Sweeney Cassidy starts out as a freshman at university, where she meets the mysterious Angelica and falls in love with the strange and beautiful Oliver. She gets tangled up in sinister supernatural events involving the awakening of an ancient malevolent goddess.
According to the afterword for the short story "The Bacchae", found in the collection Last Summer At Mars Hill, it is another trope on ancient Greek myth that prefigures Waking the Moon. They both involve murderous cults of women. Elizabeth Hand has said that she wanted to show that ancient goddess cultures were not all as peaceful and idyllic as many tend to think.[1]
Reception
Terri Windling selected Waking the Moon as one of the best fantasy books of 1994, praising it as "a suspenseful, panoramic story of murder, conspiracy, and ancient secret societies".[2]