This is a remarkable work, not only an in-depth look at a late witch trial due to the orderly preservation of all documents and transcriptions of court-doings and interrogations, but Robisheaux also provides a fascinating history of the societal concentricities radiating out from the core case.
In a little village in 1672, a miller's wife is accused of poisoning a friend of her daughter. Anna Schmieg, the supposed witch, had a long, vile reputation as a drunk and vindictive woman who wouldn't hesitate to cuss your ass out if she thought you deserved it.
Carefully, Robisheaux moves inward and outward, studying different aspects of local society to piece together the worldviews and mindsets of all involved, from local scum shit-talking the accused, up to the Count. There are sections on superstition, social mobility (and lack thereof), autopsy science of the time, jurisprudence, local political shenanigans, the fact that the region was only beginning to recover from the ravages of the 30 Years' War, the 30 Years' War, university law, and so on. Most crucially, there is such a wealth of detail on Schmieg herself, that R. is able to piece together the biography of a social outsider.
With the benefit of the scads of documents in the Langenburg and regional archives, Robisheaux delivers what you wish you could get from every supposed witch trial: a finely rounded look at one person's life out of the past, alive and vibrant.