THE WITCHY, RADICAL RE-IMAGINING OF IRELAND'S MOST BELOVED SAINT AND GODDESS
In a wild, ancient grove at the edge of winter, a desperate girl prays to the gods for her freedom.
Born to a slave mother, sold in marriage to a brutal husband, none have ever listened to Brigid’s prayers.
But this time, a goddess answers . . . with a vision that will transform Brigid’s path forever.
Ireland lies on the precipice of change. The new Christian god is coming, a faith that Brigid can bend to her will, building a sisterhood and sanctuary for women with nowhere else to turn. As their numbers grow, so too do the rumours – of just what powers women can hold when they come together.
But power, like a flame, consumes as it grows. As Brigid rises, challenging kings, defying bishops, soon she must reckon with what she herself has become.
And as her enemies draw closer, eager to reclaim all she has taken from them, what – or who – will she sacrifice to hold on to her legacy?
A radical reimagining of Ireland’s most beloved saint, Brigid is the story of a woman who could never be caged – by men, by gods, or even by history itself.
PRAISE FOR KIM CURRAN
'A Stunning New Voice' - PATRICK NESS 'An Astonishing Talent' - KATE HEARTFIELD
Kim was born in Dublin and moved to London when she was seven. She got her first typewriter when she was eight, had a poem she wrote about a snail published in a magazine when she was nine, and that was it – Kim was hooked on writing.
Because she never thought she’d actually be able to make a living as a writer, she decided she needed a trade to fall back on. So, naturally, she went to Sussex University to study philosophy.
While Kim’s plan of being paid big bucks to think deep thoughts never quite worked out, she did land a job as a junior copywriter with an ad agency a week after graduating. She’s worked in advertising ever since, specialising in writing for videogames.
🔥 ARC REVIEW | BRIGID by Kim Curran 🔥 (publishes 29 January 2026 - clear your calendars)
I don’t say this lightly: Kim Curran is on an absolute fire, and Brigid cements her as an auto-buy author for me. After The Morrigan (which I adored), this felt like coming home to exactly the kind of feminist, ferocious mythology retelling I want injected directly into my veins.
This is not a polite saint’s life. This is fire, blood, politics, bees, books, rage, tenderness, and women carving out space in a world that does not want them to exist freely.
Curran does the homework - all of it. You can feel the hundreds of hours spent steeped in Irish myth, early Christianity, pagan ritual, and the messy overlap between the two. Nothing is pasted on. Legends are woven so seamlessly they feel inevitable. Of course this is how it happened. Of course this is how the goddess and the saint blur. Of course this is how power shifts hands.
From the opening pages, Brigid’s position is brutally clear:
“What is a girl like me? … Born to be bought and sold.”
There is no romanticising of womanhood here - only the grinding reality of it. Wife or slave, and as Brigid notes with devastating clarity: “There is little difference between a slave and a wife.”
What Brigid does brilliantly is chart a woman who wants more - not just for herself, but for others. Brigid doesn’t dream of freedom as a solitary act. She dreams of systems. Of shelter. Of sisterhood.
“Brigid wants more for herself than to be a spoke in a wheel of women’s lives repeating over and over and over.”
And that wheel? She takes an axe to it.
The relationships between women are the heart of this book. Rescued women. Chosen sisters. A community built deliberately, fiercely, against the grain of a violent, patriarchal world. One of my favourite moments is deceptively small and devastatingly funny:
“‘Look,’ one of her new sisters says… ‘It even has pockets.’”
Reader, I laughed. Then I sighed. Then I felt seen.
Curran’s Brigid is complex, flawed, strategic, and sometimes frightening - especially when power enters the picture. The book is deeply interested in what leadership costs women, and how often they are asked to trade tenderness for survival.
“This is the cost of power, then? … Weighing the worth of one life against the needs of many.”
There are no easy answers here. No clean sainthood. Just choice after choice in a world where men hold swords, spears, and theology.
“Christ told his followers to hate violence… But Christ was not a woman.”
Exactly.
Stylistically, this sits beautifully alongside Lucy Holland and Elizabeth Fremantle - lush but controlled, sharp without being brittle. The prose has weight. Authority. It knows when to step back and let myth breathe, and when to punch you clean in the chest.
And yes, I am completely obsessed with the cover. Iconic. Flame-lit. Shelf-dominant.
The ending? Quietly powerful. Wise. It lingers. Especially this:
“The light of wisdom and curiosity and kindness and sisterhood will continue to glow in the heart of every woman who is brave enough to ask, ‘What if?’”
What if there was another way. What if women ruled differently. What if holiness looked like protection, not obedience.
🔥 Verdict: Feminist mythmaking at its best. Ferocious, learned, deeply human. ⭐ 4.75 / 5 📚 Huge thanks to Penguin & NetGalley for the ARC - I will be shouting about this one.
thank you to netgalley for the arc! I absolutely loved this, cannot wait for publication. An amazing feminist centred (re)telling of Saint Brigid and the Irish goddess Brigid. A story new to me, but kept me 100% glued
This book tells the story of Brigid, both the saint and the goddess, and does such a wonderful job of blending history, mythology, and magic together. I was completely spellbound while reading it and can't wait to get my hands on a physical copy.
Thank you @netgalley and @michaeljbooks for the chance to read and review this novel!
Thank you to Penguin, NetGalley and Kim Curran for an eARC of Brigid!
I'm a lover of mythology and retellings, especially when it comes to my home country. ♥
Firstly, Curran does an amazing job of describing and capturing old Ireland in it's glory. I truly felt like I was back in time. It blends the new faith (Christianity) and the old faith of Ireland (Now called Pagans?) at the time when people were converting. It was truly interesting to read and understand how the world was changing at the time.
The relationships Brigid has with these women she finds, rescues, befriends and lifts up, was wonderful. Showing them that they don't need men, anything they can do, the women can also do, just as well. Something we should all aspire to have and do, especially considering the world is still mainly run and controlled by men.
For me, I found myself flagging through the middle of the story, like it was dragging on a bit. It felt like the story didn't progress through the middle section of the book, but for me the beginning and end was spectacular.
It was a thoroughly enjoyable read, the characters stood out for me, even the background characters. You felt for them, you felt their emotions and their thoughts, you felt their struggles and celebrated their victories, Kim Curran has a wonderful way of writing that truly makes you feel for the characters you're reading.
A solid 3.75 stars for me, I'd definitely recommend it to friends who I know enjoy historical fiction/mythology.
A huge thank you to Net Galley, Kim Curran and those at Penguin for this Digital Arc for Brigid in exchange for an honest review.
After reading, and loving the Morrigan at the beginning of this year I was so excited to see a second instalment from Curran, and this was equally as great. I loved the perspective and POV that this was written, it's a style I haven't encountered before and thought it made it much more exciting to read.
I was a big fan of the sisterhood, and the journey Brigid took, the way she navigated the politics of man to try and achieve her purpose. Brigid herself is a complex character, her strengths and her flaws were explored beautifully and the complex relationships between the sisters kept a good level of tension throughout. Exploring themes of found family, sisterhood, religious politics, & inspired by the Irish Saints, this is a great almost biographical piece of story-telling.
I really hope Curran continues to write these interesting characters, exploring the Irish Folklores, especially in this style as I think it's truly compelling.
I enjoyed Kim Curran’s previous book, The Morrigan, which told the story of the Irish goddess of war and fate, one of the supernatural race known as the Tuatha Dé Danann. Her new novel, Brigid, takes as its subject another figure from Ireland’s distant past: Saint Brigid of Kildare, a semi-mythical woman who may or may not have existed. The current thinking seems to be that she was a real person, an abbess who founded the abbey of Kildare, but has been given many of the attributes of the Celtic goddess, Brigid, who shares her name. Curran’s approach is to include both Brigids in the novel, with the goddess guiding and watching over her human namesake.
The human Brigid, born in the 5th century, is the daughter of an Irish chieftain and one of his slaves, whom he sells to a druid when she becomes pregnant. Brigid grows up in slavery in the druid’s household before being returned to her father, who attempts to arrange a marriage for her. When she gives away her father’s best sword to a beggar, the king hears about her kindness and grants Brigid her freedom. Determined not to be forced into marriage or to live a life controlled by men, Brigid sets off alone on a journey to find her mother. Along the way she makes several new friends, including Lommán the leper and Darlughdach the bard, with whom she later founds a small sanctuary for women, which expands over time into the large and powerful abbey of Kildare.
I had no prior knowledge of Brigid’s life before beginning this book, but it seems that Curran has incorporated many of the key events and characters traditionally associated with Brigid’s story. One of these characters is St Patrick, with whom Brigid clashes several times throughout the book. She resents Patrick because he has all the advantages of being a man in a male-dominated society and because his approach to converting people to Christianity is more forceful than hers. Brigid is happy to allow people to continue celebrating pagan gods and festivals alongside the new Christian religion rather than expecting an immediate conversion.
For a while, it seemed that the message of the book was “all men bad, all women good”, which is something that tends to annoy me because I think there are better, fairer ways to promote feminism. However, it turned out to be slightly more nuanced than that, as eventually some of Brigid’s own friends and followers become frustrated by her hatred of men and even Brigid herself has to accept that a life entirely without men is not possible and she’s going to have to learn to work with them whether she wants to or not. She can also be cruel, punishing people harshly for the smallest of things. As someone who would become a saint, I certainly didn’t find her very saintly in this depiction, but despite that she’s clearly someone who inspires love and loyalty from the women around her and that’s what makes her an interesting, if not always likeable, character to read about.
Whereas The Morrigan was a mythological retelling, with strong fantasy elements, this book is more grounded in reality. There’s still a small amount of magic, though, such as when Brigid performs her miracles – healing lepers, for example, or turning milk into butter. She’s assisted in this by the goddess Brigid, who occasionally appears to her in human form. However, I would describe this as much more of a historical fiction novel than a fantasy one, while The Morrigan was the other way round. They are both interesting books and it’s good to see an author tackling subjects that aren’t written about very often.
Brigid – advocate for women; bringer of hope; an angry woman.
Brigid’s life is transformed when a goddess of the same name hears her prayer and answers it. But what is it about her prayer that stands out from the countless others being offered up in invocation?
It is the sheer abnormality and subversiveness of this prayer – its singularity which piques the goddess’ interest. Because beautiful Brigid wishes to be ugly. A bold request in a society which values women for their submission and their appearance above all. The goddess chooses Brigid, not merely as a recipient of one-off divine beneficence, but as one who will carry her light, tend her flame and upon whom she will bestow her power.
Brigid’s rise to power in Ireland is borne through her works of miracle and her conviction that women need a safe space, a sanctuary in which to flourish as a community and to receive an education – factors which amass a following of women. But Brigid’s ambition and her challenge of accepted social norms is often met with hostility by men, a response driven by their fear of progressive social change and an awareness that the balance of power is shifting.
Brigid’s loyalty to the old gods coincides with Patrick’s efforts to spread Christianity throughout Ireland and stamp out paganism. To an extent, different religious beliefs can co-exist harmoniously, but as resources decline and raiders threaten the women’s security, Brigid’s idealistic vision for her community is overtaken by a necessity to form alliances with those who can provide protection.
This novel presents an interesting examination of the concept of freedom and its subjectivity in the context of individual experience. To Brigid, freedom means being neither married, nor a slave and being unconstrained by the limitations imposed by men (albeit, the King would argue that he owns all people of Leinster, whether freed or enslaved). It goes without saying that enslavement should not be endured, but does freedom provide the unfettered liberty sought when it leaves one without food, money, shelter, transport?
In the first half of the novel, Brigid finds herself frustrated by a perceived lack of aspiration in others, particularly those slaves who are socially conditioned to accept a subservient state and fail to reap the opportunities transferred through emancipation. For some, the notion of freedom as understood by Brigid, is simply too nebulous to comprehend.
Brigid’s life could have been one of obscurity, but with the help of her goddess she seeks to break with the patriarchy and offer a different future to the women who follow her. This novel was an interesting reimagining of her life.
Thank you to Michael Joseph and NetGalley for sharing an eARC with me in exchange for an honest review.
“How robbed we have been by being told we are the weaker sex. How small they tried to keep us.”
I want to start by thanking NetGalley, Kim Curran and Penguin Random House for providing a digital arc in exchange for an honest review. Brigid will be out January 29, 2026!
Curran has written an absolutely gorgeous story based on what little we know of the life of Saint Brigid of Ireland. I was really intrigued to see how Curran would approach this as there isn’t much documentation on Brigid and many argue she either might not have even been a real person or conflate her with the goddess Brigid and was thrilled to see she built a connection between the two.
I really enjoyed the concept of Brigid taking advantage of Christianity as a means of protection for both herself and countless women as well as a way to preserve the old faith of Ireland. In their time, they had two choices: wife or slave, to which Brigid remarks there’s no difference. But upon meeting Christian nuns while visiting her druid step-father, Brigid finds her third option although she ultimately decides to do it after meeting the goddess Brigid who convinces her it is necessary to preserve wisdom.
Curran raises arguments towards organized religion and its systemic patriarchy, the necessity for female communities and really brought to life some lovable characters you feel you know. Despite being based largely on legendary myths and historical figures, Curran weaves through them and finds explanations for these stories in a way that perfectly follows the story she creates. Ciara became one of my favorite characters by the end and the development of complex characters like Lommán and Darlughdach really enriched the story for me outside of the miracles and hardships of Brigid.
Saint Patrick as one of the many evil men in this book really nailed home for me Curran’s approach towards Gaelic Ireland, balancing a nostalgia for Ireland while also bringing forth the harsh realities for women, slaves and druids/pagans. Brigid taking advantage of every man she can is a huge win as president of the man hating community!
My biggest struggle as a reader was the disconnect from Brigid as she gets wrapped up in her struggle for power. While determined to protect her women from men, she becomes so absorbed and distracted it is impossible to know her thought process and it really drags the pacing. While I understand this is in part to show how she distances herself from her community and her faith, I think even having a small moment of showing her make that decision would have aided the book massively for that final chunk; especially because we see the moment Brigid decides to allow herself to be vulnerable again. For the most part, the narrative style works wonderfully to paint this as a myth or biblical story but it hurts itself when there is even more distance from the subject.
That being said, when Brigid does open herself up again and then grows old surrounded by those closest to her I did cry. The whole last chapter was so beautiful and will stay with me, especially that closing paragraph. My heart hurts for women not living in our lifetime.
4.5/5
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I received an eARC from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. It has not affected my opinions.
BRIGID is a retelling of the life of an Irish patron saint as a woman determined to protect other women against the violence of the rule of men.
This is a deeply angry feminist tale about a group of women forming to protect themselves and one another in a world where they are second class citizens. There are no nice men in this book - even those that start off seeming mild and helpful end up being corrupted by the society that puts them first. The book does, at least, show that women are as susceptible to this same corruption and can choose not to think of the sisterhood.
It was very interesting to see Saint Patrick's portrayal in this book. He is a towering figure in Irish Christianity - and also the early English Church through the Ionian tradition. Because it was the Church writing most of these early histories, he has come down to us as great man - and he very much is not in this book. He is ambitious and protective of his power, setting himself up as the great power and determined to squash those who oppose him. This lets him function as a warning for what Brigid could become if she plays the games of men too well and loses herself.
The book is focused on Brigid the saint but is narrated from the perspective of Brigid the goddess. I found it interesting that the book made a clear distinction between these two people as there is debate about whether the tales around Brigid the saint are an adaptation of Brigid the goddess to assimilate the Irish into Christianity as happens across a lot of Europe.
The narrator stays rather removed from the story for a lot of it, so it is often easy to forget that there is a narrator commenting on matters. It was an interesting framing for the tale, personal at times and very distant at others. The goddess came across as very inconsistent, sometimes answering and sometimes not without much explanation, but that does fit the capricious nature of many mythological figures.
This retelling of Brigid is not a simple tale of saintly innocence and kindness. Instead, it is a story steeped in politics and feminism, offering a powerful exploration of how women are often forced to suppress their natural softness in order to gain real strength and authority in society. It is a vivid portrayal of women fighting for freedom within a system designed to keep them caged. At its heart, the novel centres on the role of women: their relationships with one another, their resilience, adaptability, and their capacity to create, build, and sustain community. These themes form the backbone of the story and give it its emotional depth.
I have Irish ancestry and I’m always drawn to mythical retellings that transport me to ancient, distant lands, and Kim Curran achieves this beautifully. The novel feels visceral at times; the smells, the landscapes, and the rhythms of speech in old Ireland are so vividly created that I was completely absorbed.
The story is a blend of old and new faiths, set during a period when people were converting to Christianity and turning away from the old gods and goddesses. Curran seamlessly weaves ancient legends into the fabric of the narrative, enriching the world and its conflicts.
While the pacing does slow in the middle, my investment in the characters kept me reading, and the final act truly gathers momentum. The ending is both gripping and thought-provoking.
The novel left me reflecting on the role of women in society today. While progress has undeniably been made, it’s hard to ignore that power still largely rests in male hands. As the story reminds us, “The cost of power is weighing the worth of one life against the needs of another.”
Strong 4 stars and I can't wait to go look through Curran's backlog. Thank you to Penguin and NetGalley for the ARC copy in return for my honest opinion.
Briefly - An excellent and powerful retelling of Brigid and St Brigid.
This is a story about Brigid. She is a beautiful young woman who is a slave and being bartered as a wife for a brutal husband. She prays to the ancients to be ugly rather than married. One of them is listening and she is bitten by a snake and rejected by the husband to be. In practice this simply makes her more of a nuisance to her slave owner who now owes the person who was to be the husband. Brigid does have one habit right from the start - she will always give anything she has to someone in any need. Admirable you would say however it is a trait that will get her in trouble.
This is a reimagining of Brigid, an Irish woman, who was possibly born around 450 AD and was quite possibly a slave. However there may be two Irish Brigids, a saint and a pagan goddess. This book draws on both characters and manages to weave these stories together very effectively. Until late on in my reading of this book I was not aware of the possibly dual nature of Brigid.
It's fair to say that there are plenty of stories about both characters although much less real evidence. Maybe that makes this retelling even more possible. Fundamentally this Brigid was an ardent feminist who would do anything for women in trouble and who starts a community for such people around the time of the arrival of the "new religion" - Christianity.
Brigid's travels early in the book had a real charm and simplicity to them. Life becomes considerably more complex as time goes by and as she tries to build her community. As someone with little time for men she draws quite a lot of unwanted (and unhelpful) attention.
This is a book I really enjoyed. In fairness I have to say that the pace and hold of the story varied. I loved the early parts and then there was some middle ground that was less exciting I guess. However the latter part was excellent - by the end the character of Brigid was very well fleshed out. I'd not read anything by this author before but I have now bought her earlier book and will read it when I can get to it.
Note - I received an advance digital copy of this book from the author and publisher in exchange for a fair review
I read an eARC of this book on NetGalley so thank you to the author and the publisher.
Brigid is such an awesome character, we follow her from a young age as she tries to stay true to herself in the face of a bunch of men who want to use her for their own purposes or gain. She’s helped by the goddess (who is also our narrator). Brigid is clever, determined and wants to make life better for those in need and particularly women. She’s vowed to give away everything she doesn’t need to help others. Something that regularly irritates those around her. She faces great challenge and danger from men, but she is so resolute in her belief. I loved her inner strength, her outer grace and dedication to helping others.
This is a historical novel set in Ireland. We see the conflict between the growing Christian faith and the old ways. There are some who don’t think they can co-exist and we see members of the church wanting to crush local beliefs and celebrations, and to punish those who honour their pagan beliefs. Brigid, however continually demonstrates that they can exist in harmony. She uses structures of the church to help provide sanctuary and aid to those in need, but she still honours the beliefs of others and celebrations rooted in nature. She has a power provided by the goddess that allows her to heal others.
She was such a fascinating character, we see how the continual derision and interference of men starts to grate on her, and how the hypocrisy of some men causes real and serious problems. Prepare to be enraged at some of the attitudes and the ways Brigid is dismissed even though she has the knowledge and experience to back up what she’s asking.
This book was a compelling blend of myth and the brutal realities of life as a woman in a holy man’s world, focussing on one woman who stands up for women everywhere and the dangers of underestimating her.
Kim injects a raw passion, power and feminist fury into the story of Brigid the Saint and Brigid the Goddess, who together are a force to be reckoned with. I loved the voice of the goddess guiding Brigid and steering her as she carved out her path in a richly described Ireland navigating a widespread conversion to Christianity.
The first part of the book has Brigid doing a lot of arduous journeying. Refreshingly the author manages to convey the difficulties she encounters yet still maintain pace, not lingering on aspects other authors would be tempted to describe in painful amounts of detail, for which I was grateful!
This pacing is continued throughout as we sweep through the years of Brigid’s life, pausing at key points but ultimately taking the reader on the journey of her life story, power struggles and internal conflicts.
The relationships between Brigid and the women she brings under her protection are the heart of this story and what I enjoyed most.
I was frequently angry with the injustices on her behalf, frustrated with her decision making and then cried for her at the end.
I love a good historical based book. Not knowing much about this Saint that is based in Ireland I needed to pick this book up. My intital thought after reading some review was that this was steeped in mythology but this is far from the case. In my eyes this is the story of a young forced to be involved in an arranged marriage but takes control of her own destiny by getting out of the deal. She is aided by a force/being that we are not given much details on but she becomes an important factor to Bridgid and the woman / miracle worker that she becomes. We travel though Bridgid life and her journey into the new faith with the aid of her friends and other women. Her goal tknprobide an heaven for females only through miracles,hard work and God. In all honesty I wasn't too sure what to expect from this book. It is beautifully written with amazing characters and is a page turning book. At times its coukd be a bit slow paced but this didnt stop me enjoying it at all. A story of feminism in maybe medieval times ( i could be wrong) shows the struggle of women finding their place. Can't wait to recommend this to other to read.
Ireland at the edge of two faiths, and a woman standing in the middle.
Curran explores how early Christianity and paganism both blended and clashed in early medieval Ireland through the life of Ireland’s patroness saint, Brigid. I find the melding of two belief systems especially fascinating, and the rise of Christianity and the wave of conversions across Ireland was told in such an engaging way.
I loved how Brigid’s character developed throughout the story. She begins idealistic, but grows increasingly cynical as she fights to survive and keep her dream of a sanctuary for women alive within the patriarchal structures of both the Church and Ireland’s ruling kings.
Her strengths and her flaws are portrayed in such a compelling, human way, and her found family -the sisters who share her sanctuary- are also richly drawn, complex characters who add real depth and heart to the story.
Thank you to @michaeljbooks and @kimecurran for a #gifted advanced copy of Brigid for review, which is out now!
Q: Do you enjoy historical fiction that explores the clash between old beliefs and new religions? It’s one of my new favourites!
I was excited to receive this as I enjoy Celtic mythology and this story is set in Old Ireland around 480-500 when Christianity is replacing paganism.
It's a reimagining of Saint Brigid of Ireland. I know very little about her except that she was reported to be kind and good so this darker version weaved with the Celtic Goddess Brigid was an unexpected surprise.
It was a slow start for me at first, reading like the usual type of quest/journey, gathering various women on the way including her mother who then wanted to go back to Brigid's father and so we had a return journey and more adventures and meetings.
I was also confused a bit until I realised the narrator was the Celtic Goddess!
Once Brigid was back and had secured her land from the King, the story picked up and was more interesting. As the story progresses so does Brigid's intolerance of men and even some of the women who dare to thwart her plans. The combination of her incandescent rage, always men in charge of everything and anything she wants to do, fathers, brothers, husbands, the King's son, Saint Patrick, together with the compromises that she is forced to make, along with her pent up and held back emotions, all build up to a heady brew that nearly destroys her.
Overall it is a good retelling and it does make me want to research more about this period in history.
Thank you to Michael Joseph, Penguin Random House and NetGalley for the ARC.
The daughter of a noble and a slave, Brigid is sold in marriage but she asks a goddess to help her and so releases powers. Tied into he new religion of Christianity, Brigid founds a convent, Cill Dara, on the lush meadows of the Curragh. This convent becomes a place of sanctity and refuge for women from around Ireland. As Christianity becomes the main religion of the land, Brigid still has to balance the old 'pagan' ways with the sexism she encounters. I loved this book. Curran's first novel was really good and this is along the same vein, mixing legend with fact and written in a beautifully flowing prose. Brigid is a hero with feet of clay and I like that as she is not a perfect role model but someone who has to make hard choices. It's a lovely and moving book.
I had read Kim Curran's other Irish mythological retelling of The Morrigan and greatly enjoyed it, so was very excited to have a chance to read Brigid.
After a bit of a slow start, this retelling became a fantastical yet grounded portrayal of Brigid and her quest to keep women safe at all costs.
The author manages to masterfully bring the reader along to the difficulties of old Ireland, with the feminist layer over it questioning why men are afraid of powerful women.
The Brigid of the title is the girl who becomes St. Brigid and weaves together what is known about her life , with a solid dose of reimagining. The story is told in the 3rd person but occasionally the mythological Goddess, Brigid voice appears in the first , as she guides and observes the other Brigid. A powerful leader in her own right , Brigid is constantly thwarted by the misogynists around her. Kim Curran vividly builds a picture of Early Medieval Ireland and the Community that Brigid builds. Historical/Mythological cross over books is not a genre I drift in to often , but Brigid drew me in and convinced me to read this book and I am very glad she did.
Having said that this a great work of fiction and if the concept remotely intrigues you I would urge you to read it.
I have heard so much about Brigid from my fellow witchy pals - so was excited to find out more about her in a different way. There were a lot of characters in this book, and a lot of characters with difficult to read names. Something that I found quite difficult to read, and it slowed down my reading pace quite a bit. I liked the real anarchy and feminist take on the it all, it it really got me quite fired up - much like Brigid herself. Overall I enjoyed this book, but think maybe I would have enjoyed an audiobook experience a lot more due to the difficult names and amount of characters. May have to re-read this again in that format later this year!