This was a great read. The Salem Witch trials have always interested me, so one night I went on the prowl for some good books on the subject. I wanted real stories, and fictional stories based on the true events, which is the category Abigail Accused falls into.
The story was a little slow in the beginning, but it needed to be, to get a feel for the times, and the characters. Sometimes it was a little confusing to follow all the names, with them being the same or almost identical, but that's not the author's fault, that's how it was back then. The wording and sentence structure held true to the time it took place. Juliet Mofford did a great job researching and describing the history, and how it all took place. From describing the main character, Abigail, and her family life, her husband's PTSD, losing a child, and then, of course, the beginnings of what was going to become one of the most historical events in American history. It told how living in Massachusetts Bay Colony, near Salem, was caught up in the witch hunt. There were stories, coming from Salem, about young women who would fall upon the ground, writhing in pain, saying someone's spectors were torturing them. Only the hand of that person's spector could calm these fits. It told how women in Salem were being tried and executed for these crimes, all on accounts of these few young women, and that alone. Abigail, wasn't worried about the insanity coming to Massachusetts Bay... though she should have. When a man brings these women to Massachusetts Bay to help find a reason for his wife's suffering, Abigail learns first hand just what she should have been worried about. Ms. Mofford did an amazing job telling this story, she brought Abigail Dane Faulkner to life in vivid detail. After Abigail's arrest, the stench and filth of the prison she was kept in was described so you felt you were sitting on the floor, chained up next to her, hearing the muffled cries of those around you. I wish it had gone into a bit more detail in the end of how the trials finally ended, but the story was well wrapped up in the end.
There were a few editing mistakes, wrong words or misspellings in the book but nothing that detracted from the story, all & all, a great read!