I can't decide whether I really like the book or it was a waste of my time....
***Spoiler alert***
Personally, I don't find Alys, the supposed protagonist, sympathetic or likable. She is motivated by self-preservation, greed, and pure selfishness. I wanted to know what made her this way, but all I got was that she was probably starved for affection when she was a toddler but when she joined the nunnery, she was loved by the head mistress. There was a lot of affection and expectation. So, it still really didn't explain this interesting, but frustrating character trait.
What I found hard to understand was that she killed, more like sacrificed, her first "mother" firgure in order to save her own hide when this woman was infact trying to help her. Then she denied even knowing her loving second "mother" figure even as this second woman was sentenced to death by fire.
To be sure, I don't know what it's like to be driven by self-preservation under the constant threat of death by hanging (being a witch) or by burning at the stake (being a heretic). This, of course, is on top of all the other unpleasant possibilities of being tossed out without any viable means to support herself.
But something about this character strikes me as partially unbelieveable. I just don't buy that Alys would act the way she does in the book, and I don't buy the ending. The author, through the reading club questions, implies that Alys chose to die with Mother Hildebrand, but it doesn't ring true with me. I think she dreamt the ending while sleeping in her comfortable bed with Hugo's heavy arm slung over her swollen belly.
It was interesting to see how Henry VIII's marriage woes (for the wives, that is) affected the kingdom in general.
Would I recommend the book? I would, with some hesitation, but ultimately, this book left me unsatisfied, with the ending, with Alys, and with the fate to two mother figures.