I may have finished reading Corrag weeks ago, I may have read five other very different types of stories since then, but I am still in the highlands and with Corrag and Charles. Susan Fletcher immediately transported me so thoroughly to a time and place, to ways of thinking and perceiving they are, for the time being, a part of me.
Fletcher sets up the novel with alternating chapters told by Corrag, a young woman accused of witchcraft: "I wait for it - death. My own, fiery one" and by Charles, a Reverend, who is on a mission both political and spiritual. Charles chapters take the form of letters he writes to his dearly beloved wife, in far off Ireland, at the close of each day, recounting events and, more importantly, his thoughts and feelings.
Both sections are equally powerful in the way they reveal the inner thoughts, values, and personal struggles of both Corrag and Charles. I might even argue that his wife, Jane, becomes a major character because she clearly is a strong filter for his own thinking. "Jane. My dearest. We have spoken of this in the past, you and I - ...Do you remember? You wore the blue shawl that makes your eyes bluer, and I spoke of enchantment - so we spoke of witchcraft by that tree. I know we disagreed." Whereas he believes along the established powers that witches "must be purged by fire or water, for their own sake" and must not be allowed to live, Jane does not believe in "witch, or rather you don't trust the men who call it out - I know. , You think such women are ill, perhaps. That they suffer delusions, or grief, or fear men"
Corrag's chapters are also narrated in the first person. They both tell her story - thus move the plot along more - but are also composed of inner thoughts and immensely rich in feeling and tone. Fletcher has an astonishing ability to create convincing voice and character within the first fifty pages.
One of the things I most loved about the book was that it was beautifully reflective. I was going to say it was not plot driven, but that is not true. We know Corrag is in jail, chained in irons so she does not escape, on charges of witchcraft. We know the Reverend is coming to interview her to learn more about a possible implication of King William of Orange in a clan massacre whereas Rev. Charles is a secret Jacobite. But that is merely the framework around which a thousand poignant, glorious, and tragic details are woven.
There is plenty of action, suspense, and tension. And then there is the poetry of her language. I felt I was there with her in the highlands and just may need to plan a trip to Scotland.
The story is rich in themes and big ideas to contemplate as one reads and months afterward.
One was how much fear was built around these around these women - often old, often widowed or alone, sometimes too intelligent for their own good. often small, poor and powerless. Throughout the story Corrag is seen as especially tiny, "I know I am tiny. Ive been called mouse and little bird, and bairn, though I am none of these." In her afterward Fletcher writes of how tens of thousands of women were put to death for witchcraft throughout Europe over a three hundred year period.
Themes of identity "what we believe is what shapes us", loss, loneliness, love - both the sharing of it and yearning for it, ever present death, belonging, betrayal, honor, the natural world vs manmade institutions. My favorite theme, however was "change" and Fletcher introduced it early on and referred back to it in many characters thoughts and actions. Pg 15, as Corrag, in jail, reflects on the momentous parts of her life, she thinks about the power of place, of how the highlands changed her and "how he said 'you've changed me', as he stood by me side. Most heartening of all was witnessing the changes in the character and voice of Charles - both through the voice of his wife Jane and Corrags stories. I smiled at his references to her powers as a story teller and thought of those Russian nesting dolls. Author Susan Fletcher was inspired by the historical stories of Charles Leslie and the struggle of the Highland clans to survive the political turmoil of late 1600's, so she wrote a story to ignite a spark of knowledge and understanding in the reader, and she has Corrags magical gift for storytelling ignite a spark of knowledge and understanding in Charles which he then pays forward as well.
"All I try to say is that we change - over and over. But I think our hearts are our hearts, and cannot be governed - not by kings, or oaths. Not by our own heads. They are too strong."
A book I will long remember and a story rich in treasures.