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Witch Hunt

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A chilling, haunting ghost story that delves into the dark past of the 16th century Essex witch trials in England.

Sadie Asquith has been fascinated by the dark past of Essex’s witch hunts for as long as she can remember. And for good reason: between 1560 and 1680, over 500 women were tried for witchcraft in the county of Essex. But as she researches a book on the subject, Sadie experiences strange, ghostly visions. She hears noises at night, a sobbing sound that follows her, and black moths appear from nowhere. It’s as if, by digging up the truth about the witch hunts, she has opened an unearthly connection to the women treated so cruelly and killed centuries before.

And something else in the modern world is after her too: Sadie is sure she’s being followed, her flat is burgled and she finds clues that reveal her own past isn’t all that she believed. Can she find peace for the witches of Essex’s history and can she find a safe path for herself?

For fans of Christopher Ransom and Susan Hill.

So scary you’ll sleep with the lights on…

442 pages, Paperback

First published October 11, 2012

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About the author

Syd Moore

19 books204 followers
Before embarking on a career in education, Syd worked extensively in the publishing industry, fronting Channel 4’s book programme, Pulp. She was the founding editor of Level 4, an arts and culture magazine, and is co-creator of Super Strumps, the game that reclaims female stereotypes.

Syd has also been a go go dancer, backing singer, subbuteo maker, children’s entertainer and performance poet, She now works for Metal Culture, an arts organisation, promoting arts and cultural events and developing literature programmes.

Syd is an out and proud Essex Girl and is lucky enough to live in that county where she spends her free time excavating old myths and listening out for things that go bump in the night.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 163 reviews
Profile Image for Ken.
2,600 reviews1,382 followers
October 21, 2023
There were elements in this novel that I really enjoyed.
Especially as the Essex Witch trials are an interesting topic to delve into.

That's certainly the case for Sadie Asquith, who's researching the grim past where as according to the novel the county had a higher percentage of women put to death.

The idea of the stereotypical Essex girl could be the reason for the higher rates certainly seemed an interesting theory...

I was hoping for a bit more spookiness as strange Internet messages start to appear the more that Sadie started to delve into the dark past.

It was quite slow going in places but still an interesting look at the history of witch hunts in this country.
Profile Image for A N N A.
230 reviews3 followers
March 17, 2020
I didn’t go in to this book for scares or thrills, I picked it up for the witch aspect and because of that I enjoyed it more than others (it would seem).

I have a deep, almost obsessive fascination with witches and witch hunts so this was a great read - full of conspiracies and empathy for the people murdered by Mathew Hopkins.
Profile Image for Caroline.
64 reviews22 followers
November 12, 2012
This would be a two and half star book for me. It was quite a smart story, although it did verge on incomprehensible at times. However, I have a strong suspension of disbelief and I was hooked until the quite frankly, bonkers conclusion. The writing is a little clumsy and there were times when I really questioned how the main character could make a living as an investigative journalist when she was SO slow on the uptake. She also seemed to know very little about her specialist the subject, the Witch Hunts of the seventeenth century. The subject, and the fact that action was set in the Essex countryside were my main reasons for selecting the novel in the first place. It did bring a new perspective to this fascinating subject and I was pleased to see the author included further reading at the end.

I also found it more than amusing that a book published by an imprint of Harper Collins contains a villain based on owner, Rupert Murdoch. Good job, guys.

Profile Image for Lynne.
1,058 reviews18 followers
July 24, 2013
Interesting topic, though it does suffer from a slightly melodramatic narrative voice and ridiculously implausible ending. Moore attempts to link the real-life, self-titled Witch Finder General Matthew Hopkins' forays into Essex with further adventures in New England. She does admit, however, that this is entirely fictitious. Have to admit, typically mentions of 1692 started to make me twitchy but she wisely concentrates on the Essex travesty, though her claims that it is not widely known is somewhat dubious.

Malcolm Gaskill's 'Witchfinders' is the authoritative text on ths matter and well worth reading. In fact, Moore herelf cites this as a source. I read Gaskill's book about five years ago, and although Frances Hill's work on Salem is more to my taste, his book is brilliantly researched and accessible.

Moore's fictitious version is entertaining holiday reading; at times senstationalist nonsense, almost adolescent in its breathy descriptions of the luscious Felix and dependable PC Joe. The journalist protagonist, Mercedes (Sadie) Asquith aka Mercy Walker is not exactly a sympathetic, and at times, histrionic character. Have to admit, I did feel she deserved incarceration in Colchester Castle and would have locked the door myself. But then I would.

This claims to appeal to fans of Christopher Ransome (The Birthing House) and Susan Hill (The Woman in Black et al) and does credit MR James' short stories, particularly the device used in 'Oh Whistle and I'll Come, My Lad', but it doesn't rank alongside Hill and James at all. If you want real ghost stories (an oxymoron maybe?) you'd be better off with MR James, Walter de la Mare, R Chetwynd Hayes and the old masters found in anthologies or Project Guttenberg.

Plot 'twists' are visible well before their disclosure and the ending is, frankly daft. Be interesting to see what this self-professed Essex girl (her first novel The Drowning Pool is better than this) produces next time.
Profile Image for Furciferous Quaintrelle.
199 reviews40 followers
December 3, 2025
I actually really like this book. #SorryNotSorry

Yes it's a bit bonkers. Yes the idea of someone who died in the 1600s being somehow able to contact a journalist in the 2010s via Facebook messenger, is on the face of it, pretty nutso. But I just really enjoy the amount of background research done for this story and the way it's incorporated into the book.

It's always odd seeing people react to the witch hunts back around the time of the English Civil War, as if it was thoroughly unbelievable that sane people would get on board with any of it; yet we still live in a time where we pursue, persecute, prosecute and try to cancel those who don't go along with whatever issue is plaguing us in #CurrentYear. (You only have to check out the politically cretinous outbursts from randos on Twitter calling anyone they don't agree with both "Far Right" and Hitler, without having the slightest idea as to why that makes absolutely no sense, if you want to see how this notion of damning one's opposition in any arena, is as popular as it ever was.)

Of course this book is silly, but it's not terribly written. For the most part that is. I did laugh at a couple of amusingly contradictory statements where at one point the narrator claims to be an out and out socialist...only to then claim a few chapters later, that they hate how bloated the bureaucracy is within the UK government. Um...yeah, you're a socialist babe. You love big daddy government and all the tax spent on every tentacle of the state that weaves its way into every aspect of our lives. Are you saying you're pro small government? Minarchist? Little bit localist, little bit libertarian? ARE YOU A MEMBER OF THE FAR RIGHT, LOVE??

Yeah that just made me chuckle. Gotta love people who throw their weight behind a political position and then when everything goes to shit, they're all "surprised Pikachu face" about it.

I've read this book about 5 or 6 times, but I wanted to have a nice little simple 'Spooktober' read that I knew wasn't going to disappoint me as much as some other titles have this year. And I do genuinely find the topic at the centre of the tale fascinating. I've given it a 3 star rating in the past and I'm going to stick with that because it might be 3.5, but I don't think it's worthy of rounding up to a 4 star score.

Is it worth reading? Well I obviously think so. I wouldn't have read it as many times as I have if I didn't. But I'm not completely mental. If you find the witch hunts - on both sides of the Atlantic - interesting, and are looking for an interesting tale that incorporates past and present into an easy-to-read bit of mental cotton candy, then by all means give this a shot. Syd Moore also wrote another story that touches on similar themes with her first book 'The Drowning Pool' (which I might read again at some point because I think I quite enjoyed that one too) and a series of other books that is set around an Essex Witch Hunt Museum, but they never appealed to me. (The blurbs on here and the GR reviews make them sound like some fantastical YA tales that the author wrote around the topic she finds the most fascinating...namely, witches and witch hunts. And one can have too much of a good thing, y'know?)

But this was fun to return to and there was a lot that I'd forgotten since I last read it, so it was still an enjoyable romp. And it reminded me of some factual books that I should probably dig out and have a quick look back over, because it's a very interesting period in history from which I fear too few people have actually learnt any important lessons - and/or applied them to the way they behave in #CurrentEra. I'm not promising anyone that this will rock their world or blow them away with its literary greatness, but it's fun and factual in equal measure, even if it is a bit silly.

The love-interest bit was lame AF too, with the copper being incredibly 2-dimensional and annoying in equal measure. I don't know why we always have to have a relationship thrown into a story for absolutely no reason, regardless of the themes or genres being written. Between boring love-interest side-plots and that ubiquitous character with flame red hair, it does sometimes feel like a lot of books are trying to play 'Buzzword Bingo' with the readers. I also find it a bit annoying when feminists get all up in arms about the fact that there were mainly women targeted by the witch hunts around this time - making sure to throw the word "misogynist" in there a few times - but neglect to pay much heed to what was happening with so many of the men in this period: namely that they were being rounded up and sent to fight in a civil war. Life was shit for everyone back then, but as always it's a case of "World About To End...Women Most Affected!"

Sure Jan.

⭐⭐⭐
Profile Image for Martin Belcher.
496 reviews37 followers
November 5, 2012
I really liked this story, it's very atmospheric and haunting in its setting of Essex and Suffolk, surrounding the towns of Manningtree and Colchester where in the period from 1560 to 1680 upwards of 500 women were tried for witchcraft in the area. Central to the plot is the much maligned figure of Matthew Hopkins, the infamous witch finder general.

In modern day Essex, Sadie Asquith has moved back to home after giving up a fast paced life in London which does not suit her any longer. She lives alone in her flat and is picking up the pieces after losing her Mum suddenly. Working for a local newspaper as a journalist she comes up with an idea of bringing the Essex witch hunts bang up to date with a regular column piece with a view to publishing a book. Starting her research on Hopkins and the trials she begins to get spooked by some very strange noises in her flat, she then is plagued by strange visions and apparitions. She is convinced someone is following her and then Sadie makes a terrible discovery about herself and her family....

Very creepy in places, full of wonderful descriptions and bound together with the true history of the despicable witch trials and the terrible witch finder general himself. A very good read and I found it very fitting to have read this over the Halloween period for added atmosphere. Spooky....
Profile Image for Siobhan.
5,076 reviews602 followers
October 20, 2015
We will start with the most important factor first: if you’re looking for a truly terrifying horror book this is not what you’re looking for.

Whilst it appears to be a scary read such is not the case. There are supernatural elements to the book but not in a manner which will keep you up at night. Despite the fact that I was expecting more of a scary story than I was given I still enjoyed the book. I feel as though the last third was the best part of the book, however, with the first two thirds being a little bit slow in places – of course, that is just my opinion and I’m sure there will be people out there who will disagree with me.

Nevertheless, the storyline is one which keeps you interested throughout and leaves you wanting to read more and find out exactly how it ends. I will say, however, that I do wish that there hadn’t been quite so many references as to what was to come as I felt as though it would have been more of a surprise that way.

Still, it’s worth a read if you’re into the suspense filled books with a paranormal twist.
Profile Image for Debbie.
60 reviews
December 7, 2012
This book started off so well, but unfortunately became dull and slow! I think it would have been much better as a short story, really could have done without the 'In between' stories.
Profile Image for Joanne Sheppard.
452 reviews52 followers
November 19, 2012
Narrated by proud Essex Girl Sadie Asquith, Syd Moore's Witch Hunt mingles ghostly horror with mystery and a dash of chick lit, along with a sprinkling of historical fact and a smidgeon of psychogeography.

I enjoyed the horror, the mystery and the fascinating details of the 17th century witch hunts and the appalling injustices dished out by Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins. The chick lit? Not so much. Sadie was an independent and capable heroine who, coping with a recent bereavement and juggling a brand new book deal with her career as a freelance journalist, I might have preferred not be going giddy over her new editor whose eyes are 'flecked with quartz' or calling on her cute policeman friend Joe to rescue her from time to time. Having said that, I was glad to see that this became a relatively minor aspect of the story and wasn't wholly resolved in what might have been the easiest or most obvious way, which is a plus.

Women - Essex women in particular, whether they're from the present day or from centuries past - are the strongest and most memorable characters in this book, and it's a better read for that. It's also worth adding that Essex is almost a character in itself in Witch Hunt. I grew up just over the border in Hertfordshire myself: I know Essex well as a county full of intriguing history, a pleasant coastline and charming villages and consider it unfairly maligned, so I was delighted by Moore's efforts to redress the balance on that score.

Overall, Witch Hunt is an engaging page-turner with an interesting premise and plenty of chilling moments. Moore has clearly done some serious research into Matthew Hopkins and his role in the witch hunts, and this benefits the book tremendously - it's a chilling and gripping subject in itself and it's easy to empathise with Sadie as she becomes increasingly affected by her studies. Sadie's complex family relationships and the shadow of mental illness that hangs over some of them are convincingly and sensitively handled too.

The ghost story elements of Witch Hunt work well, and it's to Moore's credit that they don't all take place in historically significant locations and atmospheric settings: Sadie's experiences in a local castle are nicely written and the chills are easy to imagine, but for me, some of the creepiest moments come when Sadie is logging on to Facebook or catching a train. As the past catches up with the present and Sadie's own connections with the Essex witches start to become clearer

Witch Hunt is Syd Moore's second novel and I think I'll be checking out her first book, The Drowning Pool, as a holiday read in future. I would, however, love to see her attempt a dark historical novel in what seems to be her favourite Essex setting: from Witch Hunt, I got the impression that Moore feels every bit as connected to the women persecuted by Matthew Hopkins as she does to her present-day characters, and I for one would like to read more about them.
Profile Image for Sharon Goodwin.
870 reviews147 followers
November 24, 2013
Witch Hunt was my Halloween read. Having bought it a year ago, I finally made it in time for this year!

The prologue is obviously a scene from the past. I wanted to know who is she? What had she done? How is she invisible to neighbours? This really hooked me in.

Another hook for me was how the author makes the reader aware that something of significance had happened in the past. This definitely made me want to carry on reading because I really wanted to know!

Fabulous scenes at St Botolph’s, Colchester Castle, Manningtree and in the Witchfinder General’s room at the inn :) I have to be honest and say I wasn’t scared. Fascinated yes, scared no!

I also have to mention when Sadie visits Dan. I really felt as if my perceptions had been altered.

The flashbacks to the time of the trials were brilliant. It is obvious Moore has researched thoroughly as they felt authentic.

There was one character that I just wasn’t sure of. I asked myself, what part was he playing? I knew it was more than we saw on the surface. This was a shock when I found out because I just hadn’t worked it out!

Blending fact with fiction, excellent characters and some terrifying scenes, I enjoyed this story with its different threads weaving through, all linking back to the witch trials.

I have to admit I’ve now bought Moore’s debut, The Drowning Pool. Hope it won’t take me another year!

Profile Image for Carl.
29 reviews
October 22, 2013
This book is based upon the Witch Trials in 16th Century Essex, especially those killed by the ‘Witchfinder General’ Matthew Hopkins. From 1560 to 1680 upwards of 500 women were tried for witchcraft in the area.

(Spoilers ahead!)


The book is based on fact, but the author changes the story slightly to suggest that Matthew Hopkins did not die at the young age of 27 as most scholars suggest. Moore links the killings that happened later in New England, after Hopkins’ supposed death, to Hopkins. This is not what scholars say happened since he was apparently dead, but Moore acknowledges that this change in her book is purely fiction. It does make for any interesting story!

The book is mostly set in modern day Essex, and is centred around the character Mercedes “Sadie” Asquith who is a journalist that has recently lost her mother. She starts research on the Witch trials from Exeter with the intention of writing a book on the subject. The further that she gets in her research, the weirder things start to become. Moths start following her around, and a ghostly presence keeps trying to communicate with her. She also starts to have visions from the 16th Century.

This was ultimately a very enjoyable read, but I thought that the ending didn’t really do it justice.

I’d recommend it for fans of the supernatural, and anyone with an interest in the witch trials.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for L.K. Jay.
Author 13 books43 followers
November 1, 2012
This story was always going to be a winner for me; it has witches, ghosts and a jolly good mystery. When something appears to be too good to be true, then it usually is but not in this case as I really enjoyed reading this book.

The story centres around a journalist called Sadie, who is commissioned to write a book about the Witchfinderr General, Matthew Hopkins. Thus a mystery ensues and I was engaged from the beginning until the end. The story unfolds as a satisfying pace, and there are some great revelations and you are left feeling satisfied with the mystery.

Something I did enjoy, if that is the correct term, was the detail that went into the descriptions of what happened to the women and men who had been condemned as witches. This was really brutal, and I'm glad it was, as it gives a realistic feel of how horrific the treatment of these people was. Also, I like the idea of Hopkins being akin to a serial killer, as that is in effect, what he was. A great mix of fact and fiction with a cracking ghost story to boot.
Profile Image for Cat.
120 reviews38 followers
July 1, 2013
I felt weird about this. I closed it not sure if I had enjoyed it or not... Its not that i have a problem with things in books not being believeable- else I wouldn't have enjooyed Harry Potter, or The House at Midnight or Twilight, but this seemed a bit ridiculous in places. I like horror books where I can relate (as someone who believes and experiences such things regularly) to the feel of terror or the vision and I don't know... monsters don't scare me because they are not real. Evil people are (were?!) So the Devil thing didn't really scare me at all. The idea a supernatural force can physically harm you is just not plausable. Mentally terrify? Yes. Physically? Not so sure.

I also felt the book needed to be 100 pages shorter. Some stuff just didn't need to be in there, and I hated the political views thrown in. I don't like politics in books.

This is what i would call the 'chick lit' of the Horror Genre. Its ok to pass the time but you don't need to think about it- and you won't when you've finished!

Profile Image for Cristina Mureșan.
167 reviews4 followers
June 20, 2022

Ugh... this book should've been so good... the only amazing thing about it is the perfevt evil timing - just when you are about to throw it out the window, something interesting happens. 2-3 pages. And you say to yourself - yes, now it's going to get fired up. Nope. Nothing happens for another hundred pages. When you're about to set it on fire - wham, action and thrills. 2 pages. You feel like slowly dying for another hundred pages, then it painfully ends. And the ending is so so bad. Soooo bad! Oh, well, at least the realistic bits and pieces about the witches trials where interesting, but the so-called journalist is so bad at her work, and at living basically, she gets drunk a lot, she is scared when she is not supposed to, and stupidly curious when survival instinct should kick in, and the only way she survives and actually manages to find out things is because ghosts intervene. Great idea, not a great book.
Profile Image for Join the Penguin Resistance!  .
5,682 reviews334 followers
November 9, 2019
WITCH HUNT is both a fascinating exploration, through contemporary eyes, of a terribly ugly chapter in English history (the witch-hunt hysteria and the English Civil War between Oliver Cromwell's Parliament and King Charles I); and a paranormal excursion which becomes terrifyingly real and vividly experienced. I enjoyed both the historical revelations and the unfolding of secrecy as out protagonist is increasingly pulled into experiences of another realm. The only aspect I didn't appreciate is the author's tendency to telegraph the approach of trouble or difficulty, which I considered to be too frequent, and also is a pattern in the author's first novel, DROWNING POOL, which I am currently reading.
Profile Image for Nikki.
58 reviews18 followers
June 5, 2017
Another excellent read from Syd Moore. She has found a way to put a spin on the classic ghost story and bring it into a very modern setting. I was about three chapters from the end and wasn't entirely sure how everything was going to finish so quickly after all the twists and turns that occurred throughout but I was pleasantly surprised. Looking for to other future reads by Syd Moore!
Profile Image for Tracy.
138 reviews5 followers
March 30, 2026
A 3 1/2 star read for me.

I definitely picked this book for is witch trials connection, and that side of it did not disappoint. I was completely absorbed by the history part of this book, and living locally I can picture some of the places easily and now have a list of further places to visit. I was more interested about the history of the witches, and for me this side of the story really delivered.

I also felt the concept of Mathew Hopkins not dying as more widely speculated (no spoilers) interesting, and certainly added to the intrigue.

The spooky parts are well written, and I thoroughly enjoyed them, but in my opinion it is not a horror (which was fine by me as I didn't pick it for this reason). I think it being labelled as horror is one of it's biggest downfalls, maybe supernatural thriller (with historical elements) would be more fitting. I didn't pick it for scares and thrillers, so it did not bother me.

I unfortunately did not like the main character, I was not really bothered about what happened to her, finding her irritating and naïve.

I felt at least one of the characters was completely unnecessary (no names as I do not want to give away any spoilers).

I did find the jerky start/stop of the exciting parts a little annoying. I understand the need for tension and calm, but for me the quieter bits dragged slightly.

I was really bothered by the ending, it felt rushed despite being a long time coming, and I would have liked more depth here to properly round things off.

The incredible research by the author really came across, and this certainly has not put me off reading more of this author's work. Overall, I was not disappointed that I had chosen it to read.
Profile Image for Lance Greenfield.
Author 69 books254 followers
April 3, 2018
After a promising start, this book seemed to cruise along at a leisurely pace until the final three or four chapters. I didn't find it scary at all, although the chilling shower scene made me a bit shivery.

As a believer in the interconnectedness of everything, through time as well as space, the concept of links between the main character, Sadie, and others in the present and those of the seventeenth century was easily consumed. However, the ending, which I shall not spoil for you, bordered on the ridiculous and unbelievable.

It was a captivating and interesting story in that I always wanted to read on to find out what happened next. I got a little bored with the railing against the Essex girl stereotype and Sadie's attempts to prove that wrong. It was almost as if she was carrying a banner saying, "Essex gals ain't fick!"

I enjoyed the true history of those witch hunt days and the suggestion, probably true, that there was a battle of the classes behind much of the horror. One thing is for sure, the witch, once accused, could not survive. Most of us know about the trial by ducking stool. If the accused drowned, it proved that she was not a witch, but she would be dead. If she survived, she was definitely a witch and would be hanged or burned at the stake. Heads you lose, tails you lose!

I felt that there was too much about the challenges that face almost every freelance journalist and novelist and the fact that it is very difficult to earn a living that way. This seemed like the every-day gripes of the author creeping into her story.

Having said all of this, I would still recommend the book to those who like a good historical yarn and are interested in those puritanical times and the local history of Essex.

I would probably read another book by this author, but I have many higher priorities on my TBR mountain.
Profile Image for Books.
79 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2025
Firstly, I have to say I am shocked at myself for not knowing more about the Essex witch trials, especially when I'm from Essex! I will be putting that to rights.

Now, my review, I really enjoyed Syd Moore's Witch hunt. I loved her down to earth Essex lass way of speaking.

The only bit for me that felt a bit iffy was when Sadie spoke about the police woman. I wondered if the rude police officer had been slim, would she have spoken about her body in a similar way? A chunk of this is very likely to be my own feelings, but it would have felt wrong, not to mention it.

I really respected how Syd was able to transport what those poor souls went through in the awful pointless trials. Sadies' story really was gripping, relatable at times, and I was completely invested in her story.

I'm currently in a witch trail wormhole, educating and learning more about our history as women while remembering men were also targeted at the time. Especially the men who tried to stand up for the women and children accused.

5 stars for Syd Moore's Witch hunt ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

And I love that Syd Moore also campaigned and won to have the outdated and discriminative 'Essex Girl' meaning removed from the Oxford Dictionary 👏 what a babe!
Profile Image for Jen.
686 reviews30 followers
August 18, 2018
Gloriously over the top fun read.
Profile Image for Riri ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ.
24 reviews
October 2, 2023
once again i judged a book by its cover and it ended up being one of the most beautiful and poignant stories i’ve read in a long time. i will miss sadie very much
Profile Image for Tracey Dovey.
52 reviews
June 11, 2024
I loved the topic but it did go a bit over the top in places which it didn’t need to, but that didn’t soil it for me. Great ending though.
Profile Image for Karen Reed.
38 reviews
November 8, 2023
From the first chapter I thought this book was not my kind of read was very gruesome but I was compelled to go on and glad I did scary at times and thrilling loved the ending in all a good read 😊
Profile Image for Beansbook.
53 reviews1 follower
April 14, 2026
FOR THOSE WHO LIKE FANTASY AND HISTORICAL FICTION- this book is definitely for you. I found it to be the perfect mix between the two genres and believable by paranormal phenomena standards. I have found so many fantasy books that are too fantastical and off putting as they push the theme just too far and don’t include enough realism or implement a way to merge the paranormal and fantasy elements into the narrative so when they return their characters back into their original present day reality it just doesn’t meld. This one had me hooked and so intrigued to get to the next revelation and I was completely immersed never had a chance to even question or doubt the concept or sequence of events.
The book is narrated by the main characters POV and synopsis is as follows:

Sadie’s relentless pursuit into the mysterious realm of the Essex witch hunts in England will have an intimate and profound impact on her.
When her mother passes away, she is inundated with terrifying visions and haunting events that seem impossible to be imagined. As she delves deeper into the past and learns more about the General Witchfinder, Matthew Hopkins, she is contacted by one of his victims Rebecca. A 15 year old girl who he would torture and rape and have her testify that her mother was a witch. Her mother was hung while she was forced to witness it and will later give birth to a daughter that Matthew Hopkins takes from her and he disappears to America. Rebecca in duress takes her own life upon learning her daughter’s whereabouts is lost forever to her.
Sadie learns that upon reaching America’s shores the witch hunts that happened in Essex county of Massachusetts and parts of Connecticut were because the Witchfinder had continued his evils against women and those who weren’t able to find support from anyone in their community. He preyed on the vulnerable and weak and enjoyed his torture and killing of hundreds of innocent women, some men as well as children. This is an enormous historical finding and she is so excited to share this news with her new editor, Felix. Unfortunately she has received a contract through a company in which one of the most corrupt and powerful men of England owns. Before her mothers death she had tried to plead with Sadie to turn down the contract and stay away from Robert Cutt never giving her any reason other than she’d had a deep hatred for him for as long as Sadie had remembered and she assumed it was because he was such a despicable man. He had currently been getting horribly poor allegations against his character at a time when he was getting ready to be given a prestigious political position and was doing everything in his power ro make all the bad press and the complaints and misdeeds he’d done go away by any means necessary.
As Sadie starts to notice she’s being followed by a black car, her home is also broken into and absolutely destroyed but the only thing missing is her case files she has been compiling about the Witchfinder and his victims.
Dan, her mothers partner, who also has been diagnosed with a mental illness as her mothers partner was also diagnosed with depression but had also been known to hallucinate things and people that weren’t there and claimed to have an inner dialogue with a woman she referred to as Rebecca, Dan tells Sadie. Sadie is chilled to the bone because she can remember her mother telling her that they were descendants of one of the victims of the Witchfinder and that was what had piqued her curiosity into the past to begin with.
Dan also reveals that her mother had warned him she would be in danger and he had to protect her. That someone was coming for her. Sadie also finds a birth certificate in her mother’s jewelry box that reveals her real name was Mercy and the name of father was blank on her birth certificate. She confronts the man she’s believed to be her father and he confirms that she was not his biological child but he’s her Dad and she’s his daughter in all the ways it matters. He explains that he had nearly hit her mother and the carriage she was pushing across the road late one night. He said her mother was exhausted, emaciated and Mercy, the baby was tiny and malnourished. He said when he drove them to the hostel that her mother Rose was staying with her it was derelict and filthy. He managed to convince Rose to come to his house and stay in the spare bedroom with Mercy. As a year passed, she slowly began to trust him yet refused to discuss anything about who the father of Mercy was, or what had happened to Rose that made her so afraid and terrified to use her given name, Rose Walker. Instead she changed it to Rosemund Alquist after she marries the man whom Mercy believed was her father. Her name is legally charged to Mercedes Alquaist and her Dad tells her it was done by illegal means. Her mother wouldn’t allow anything to be publicly recorded.
In the end it will be Felix, who lures Sadie to an inn under the guise of meeting an expert on the Witchfinder who wants to remain anonymous and when he receives a call he alludes they have to meet this person somewhere else. As he drives her down into a dark deserted road he tells her to get out of the car and leave her recorder there. Fortunately Sadie pockets it and turns it on. They walk through a copse of trees and when it opens up there’s a body of water and Felix sits on a large rock. As Sadie sits beside him inquiring why they are there and what is all the secrecy he begins to tell her that she should’ve left it alone like she’d been warned several times and now she was going to know why. He shocks her by telling her that Robert Cutt is her father. She then recalls her mother had told her when she was younger she had been in publishing but something had turned her of it for good and Sadie never knew what. Felix said that her mother was 15 and had cried rape and that was considered statutory rape so he’d paid off her parents and she disappeared. Sources would then tell him they’d learned she was pregnant and after that his sources would never again find her mother until a byline featuring Sadie and her photo will give Cutt pause to look into who she was as she looked so much like her mother and had his exact gray rare eyes. Confirming she was his daughter and learning of her mother’s illness and that death was imminent he had them surveilled with fear she would confess to Sadie on her deathbed who she was and how she was conceived. Through his publishing companies that he owned he learned she was shopping a book based off of all things, the Witchfinder who was in fact his ancestor and in an unbelievable twist of fate it would become known through Sadie’s research and through her mothers previous research that they were related to Rebecca. Her mother had been plaqued by Rebecca’s ghost her whole life and her fear of Cutt was more than that of her rapist it was deeper and she had been given some information from Rebecca so she would follow her research to the exact same house where Sadie had been able to find the historical records that reveal Rebecca’s demise, the Witchfinders movements after leaving England and the name her would take in America. That name was listed on Cutts ancestry page that Sadie had previously looked into. She also was able to identify her own relation to Rebecca and knew that Felix was being truthful. He offered her money and a new passport and gave her the opportunity to disappear and never resurface. When she refused he pulled out his gun and only one of them walked away. I’ve given so many spoilers already I will leave the last for those who read it.
Great character structure and the plot was insanely brilliant!!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Deb Lancaster.
867 reviews5 followers
February 16, 2020
Oh man. 1.5 stars. If that. I feel like there's the bones of a really good book, or maybe a film. A good story, Matthew Hopkins is always fascinating, and obviously what happened to all of those people is horrific. But Christ alive, this was hard to read. Really really badly written. Genuinely boring. The protagonist is irrtitating as f, but I guess when we learn who her father is (not really a shock btw), that makes sense.

Couple of things worth mentioning, the OBSESSION with 'attractive' men, all with 'lean bodies' and 'strong jaws' gets old. Fast. As does the constant reiteration that the main character is stunningly attractive because she is thin. There's even a whole paragraph devoted to the partner of her cop sort of boyfriend (one of four men in the book instantly and completely apparently enamoured with her. It must be her, um, thin frame and bobbed hair). Anyway, this partner woman is fat. I know this because during her brief part in the plot, the writer says she's fat, weighs as much as a man, has a broad backside, and, um, reeks of cats and microwave meals for one. Because she's fat you see. So obviously she's lonely and sad.

All of this really took the shine off the witchy plot and makes me wonder how old Syd Moore is. Because she writes like a 15 year old acting out her fantasies and I'm not here for that kind of crap. I'd also bet cash money that she's overweight and unhappy about it. Not remotely interested in trying any of her other books. At all. Total bust.
Profile Image for Fiona.
560 reviews
November 20, 2012
This book was given to me to review.
Set in the present time we are introduced to Sadie, a journalist whose mum has just died . Sadie has an interest in the Essex witch trials and deciding to write a book about this unleashes a nightmare that had me sucked in from the very start and relishing the fact the rest of the book was yet to come.
The prologue and excerpts throughout introduces you to Rebecca, a young woman involved in those trials in the 17th century.
While researching and writing the book Sadie starts to have experiences that made the hair stand on the back of my neck, dreams making her wake up in a cold sweat, noises in the attic , instant messages from someone with no name and no proof that these things are happening, the sensation of being followed . Has Sadie inherited her Mother’s mental illness or is there something more to these strange occurrences?
The novel flits between the two time lines building up tension nicely, the description of the what those poor women tried as witches went through was horrific and the suspense of what is happening to Sadie was spine chilling.
A great paranormal novel written beautifully by an author I had never tried before, rest assured I will be seeking her other work out now!
Profile Image for Rebecca tedder.
99 reviews1 follower
April 8, 2013
Being a girl born in Essex and moving to the other side of the border and into Suffolk, this book struck a chord and sparked an interest in local history. Being originally from Colchester myself it was good to see the Castle as a backdrop for certain parts of the story and the surrounding areas.

The fact and fiction of the book kept it exciting and when you know the area well, it adds to the intrigue and what you do visualise is a place you know well.

Some of the story I found predictable and I found the main character a bit weak at times. I think she needed more guts every now and then but when it came to the final twists, they were more in depth than what I expected as everything made sense gradually. However, I did feel the end was rushed to just tie things together in a hurry. Not that I mind that as I loved the paranormal connections and this was a chiller that kept me hooked.

I will certainly be reading up more on the Essex Witch trials and currently have Syd Moore's The Drowning Pool on my "to read" shelf.

All in all, good tale with a good amount of research done to make it a believable and exciting book.
Profile Image for Otis Hanby.
Author 2 books5 followers
December 20, 2019
Well written for sure, but a bit boring. Maybe a hundred pages too long?
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