FICTION

The Wicked and the Just

342p. Houghton Harcourt. 2012. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-0-547-68837-4; ebook $16.99. ISBN 978-0-547-68883-1.
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RedReviewStarGr 6–9—Set in 13th-century North Wales 10 years after the English takeover, this is an instantly gripping story of injustice spawned by subjugation. Cecily, an English girl, tells readers from the outset that her life has been ruined now that she has been uprooted to live among "savages," as she calls the Welsh. Gwenhwyfar is a servant to Cecily, who assumes that she is to be the lady of the house and demands to be treated accordingly. Gwinny resents Cecily, referring to her throughout her narrative as "the Brat." Fleshed-out, multidimensional characters breathe life into this little-known period. Coats's cinematic prose immerses readers in medieval life as she vividly depicts the animosity between the Welsh and the English. Though both young teens are strong and opinionated, they feel victimized, and their determination and will to survive are clearly voiced. While Cecily is cruel to Gwinny at times, she also expresses occasional compassion for her and intercedes anonymously to help her and her family. Even in her haughtiness, Cecily disdains her father's fawning to impress those in power and is disapproving when he reduces promised wages to Welshmen by half. Gwinny also shows some compassion for Cecily when she saves her from a potentially bad match with a scoundrel. This debut novel reverberates with detail, drama, and compassion. The appended historical note is helpful; it's unfortunate that there is no glossary of unusual terms. Fans of Karen Cushman's The Midwife's Apprentice (1995) and Catherine, Called Birdy (1994, both Clarion) will surely be drawn to this unique story.—Renee Steinberg, formerly at Fieldstone Middle School, Montvale, NJ
In 1290s Caernarvon, Wales, English Cecily, resentful of her father's new post as a town burgess, feels the place and the filthy, taciturn Welsh servants are beneath her. When the Welsh rebel against the English, it's her servant Gwinny's turn to exercise power. Coats allows the two narrators to be both sympathetic and unsympathetic in this unusually honest portrait of the effects of power.
In 1290s Caernarvon, Wales, English burgesses tax and oppress the local Welsh, who have only recently come under English rule. Into this castle-dominated town arrives English Cecily, resentful of her father's new post as a town burgess and landholder. All Cecily can think of is how it's all beneath her -- the place, her father's townhouse, and the filthy, taciturn Welsh servants. Arrogant, spoiled, and ignorant, Cecily plays the chatelaine by bullying her servant Gwenhwyfar -- known to Cecily as Gwinny -- and betraying the impoverished Welsh to their greedy overseers, even as she struggles to fit in with the town's snooty English coterie, the honesti. At the same time, Gwinny the servant barely survives, tending to her half-dead mother in a hovel with her meager earnings. Then the Welsh rebel against the English: now Cecily is abject and terrified, and it's Gwinny's turn to exercise power. Terse, cantankerous, and vivid, Cecily's first-person voice brings this tense situation to life, as does Gwinny's alternate voice -- haggard, starved, and angry. Coats allows the two protagonists to be both sympathetic and unsympathetic in this unusually honest portrait of the effects of power. Refreshingly, she asks her readers to see beyond the perspectives of each narrator to interpret between the lines; at the same time, she offers us a potent historical novel. deirdre f. baker

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