The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane

by Katherine Howe

Hardcover, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

Ho

Publication

Voice (2009), Edition: First Edition, 384 pages

Description

While readying her grandmother's abandoned home for sale, Connie Goodwin discovers an ancient key in a seventeenth-century Bible with a scrap of parchment bearing the name Deliverance Dane. In her quest to discover who this woman was and seeking a rare artifact--a physick book--Connie begins to feel haunted by visions of the long-ago witch trials and fears that she may be more tied to Salem's past than she could have imagined.

Original publication date

2009-06-09

Media reviews

I absolutely love the setup of having someone in the present investigating a story from the past, with the action moving between the two periods, but so very few authors do it well and get the balance right. Howe is one of those few. The action takes place mostly in the present, with the sparse
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sections set at the times of Deliverance and her descendents exactly enough to enrich the investigation and mirror and illustrate some of the developments in Connie's story. I also loved that Connie had to do proper detective work to uncover what had gone on in Deliverance's time. The last few books I read with this setup ...had the present-day protagonist just stumbling on stuff, and then doing nothing more strenuous than reading a diary. Connie isn't so lucky. She has to follow up on all sorts of sources, and since the book is set in 1991, this doesn't mean just going online and running a few searches. She needs to actually visit a variety of places and consult a whole lot of potential documents, from church archives to probate records, and when she does find something, she needs to interpret and decode what ambiguous records might mean and imply. ... Something I really ended up liking, though were the relationships in the book. There are a few false steps in the characterisations at the beginning, with people sounding a bit off... Howe soon hits her stride, and things feel much more natural. I liked Connie and Sam's romance, but I think my favourite was the way Howe develops the concept of mother-daughter relationships
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7 more
"The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane" is smart, and Howe's research translates into a vividly imagined narrative. The social forces driving Deliverance's life come alive, as do the realities of the not so distant pre-Internet and cellphone realities of Connie's world. The novel is a page-turner,
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but the characters, not the plot, dominate... The novel's weakness lies in the final pages, which beg credulity. That flaw shouldn't be a deal-killer. "The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane," up to that point, not only goes down smoothly but raises questions about society, and what might be taken for magic, that linger after the final page is turned.
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“The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane” does indeed perform a work of magic. Through a type of literary alchemy the current interest in novels tied to the Salem witch trial (“The Heretic’s Daughter” by Kathleen Kent and “The Lace Reader” by Brunonia Barry are just two examples),
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commingles with the plot of A.S. Byatt’s “Possession” (in which a graduate student stumbles upon a secret powerful enough to upend recorded history) and produces a new compound – in this case, one powerful enough to deliver a charming summer read.
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In her provocative debut novel, The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane, Katherine Howe pairs a scholarly search for a missing book with the thrill of spine-tingling witchery.
I liked this book very much, but I want to ask the author's editor to please, in the future, keep her from wrapping or folding her characters' arms around their middles. And also point out that Connie's shoulder bag gets dropped on the floor so often it begins to sound like a character itself. But
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these are minor complaints. And by the end of this book, as any graduate student should, Katherine Howe has filled us in on much more than we used to know about that group of unfortunate women who paid the price of their lives due to a town's irrational fears.
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Physick is a bubbling cauldron of colorful plot points: a crumbling cottage, a missing spell book, a mysterious illness, a scrappy heroine and a Toto-like dog that may be more than Connie's pet. Once in a while, a new writer offers up a hypnotic tale of the supernatural that has the publishing
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world quivering with excitement. In 2005 it was Elizabeth Kostova's The Historian; in 2006 it was Diane Setterfield's The Thirteenth Tale. This summer, The Physick Book is magic.
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So begins The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane, a debut novel in which author Katherine Howe blends the history of the long-ago witch trials with the tale of a 1991 Harvard student to create a toothsome smoothie of a summer read....Otherwise, however, “The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane” does
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indeed perform a work of magic. Through a type of literary alchemy the current interest in novels tied to the Salem witch trial (“The Heretic’s Daughter” by Kathleen Kent and “The Lace Reader” by Brunonia Barry are just two examples), commingles with the plot of A.S. Byatt’s “Possession” (in which a graduate student stumbles upon a secret powerful enough to upend recorded history) and produces a new compound – in this case, one powerful enough to deliver a charming summer read
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Personal Review
Katherine Howe, a direct descendant of Elizabeth Howe and Elizabeth Proctor, two accused witches who were hanged for witchcraft during the famous Witch Trials in 1692, wrote a novel about the Witch trials. Set in present day Salem, the Story unfolds around Connie, a graduate student at
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Cambridge University and Salem historian who during the summer holidays went to clear out her deceased grandmother’s cottage and discovers an old Book belonging to one Deliverance Dane. Curious who Deliverance Dane was, Connie sets on an adventure to discover her families’ past and discovers a secret so ancient that sends tendrils of energy up her spine. The novel is close to fact as Katherine Howe describes the horrors and torture of the accused men and women and what really happened in Salem Massachusetts during one of the most gory and horrible periods of American History. A well documented and written story, Katherine Howe researched her novel well, giving the reader a thorough understanding of the history of witchcraft and the history of the Salem Witch Trials. The central theme of the novel is about the upheaval and fear surrounding Salem during the spring and autumn of 1692 and how extreme religious fervour and ignorance caused mass hysteria and fear amongst the villagers and led to the execution of more than twenty people, mostly women. The novel also centres on the relationship of mothers and daughters. I truly enjoyed this novel and like the author’s style.
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Barcode

1873
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