This debut novel by Sue Reed like so many others was conceived and nurtured throughout a lifetime of lived experience, but it was born during the pandemic.
Write about what you know, is often advice given to it aspiring authors. And it's all there in Sue's first novel ; reference points to West Northumberland, family relationships and the Toon where Molly lives before coming to stay with her grandparents.
The book deals with issues about making a place for yourself in the world, your chosen and imposed personal identity , fair weather friends and true friendship, the toxic impact of social media, and two centuries, where women were and are judged on how they looked, where they worshipped, who they worshiped and did they conform?
It's a book that promises future adventures starring Molly, although I don't know if Martha will have survived the torment of returning to the city, which persecuted and murdered her mother as a witch. This aspect is based on historical research.
I also know this much , that Sue may have been tried as a witch had she lived in that century. My own mother told me that we would've fallen under suspicion because there was no male protector in our household ; we had a black cat and I used to make concoctions for skin and hair from plants when I was Molly's age
The book deals with difficult issues successfully , you could say that it is autobiographical and biographical, the witchhunts have not disappeared depending on your chosen tribe, and whether you are a conformist or an individual