They Can't Burn Us All
From the award-winning author of A Poisoner's Tale comes a dark, feminist retelling of the most famous witch trial in 17th-century Iceland, perfect for fans of The Witches of Vardo and The Mercies.
Condemned, but not silenced. This is a story of a witch who fights back.
Westfjords, Iceland. 1655
ĂurĂður JĂłnsdĂłttir has grown up praying to the old gods and watching her father and brother practise rune magic.
But now, a witch-hunting craze is sweeping across the land of ice and fire, fuelled by the Protestant Reformation. Unlike elsewhere in Europe, those condemned as witches here are not women, but men of learning. And when ĂurĂðurâs father and brother are accused of witchcraft and condemned to burn at the stake, she is helpless to save them.
As Lutheran Pastor JĂłn MagnĂșsson's accusing gaze turns to ĂurĂður herself, the first woman to be called âwitchâ, he will find that she is no ordinary woman.
She is prepared to fight back. But at what cost?
And in an age of fear and persecution, whose side will the community take? Who will fight for justice?
Set against a backdrop of sweeping religious and social change, They Canât Burn Us All is a feminist retelling of Icelandâs notorious KirkjubĂłl witch trials.
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From the award-winning author of A Poisoner's Tale comes a dark, feminist retelling of the most famous witch trial in 17th-century Iceland, perfect for fans of The Witches of Vardo and The Mercies.
Condemned, but not silenced. This is a story of a witch who fights back.
Westfjords, Iceland. 1655
ĂurĂður JĂłnsdĂłttir has grown up praying to the old gods and watching her father and brother practise rune magic.
But now, a witch-hunting craze is sweeping across the land of ice and fire, fuelled by the Protestant Reformation. Unlike elsewhere in Europe, those condemned as witches here are not women, but men of learning. And when ĂurĂðurâs father and brother are accused of witchcraft and condemned to burn at the stake, she is helpless to save them.
As Lutheran Pastor JĂłn MagnĂșsson's accusing gaze turns to ĂurĂður herself, the first woman to be called âwitchâ, he will find that she is no ordinary woman.
She is prepared to fight back. But at what cost?
And in an age of fear and persecution, whose side will the community take? Who will fight for justice?
Set against a backdrop of sweeping religious and social change, They Canât Burn Us All is a feminist retelling of Icelandâs notorious KirkjubĂłl witch trials.











