Review originally posted on Blogcritics.com
An open and shut case. That’s what the prosecutor said. She murdered the infant and she will hang. Infant murder trials, quite prevalent in seventeenth century England were akin to the witch-hunts in colonial America.
The remarkable story of Rachel Lockyer, unmarried glove maker and her lover, William Walwyn, is set against the English civil war of 1649. After King Charles is beheaded, Oliver Cromwell’s army and the Puritans run the country. The Levelers, a small faction of agitators, trumpet the rights of the people.
Rachel is on trial for murder after a child is found dead in the woods. Her predicament follows the 1624 “Act to Prevent the Destroying and Murdering of Bastard Children.” If Rachel can prove that the child was born dead, she is innocent. Her life, now ruptured, spirals downhill, while she chooses to remain silent. Telling all might have helped her. The courtroom scenes in this book are tense and potent.
The romance of Rachel and William comes across as pure physical attraction. He is married and the father of fourteen children. Thrown into the Tower of London for his Leveler activities, William had no knowledge of Rachel’s pregnancy. Although he shows concern for her current predicament, his hands are tied because he is married. Rachel’s friend, Elizabeth, puts forth a much greater effort to help her.
Author, Stacia Brown, holds graduate degrees in religion and historical theology from Emory University. Ms. Brown lives in Decatur, Georgia. She states that Accidents of Providence is more a story of relationships between women than a love story. After an argument with a friend over whether or not seventeenth century women were chattel—too involved in mundane tasks of life to have an inner life—Brown took the challenge to prove they did. The product? Absorbing historical fiction.
Did seventeenth century women analyze and interpret the ramifications of their lives? Yes, says Accidents of Providence with resounding examples from Rachel’s inner life:
• While pregnant, she weighs the dangers of revealing her child’s father after it is born.
• After she gives birth, she contemplates her place and the place of her child before God.
• While restrained on a rancid floor in Newgate prison, she reflects on the forks in life open for her to take.
The writer wisely chooses to flesh out the story via narrative, back-story and flashbacks. This keeps us on our toes. We must put the puzzle together one piece at a time to solve the mystery. The night of Rachel’s delivery is told from several viewpoints, keeping us wondering which one is the truth. The political, social and sexual struggles of seventeenth century women are major themes. The period history, although well presented, interferes with the plot tension. The title, Accidents of Providence, hints that perhaps God makes mistakes, especially in Rachel’s case. We don’t know why until the twist at the end of the novel. After that, so much time is spent tying up loose ends that its effect is dampened.
Characterizations are well crafted. The author uses a combination of real historical figures and fictional ones (Rachel). Standouts are prosecutor Thomas Bartwain and his wife, Mathilda.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt through Netgalley graciously supplied the review copy for my unbiased opinion.
Reviewed by Holly Weiss, author of Crestmont