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  • The Witch's Daughter: A Novel
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Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
3,691 global ratings
5 star
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4 star
24%
3 star
12%
2 star
3%
1 star
2%
The Witch's Daughter: A Novel

The Witch's Daughter: A Novel

byPaula Brackston
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Top positive review

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Naturegirl09
5.0 out of 5 starsEnthralling book, could not put it down!
Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2018
You know that feeling when you have discovered an author whose writing voice clicks with your yours? And then you discover she or he has written multiple books so you get to read more by them?! That is the way I felt after just a few pages into this book! Superbly written about an fascinating woman, who becomes a witch, and shares her stories throughout the centuries with her pupil. One of the things I love about this book is that being a witch is not overly romanticized, their is nothing cheesy or predictable about the character and witchcraft is written about in a way that is respectful, seems factual, and realistic. I wish their were additional books about Bess, the main character. My only complaint (and it's minor), is that Bess' pupil, Tegan, seems not that interesting. It's a bit hard to see what Bess found so wonderful about her and how she saw so much potential. Her dialogue was not great. Other than that, I can't wait to read more by Ms. Brackston!
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40 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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William Ferguson
2.0 out of 5 starsWon't Be Bothering With Book 2
Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2020
Descriptions like "lush writing" and "compelling story" lead me to purchase and read this book. Unfortunately, neither is true in my opinion. I read a review where someone complained about the "flashbacks" but, really, that's most of the story.

The story has pretty big holes in it, I found. The bad guy is called a warlock - but only at the end - when it just sort of spills out how "witches made by warlocks are always cursed". What's this? We've been given no other information about other witches, if they're born or made, and that's part of the problem here. Nothing is really explained beyond a sort of "here's this bad guy who's really a satanist and he turns this poor stupid girl into an immortal he feels he owns and so he pursues her down through the ages". Which, honestly, is a bit stupid. Hundreds of years and he he hasn't managed to catch her or given up? A witch with intuition and everything but yet time after time she allows him to be right next to her for days, weeks, months, without seeing it?

Maybe there are rules we aren't given? Maybe she has to go willingly? He does spend an awful long (agonizing) time repeating to her that she really wants it, that it gives her the best feeling, blah blah blah. Bit like the abuser telling his victim it wasn't rape because she secretly wanted it. Pretty gross.

And oh the end! Lame, lame, lame.

And Tegan? The "daughter she never had". It just all seems so desperate. Instead of liking or admiring the main character I'm left feeling she's stupid and should never have survived.

So, all in all, I don't recommend reading this book and I certainly won't be picking up the second one. The writing is rather plain. The "present time" of 2007 is really just journal entries so rather plain and practical information. The "flash backs" attempt a different voice which mainly I just found irritating after a while. Each flashback should have just been called "Bess gets dumber".

Oh, and he's Jack the Ripper, too. I sprained my eyeballs rolling them at that point.
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From the United States

Melissa Wagner
3.0 out of 5 stars Some really interesting overall
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2018
Verified Purchase
“‘Imagine,’ she said, ‘imagine being able to do magic like that. To heal people. To shapeshift.’ She paused and looked at me. ‘To kill people. It’s powerful stuff. Seriously dangerous stuff.’”

In The Witch’s Daughter we get to hear about a witch named Elizabeth and her long life as she shares it with a young mentor and as it was shared in her Book of Shadows. Elizabeth was made into a witch by a man named Gideon when she was young, and he continues to come for her through out generations and manifesting in different ways.

There were some really interesting parts of this story, but for me it felt a bit flat and boring overall. I am willing to admit that this may have been just as much about my mood as about the book itself. I may still try reading another book from the series later on as I really enjoy the subject but had a hard time connecting to this book for whatever reason. I am giving this book 3 stars.
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Diana Faillace Von Behren
3.0 out of 5 stars Witch's Redoux
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2013
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If author Paula Brackston wishes to capture the niche as a writer of novels featuring witch women, she must offer stories with more fully developed characters and situations that are less redundant and more resplendent with magic. "The Witch's Daughter" fails on both counts. Lead character, Bess, is the usual victim of the witch hunt, who must not only run from amassed villagers waving pitchforks and torches, but from the evil witch maker who manipulated her mother into selling her soul to ensure her daughter's safe passage through the ravages of the life-stealing plague and now wants only to live out eternity with her as Abelard and Heloise witch lovers for the ages. Instead of telling Bess's story once, Brackston feels the need to reiterate the chase three times over, presenting flimsy scenarios that only her heroine does not see through despite her awakened senses, great talent to heal and enact magic. The resulting tale is three times as long as it needs be, pressing the reader into a place where his/her patience is sorely strained and the ending more than predictable.

Bess's hijinks span from the present day back into the dark days of the witch hunts of the 17th century. However, even after repeated identity reinventions, that allow her to keep her youth and beauty, Bess is beleaguered by bad judgement and over optimism when she convinces herself that again her nemesis has not again found her out, or disguised himself as someone close to her. Sadly, she falls into the same trap over and over again thinking that for once she will be able to satisfy her need to heal and simultaneously hide in plain sight. She seems to forget that the evil Gideon is basically as immortal as she is and isn't about to give up when there aren't many others in the world with their unique attributes. Brackston proves that wisdom does not come with age even if her readers know otherwise, and this after just the short period of time it takes to read a third of the book.

Brackston does provide a thoroughly detailed backdrop. Her sense of place and time is superb, despite some anomalies that should have been corrected by a good editor. Her sequences depicting magic are equally enchanting but lack substance. Interesting enough, as I read this book in Kindle format, many readers seem to use the book as a primer for basic witchcraft; there are over 100 highlights on passages that revolve around different spells, herbs and magical verses. I did not think this book to be a resource for any sort of Wiccan knowledge--reading 
Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs (Llewellyn's Sourcebook Series) (Cunningham's Encyclopedia Series)  will provide much more information than anything found in this text.

Bottom line? Paula Brackston (
The Winter Witch  offers the saga of witch Bess who has lived through to the present day sequestering herself from the man responsible for her conversion to witchcraft. While all the scenarios presented--the 17th century, the Victorian Age, the WWI era and the present day are rich with ambiance, Brackston mistakenly repeats her premise with each reincarnation, converting her novel into something more akin to episodic television than a meaningful novel where the development of the main characters are crucial. Resorting to the same tired premise of wise women hunted down by vigilant townspeople intent on cruelty does not help to raise this novel out of the realm of mediocrity. While Brackston's "Winter Witch" delivered a more nuanced story, both "The WItch's Daughter" and it rely on too many stereotypical characters to make the readings memorable. Read Marion Zimmer Bradley's " The Mists of Avalon  to discover a wise woman from Arthurian times worth her weight in gold.
Diana Faillace Von Behren
"reneofc"
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Montana Mackay
3.0 out of 5 stars Just Meh; Heroine Lacks Judgment
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2021
Verified Purchase
This story about Bess, the witch's daughter who is given/cursed with immortality, reads rather like an anthology. It spans four centuries, so that accounts for the disjointedness to a degree. Bess herself acquires a daughter in Tegan, the young woman who befriends her in the modern-day English village where she sets up shop with her potions & teas and so forth. The things I enjoyed about this book were the hedge-witch craft explanations and examples. Like a lot of people, I enjoy learning about herbs and natural cures. I wished for a little more botanical detail, but I can't have everything.

Characters: I thought Gideon was well-done up until the point where he turned into a literal demon incarnate. I thought his evil nature could have carried him very effectively throughout the book without the spectacle and hoopla of fangs and scales and whatnot. I always like a "good" villain. Interestingly, the character of Bess seemed one of the weakest in the book. She was not very astute or wise for someone who'd lived 382 years. Tegan was a real struggle ... exuding teenage ennui and tossing off ditzy remarks almost constantly, even in the horrifying scenes. I confess I started skimming about 75% through. The book was a good introduction to Brackman and I have a feeling it is characteristic of her work.
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Elyse Welles
3.0 out of 5 stars Great Concept, Too Many Plotholes
Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2021
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Maybe it's because I'm a witch or because I've read a lot of fantasy books but I could not for the life of me figure or why she would know anything about the Goddess, especially with what we learn in the book about where she learned her magic! And how is she crying so much when she makes such a fuss in the first 150 pages or dying she hasn't cried since she was a child??? And the ending was so anticlimactic, it built so much and the ending made no sense and felt very random, with no hints towards what any of its or was based on, no prior knowledge explained. Super disappointed after a strong start.
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MJ Symmonds
3.0 out of 5 stars Just ok
Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2019
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I liked this book but just didn't connect much to it. I think maybe because some things were way too descriptive when it didn't need to be and then some other things that felt more important to the story was just glossed over instead of delving more deeply into it.I

It wasn't a bad read just not the best I've read from this author.
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S.
3.0 out of 5 stars Great potential...
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2013
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I feel like this author has a lot of potential, but it wasn't quite realized in The Witch's Daughter. The characters were compelling, yet I consistently found myself wanting more: more depth, more backstory, more understanding of their motivation. Ms. Brackston has a talent for creating characters who draw the reader in and I really enjoyed the beginning and the diary entry format. Even the flashbacks worked for me, although it's becoming a worn format at this point. However, she undermined her story by either wrapping up each plot point a bit conveniently while alluding to struggles that the reader doesn't experience firsthand. I feel compelled to add *****spoiler alert*****
***************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
that if another author feels the need to connect her/his story to an historical moment - especially Jack the Ripper - I may need to call upon the Dark Arts myself. It shows a lack of imagination and is lazy. This book would have been much better if it had skipped that interlude and concentrated on the other relationships. I'm to believe that an all-powerful being, pursuing another supernatural, would think that gruesome murders will strengthen his appeal? Try again, Ms. Brackston. You can do better.
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notanotherjenn
3.0 out of 5 stars Really wanted to love it
Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2013
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I thought the idea of this book was fascinating. Bess was born in the 1600's and watched as her family succumbed to the plague. When her mother is accused of witchcraft, Bess turns to Gideon Masters to help her. Gideon teaches Bess to use her powers and become a witch but she runs from him and spends an eternity in hiding.

Perhaps I missed it but I don't think they ever really explained what happened between Gideon and Bess. I got the impression that he seduced her and that maybe she just ran out of fear of what he really was. Reading about Bess in the different periods of her life was interesting but it frustrated me that after all that time running she wasn't able to pick up on Gideon's presence sooner. It always felt like an "oh yeah" moment when she finally realized that he had found her.
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Jim Schmidt
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 stars There's Much Better in This Genre than this Effort
Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2013
Verified Purchase
I'm compelled to be tougher in grading this book than I might generally be owing to the fact that I've read several other books in the genre in the past year or so.

it does not have the literary merit of Mary Sharrat's soaring "Daughters/Witching Hill" which earned an easy 5 stars from me...it also lacks the absolute fun of Physick Book/Deliverance Dane....and the combination of story and character and history in Discovery of Witches.

I think it aspires to be all three but falls short.

the author picked three interesting times in history but the quick escape from one to the next seemed like cheating...it takes a lot of effort to sustain a narrative...three historical shorts wrapped in a modern setting do not a novel make. a particular plot device became wearying by the end.

About 90% through the main character asks herself if she's learned anything in her 300 years of escaping the antagonist and concludes that no she hasn't. what?

some lovely writing to be sure but very poor character development

not likely to read more from Brackston when there are better to choose from
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Halai
3.0 out of 5 stars Visually striking
Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2013
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I've never read this authors works before. Her writing is very visually striking and I enjoyed reading her prose. However, her character development and plot development leaves a bit to be desired. If you are a lover of all things fantasy you'll likely find a bit of everything in here with a smattering of horror to give it a little spice. Personally I felt like she pulled in so many different fantasy genre's and mythologies that they clashed a bit, but then I'm not a great reader of fantasy fiction so perhaps I am not the best judge of such. Just a note, do true Wiccan's believe in Satan? I always thought that Satan was a part of the Judeo/Christian system. And that the Wiccan's believed in the Goddess Diana and many other deity's and spirits of nature?
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Barb
3.0 out of 5 stars A good story with a likable if rather gullible heroine.
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2019
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I save 5 stars for those wonderful old, classics that have perfect stories, memorable characters and sublime writing. I would have given this 4 stars but the main character lacked a certain strength or intellectual force that a centuries old witch, in my opinion, should have developed sooner than the last few chapters. It did, however keep me reading, want to see how it would all come out. I will read more by this author. I like her storytelling.
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