Astraea by Kate Kruimink is one of two winners* of the inaugural Weatherglass Novella Prize, as chosen by Ali Smith. Back in September, I was introduced to it through Weatherglass Books’ “The Future of the Novella” event in London (my write-up is here).
Taking place within about a day and a half on a 19th-century convict ship bound for Australia, it is the intense story of a group of women and children chafing against the constraints men have set for them. The protagonist is just 15 years old and postpartum. Within a hostile environment, the women have created an almost cosy community based on sisterhood. They look out for each other; an old midwife can still bestow her skills.
The ship was their shelter, the small chalice carrying them through that which was inhospitable to human life. But there was no shelter for her there, she thought. There was only a series of confines between which she might move but never escape.
The ship’s doctor and chaplain distrust what they call the “conspiracy of women” and are embarrassed by the bodily reality of one going into labour, another tending to an ill baby, and a third haemorrhaging. They have no doubt they know what is best for their charges yet can barely be bothered to learn their names.

Indeed, naming is key here. The main character is effectively erased from the historical record when a clerk incorrectly documents her as Maryanne Maginn. Maryanne’s only “maybe-friend,” red-haired Sarah, has the surname Ward. “Astraea” is the name not just of the ship they travel on but also of a star goddess and a new baby onboard.
The drama in this novella arises from the women’s attempts to assert their autonomy. Female rage and rebellion meet with punishment, including a memorable scene of solitary confinement. A carpenter then constructs a “nice little locking box that will hold you when you sin, until you’re sorry for it and your souls are much recovered,” as he tells the women. They are all convicts, and now their discipline will become a matter of religious theatrics.
Given the limitations of setting and time and the preponderance of dialogue, I could imagine this making a powerful play. The novella length is as useful a framework as the ship itself. Kruimink doesn’t waste time on backstory; what matters is not what these women have done to end up here, but how their treatment is an affront to their essential dignity. Even in such a low page count, though, there are intriguing traces of the past and future, as well as a fleeting hint of homoeroticism. I would recommend this to readers of The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, Devotion by Hannah Kent and Women Talking by Miriam Toews. And if you get a hankering to follow up on the story, you can: this functions as a prequel to Kruimink’s first novel, A Treacherous Country. (See also Cathy’s review.)
[115 pages]
With thanks to Weatherglass Books for the free copy for review.
*The other winner, Aerth by Deborah Tomkins, a novella-in-flash set on alternative earths, will be published in January. I hope to have a proof copy in hand before the end of the month to review for this challenge plus SciFi Month.

Another for my list.
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Hurrah! Have you come across Weatherglass Books before?
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I read your piece about the event when you posted but otherwise not. They sound like a publisher to keep an eye on.
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I agree with our comment about how it could be a play. Great review, hope to have mine up towards the end of the week!
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Thanks, Cathy. Hope you enjoyed it as much as I did.
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This does sound like one for fans of Devotion, or maybe even Jess Kidd’s The Night Ship. Does the story stand on its own, do you think, despite being the prologue to a novel?
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I thought about comparing to The Night Ship but the time period wasn’t quite right and there isn’t that supernatural aspect. I never would have known it was a prequel if she hadn’t said so at the event.
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Ah, makes sense. And—excellent! I love it when things can stand alone like that.
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This sounds fantastic!
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I’m glad you’re interested. I know you really like historical fiction.
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Yes, I do!
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Excellent review. “…women’s attempts to assert their autonomy. Female rage and rebellion” so appropriate for Election Day here in the USA
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Thanks, Lisa. Perennial topics but yes, they feel timely at the moment.
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This sounds good, especially as the only bit I liked of Devotion was the bit on the ship before the Shocking Twist
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Ha ha, yes, I abandoned that one at the twist. Novella length can be a virtue.
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Phew, it sounds incredible. The women’s stories are so complementary yet distinct, simultaneously.
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