3.5*
This book was definitely interesting and if anyone is wondering weather to read it, it's 100% worth it purely because it is actually a little different, if for nothing else.
The plot takes place on a collection of islands off the Eastern coast of England, close to the Scottish border. One of these islands is called Cwen, an old English word for Queen. We follow a public inquiry into the actions of a woman called Eva, who married into a wealthy 'native' island family (I use the word native in this way as they are wealthy and that wealth comes from colonial endeavours and they bought this land many generations prior, so are native in the way a British blue blood from the 1800s would be native to America).
Eva has three sons, but it's not until one of her sons gets a woman pregnant very young that she has a granddaughter, Zoe, and it's at this point that Eva begins the actions that will start this inquiry.
Slowly, as the plot unravels and we get the stories of the different women that have found themselves on the island and in some way involved with Eva, we see how she is trying to slowly and quietly undo the patriarchy. This involves rewriting women into history, changing museum exhibitions and altering what is taught in schools, putting more women in positions of power and actively fighting climate change. At first, everyone (including the men) seem pretty happy about these changes. However, what sets the inquiry into action is Eva's disappearance. This leads to people presuming she is dead, and her sons finding out Eva has left them no inheritance and instead given it to a charitable foundation founded by women, for women, and the rest to her granddaughter. It is these actions that anger her sons, and lead to male outrage and protests, declaring that there has been an injustice and unfairness towards men.
The part of this book that struck me as really clever is the bit at the very end when it is finally revealed that the judge is a woman. Albinia purposefully never genders the judge, and occasionally we get snippets from the ongoing inquiry from the judge and witnesses that are being questioned, and as a reader I always assumed the judge was male. There is nothing about the questions asked, the attitudes shown or the way the judge speaks that makes you question their gender. You assume, as you would with any position of power, that the judge is male. When it is revealed she is a woman it feels like you've hoodwinked yourself with your own patriarchy, but also Albinia has fought to highlight that the obvious argument of her being biased is pointless, because without being gendered there was nothing to stop me assuming the judge was a man.
Now this book does focus a lot on some of the more biological processes of being a woman. There is a trans character and an AFAB enby character that appears briefly in the novel, but a lot of the ideology behind the book buys into, very heavily, a cult around the female sex. This cult like worship of vulvas, wombs and bleeding does come across as a little essentialist and at times can be a bit stifling, and so may not be a comfortable to read for anyone not cis.
One thing I did really like about the book was the ending. There is a sense of triumph to it as the women are victorious and the inquiry finds in their favour, and we have a moment when lots of women come together in a moment of community that is quite touching. But my favourite part is Zoe, because she realises that as her grandmother Eva has become a symbol for the community, the grandmother she knew intimately and loved fiercely is dead. Eva is not longer simply her grandmother, but now belongs to everyone, and through this Zoe has lost the personal bond with her and instead has a communal one. So while there is a victory, we also see it comes at a loss, and its this situation I found really interesting to thing about.
Overall, interesting, quite a pleasant read if a little self indulgent at times.