Okay, this book was fun, but it also was a disappointment in many ways. I read it based on a recommendation from writer Robin McKinley. It's a YA book (by Phil Rickman using a pseudonym) set in Glastonbury, complete with a young teen spending the summer with his laid back hippie-ish parents, whose daughter left Glastonbury and them behind years ago, wanting nothing to do any more with either the town nor her parents. And then there's the young teenage daughter of the town's C o E's church new curate, who reluctantly left Yorkshire when she was forced to accompany her parents to Glastonbury, such a weird place.
We have a Glastonbury setting that I truly hope isn't the true Glastonbury. Granted, I don't live in Glastonbury, but I've visited there numerous times and also have spent time in nearby towns, villages and cities (Wells being an example of a nearby city; I'm not meaning Bristol nor Bath). I moved to England almost 15 years ago from Boulder, Colorado. Glastonbury to me is Boulder with medieval and older artifacts, such as a ruined abbey, the Tor, the Chalice Well gardens, the holy thorn tree etc. When I first moved to England, it was difficult to find places offering vegetarian food that also banned smoking. Glastonbury had such places even before the smoking ban. And what with all of the shops offering Pagan books (including Wicca) and various other bits and pieces, along with the obvious influences of other religions, such as Christianity, Buddhism and Sufis (hey, there's a Sufi charity shop in town), among others. There are health food stores and a huge Morrisons supermarket. There's a Boots the Chemist right by a new age shop. So, there I am: a bit of Boulder, but with added history.
I'd like to think that people in Glastonbury with different religious beliefs are tolerant of one another, unlike the new curate in this book, who seems to be a born-again fundamentalist CofE priest, reminding me far more of Terry Jones in Florida than Rowan Williams, for example. And whilst I know there are "town versus gown" conflicts in cities such as Oxford and I'm sure there are "townies versus pilgrims" issues in Glastonbury, I just hope that the local curate doesn't consider street musicians near his church as horrible threats.
Although Rickman tries to give both Christianity and more Pagan beliefs fair treatment, to be honest, both of them seem to be poorly represented here. Rosa's father, the curate, is far too one-dimensional for most of the novel, and most of the pilgrims also come across that way. Yes, it's a children's/YA novel, but come on. Give kids a fair chance.
This book could have been so much better.