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A review by thereadingraccoon
A Sweet Sting of Salt by Rose Sutherland
slow-paced
2.0
A Sweet Sting of Salt is a historical fiction novel with a sapphic romance and a supernatural twist.
Jean is a twenty-four-year old midwife for her small village on the coast. Her standing with the locals is a little rocky after she was suspected of having a romance with her female childhood friend Jo. Eventually Jo’s mother became suspicious and quickly married her off and Jean hasn’t seen her since. But Jean’s talent with delivering babies has won over most of the women in town and she lives a quiet life alone on the small piece of land her parents left her. One evening the mysterious new bride of her neighbor arrives in the middle of the night in labor and ready to deliver without her husband. Despite the language barrier Jean is able to help out the new mother (Muirin) and bring her husband (Tobias) to her side. But something about their relationship is off and Jean convinces the couple to let Muirin stay with her a few days to heal after the baby. As Muirin picks up more and more English Jean becomes convinced that something is not right with their marriage and it’s up to her to rescue Muirin and her newborn son. But Tobias will do anything to hold on to his family and he won’t let Jean interfere.
This is one of those books that if you don’t buy the love story you don’t have much else to hang on to. And I really didn’t get the romance. Between the newborn baby, the marriage, the language barrier and just how little they knew about each other (including Jean’s glaring ignorance of Muirin’s big supernatural secret) I never felt any kind of chemistry or attraction between the two of them. Everything Jean does after Tobias repeatedly threatens her puts not only herself but Muirin and her baby and everything Jean holds dear including her farm and the animals at risk. It becomes really frustrating as a reader to endure. She clearly sees herself as some kind of savior but she has no weapons, self-defense skills and is entirely too naive to take on someone like Tobias. When she’s not scrambling to protect herself, lying to the people that care about her how much danger she’s in she’s mostly staring out the window worrying about Muirin which makes it a very dull and slow read.
I hate giving a debut novel two stars but this book really didn’t work for me. It was a slog to get through and I found the main character foolish and moony over a woman she barely knows.