Do you know how much I wanted to read Philippa Gregory’s new novel Tidelands? I requested it on NetGalley, but then I realized that I’m probably too small-time for an eARC, and used one of my precious library request slots for it. I can only have 10 ebooks on hold at once, which is a TERRIBLE system,  because it turns out that I’m not the only person in Boston who hears about a book on NPR and then requests it, and that ties up a slot forever, and then I have to be careful about what to request.

Anyway, I was thrilled when NetGalley sent me the eARC, and I read it in pretty much one sitting. Like the author’s historical novels, Tidelands has realistic  characters from different parts of society coming into conflict, largely because they have different backgrounds and expectations, in a way that really makes you feel for both (all) the combatants. There’s great historical detail here, too.  Like the Wideacre series (and the Jacquetta historical), there may be new and modern ways of thinking, but old ways are still happening the shadows.

But I don’t understand how characters can hide a pregnancy for months and months. This was kind of annoying in Wideacre, but I figured that a truly manipulative person, seen only by close family members who really wanted to believe her could pull it off.  But someone who’s out and about? Working physical jobs and trading all around town? No one noticed anything?

I was very unhappy with the ending. Without giving too much of a spoiler, the central conflict is not resolved at all, and about twenty new questions are raised in the last couple pages. The ending was so much of an unsatisfying setup for a sequel that I felt like I was watching a Marvel movie.

Would I recommend it? I don’t know, it’s not a story, only a random chunk of events.

Edit: Later, I read the sequel, like some kind of idiot masochist, and did not find any improvement in Dark Tides. Again, I slogged through 80% of the book, which was basically a shady character being shady, and then 10,000 things happened in about a hour of book-time at the end.

View Comments

  • Omg.. You write so good..your blog is inspiration. I just started mine and I'm really suffering with how to start it. But yours is inspiring. ❤️❤️

  • Well, it's exciting Netgalley sent you an e-arc- yay! I'm sorry it wasn't a great read for you though.

    • I did feel pretty great getting it! I know publishers usually have a limited number of review copies, and I assume they're going to bigger blogs. (At least, that's what I tell myself when I don't get one...)
      And I'll probably still read the second one in this series, just not with the same level of anticipation or with the need to get it as soon as humanly possible.

  • This is awkward, but I’m trying to find out how this ends and no one has any spoilers posted haha. I had the ebook on loan from the library and couldn’t finish it in time (yikes kind of a slog!) but I was right to the point where it was *starting* to get interesting.

    Would you be willing to email me and tell me the highlights of what happened? I’m about 2/3 in lol

Recent Posts

Sandwich

I wanted to read Catherine Newman's new novel Sandwich as soon as I heard about…

The Midnight Feast, by Lucy Foley

The Midnight Feast, the newest thriller from Lucy Foley, takes place at the opening weekend…

Retro Book Review: Passenger to Frankfurt

Passenger to Frankfurt is not my favorite Christie mystery, at all. The spy ones and…

Imperfect by Katy Motiey

Imperfect, by Katy Motiey, tells the story of Vida, a young Iranian mother, and how the…

Lost on a Mountain in Maine

12-year-old Donn Fendler is on a family hike up a beautiful but challenging mountain, when…

The Pursuit of Mary Bennet

I picked up Pamela Mingle's The Pursuit of Mary Bennet after reading The Bennet Sisters'…