's the Wicca. Strong obviously made some attempts to accurately portray Wicca, but I'm not sure he spoke to any real Wiccans in that process. He obviously did his research... but not further than maybe one Janet Farrar book? He play into every single possible stereotype... A lot of what the characters said that was most factual about Wicca sounded awkwardly didactic at best.
But then he touched on how uncomfortable some gay people can feel in Wicca, a topic I've discussed many times with many different friends and found always interesting. I LOVE that he actually approached that subject. The polarity of Wicca, the focus on male and female energies, can make some followers of the religion really uncomfortable and I've known people completely turned away from it because of that. It can make people who don't fit a gender binary feel very out of place.
But this particular coven raised every single "This place is shady" red flag for me. The compulsory nudity, the sexual touching by the leader during ritual, the isolation from the outside world. I would have run... And probably would have posted a warning about them to all my Wiccan friends.
But then, this isn't really pagan lit or LGBT lit, is it? It's a murder mystery. And as a murder mystery I found the story itself completely captivating. Couldn't put it down. The way the author mirrored the historical research with the present day chain of events was brilliant. Even 3/4 of the way through I wasn't positive who the "bad guy" was, but then when I found it was a bit disappointing... but completely believable. Cliche.
There were some extra characters who had no story closure that probably should have been looked at. (The creepy teenager who slices up animals for fun? Why didn't he get a story? It seemed like a lot of characters were just movie extras, and not actually important. They didn't really need as much story as they had, unless he was going to take it a step further and give them actual story.
Have I gone enough directions with this review? I mentioned I'm really torn on this book, right?
I have absolutely no idea what star rating I would give this book... so I'm just not going to rate it... Just know, this is certainly not a good representation of Wicca or lesbians... but it's an interesting murder mystery if you're looking for that.