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Customer reviews

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The Once and Future Witches

The Once and Future Witches

byAlix E. Harrow
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Top positive review

All positive reviews›
M Killian
5.0 out of 5 starsSister Witches! Need I say more?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 29, 2023
I absolutely loved this book! Three estranged sisters pulled back together to rediscover magic and "witching" while also being the poster children for other women/witches who want the freedom to live their lives the way they want without judgment. Yes, please!

I loved that the seemingly extinct ways of witches lived on through stories, rhymes, and songs. I loved the acknowledgement that there were many forms of witching from various cultures. I loved that the sisters were so different, but had similar goals when it came to witching.

This book was amazing and I had a hard time putting it down, even when I'd finished reading. I wasn't ready to leave that world! But the story ends satisfactorily so, alas, it is time for me to move on. But I can always revisit!
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Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Eneasz M. Brodski
2.0 out of 5 starsMagic fixes everything
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 3, 2022
A revenge fantasy wherein three sisters in the early 1900s fight for women’s sufferage while resolving personal issues, and bringing back magic.

Book Review: This book is pretty much the definition of Light Reading. It flows well, it moves quickly, and it’s not difficult to read. Interesting things keep happening. The characters are very archetypical, so you know who you’re reading about very quickly. The villians are irredemiable and flat, the good guys are unobjectionable and sympathetic. This is a good book if you’re looking for something light to pick you up. Unlike most revenge fantasies, it’s not bloody or angry, it’s actually pretty lighthearted. Which, while not what I look for in a revenge fantasy, actually worked really well for several of our readers. More about that in the Book Club section.

My one major complaint about The Once and Future Witches is the same complaint I had about Alix Harrow’s earlier novel, The Ten Thousand Doors of January (no link, because apparently I never wrote a review of it?? WTF self! We read it in book club and everything!). That complaint is that there is never any inkling of danger. We are never worried about our heroines for more than a few pages. Any time a bit of tension creeps into the story Harrow immediately dissolves it and fixes whatever the danger may have been. It’s as if she’s apologizing for letting the story develope tension.

This becomes so common that when Harrow does try to raise the stakes, we don’t believe it. We go from “never worried for more than a few pages” to “never worried.” Like, “Oh no, everything has been destroyed, and all is lost? Pff, whatever, I’m sure it’ll be fine.” Lo and behold, a few pages later it is. (Doors of January had a similar problem. Late in that book a character was supposedly killed, and no one in the book club believed he was actually dead for even one paragraph.) I guess this is the type of stroy Harrow prefers to tell, since it’s been a strong theme in two novels now, and there ain’t nothin wrong with that, per se. It just made it harder to hold my interest. I would have been fine with it in a novel of less than 300 pages. Clocking in at over 500, I just got too bored to keep going. I made it 70% of the way by the time book club day came around.

Magic also is a complete cure-all for any snag in the plot. If the heroines have a problem, there’s a magic solution. Something inconviencing you? There’s a spell for that! This is basically just an extension of the “tension is not allowed” thing, though.

Anyway, it’s fine if you want a doorstop of light reading. Personally, Not Recommended.

Book Club Review: It’s decent for book clubs. The analysis of what works and what doesn’t for different people is pretty interesting. There were readers in our book club that really loved this. The audience this will resound with is what I earlier described as the “white woke woman.” It’s basically a revenge fantasy for the tarot-loving side of Twitter. So I predit it’ll do well at the Hugos next year. :) They really loved this, and I’m glad it worked for them! It’s wonderful to find something that’s joyful and speaks to you. If you consider yourself that sort of person, I would definitely recommend this, it seems to hit all the right buttons. The conversation was interesting, as basically there was agreement as to what the flaws are, but the degree of how much a flaw mattered varied greatly. What some people found boring others found charming, etc.

One thing that was brought up was the observation that the novel seemed disrespectful to real-life suffergates. It implied that this was a problem that women just needed to try harder or just want it enough in order to solve. It seems true in the novel’s world, due to magic being a tool the women have. In the real world (it was pointed out) there are far more complications, real trade-offs to be made, and sacrafices that many women simply can’t make, especially those with children. Reducing that actual struggle to the cartoony depiction in the book felt revisionist and white-washing.

I dunno how to feel about that. It’s a fair accusation, but also it’s a revenge fantasy, so does it really matter? I’m a huge fan of The Crow, a revenge fantasy for young males, and does it really matter if it portrays society incorrectly, or that Eric is invincible and never in real danger? No, not really, the point is reveling in the revenge. So what if the real world is complicated and messy? I guess it comes down to what you were expecting from the book.

If this was shorter, I would recommend it for book clubs. A few hundred pages of this would be great. For as long as it is, it felt like it was beating a dead horse, and it wore out its welcome with the people who didn’t love it. Several of us didn’t finish it. If your book club is mostly the type of people who would enjoy this, Recommended. But for general audiences, Not Recommended.
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From the United States

M Killian
5.0 out of 5 stars Sister Witches! Need I say more?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 29, 2023
Verified Purchase
I absolutely loved this book! Three estranged sisters pulled back together to rediscover magic and "witching" while also being the poster children for other women/witches who want the freedom to live their lives the way they want without judgment. Yes, please!

I loved that the seemingly extinct ways of witches lived on through stories, rhymes, and songs. I loved the acknowledgement that there were many forms of witching from various cultures. I loved that the sisters were so different, but had similar goals when it came to witching.

This book was amazing and I had a hard time putting it down, even when I'd finished reading. I wasn't ready to leave that world! But the story ends satisfactorily so, alas, it is time for me to move on. But I can always revisit!
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Amanda White
4.0 out of 5 stars Really draws you in
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 28, 2023
Verified Purchase
I loved how well this book combined many of the issues women deal with in daily life, while adding magic throughout. Story line is strong and you’re sure to find a character you can relate to. Author does a great job at descriptions. I will say, I was a little disappointed in the ending, as i was left feeling like the story was a little unresolved… or just different from what I hoped would happen. But overall a great book.
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Tralyn Hughes
5.0 out of 5 stars An exceptional story of sisterhood and overcoming.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 8, 2021
Verified Purchase
Historical fiction is one of my favorite genres. And when it is combined with stories about witches, I am totally there! The author wrote a book about witches and the suffrage movement but, for me, it became something even more. There are so many lessons woven throughout this story.

I loved the character development of the sisters. The family drama and all of its secrets do come to full light by the end. It just goes to show us that without real communication lives can ultimately be ruined. June, Agnes, and Bell are all products of their childhood–pain, abuse, and abandonment. It takes them joining the suffrage movement to bring them, at least, to a common ground. A place where they fight for the same thing and maybe even to a place where forgiveness can begin.

For me, this story became more about the treatment of women and them finally standing up against the powers that hold them down. It takes place in a time where women are property and have no voice. The are treated horribly and the men make all the rules. Also, during this time, the witch hunts were taking place and the burnings were beginning in America. This was not a safe time to be a woman.

It’s also about love. Sisterly love. Motherly love. Forbidden romantic love. Love for your fellow human beings. If you love someone, truly love them, then it doesn’t matter their race, gender, or sexual orientation, which is another lesson in this story. The sisterhood that arises amid this very dangerous time is the beginning of a new way of life, a new way of thinking. We know the actual history of how things turned out for witches and women. But, at the same time, even though we don’t live like our sisters had to, we’re still fighting some of the same fights. I’m sure there are those who would deny us the right to vote if they still could. Women are still mistreated. People of color are denied and dismissed. There are those who still believe that anything outside of heterosexual love is wrong. But , when we read the stories of where we began, where the fight began, we can be encouraged and empowered to keep moving forward. The battle still rages but great things can be accomplished when we lay down our differences and come together for the common good. That’s why stories like this one are so important! The Eastwood sisters did exactly that in this book.

I loved the witch and magic aspect too. I enjoyed imagining that the witchcraft of old is really still here, just hidden in plain sight. This was a truly fascinating part of the story for me. It makes me want to dive further into the history of witches.

While this isn’t a fantasy with dragons and warriors fighting for good against evil, there is an epic battle scene. And, as in all battles, there are heartbreaking losses. I cried and cried over one of those losses. As a reader you ask, “Did that really need to happen?” As a writer, my answer is, “Yes. It really did need to happen.” It doesn’t make it hurt any less, though.

I could go on and on about this book! The storytelling, the characters, the lessons, and the history all come together in an amazing way. I’ll end by saying that this book is now my favorite read of this year so far, and will go on my list of favorite reads of all time. It will take something pretty spectacular to take its place.

I gave this book all the stars and highly recommend it to any fan of historical fiction, historical fantasy, stories of witches, stories of women’s history, and stories about sisters.
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Tralyn Hughes
5.0 out of 5 stars An exceptional story of sisterhood and overcoming.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 8, 2021
Historical fiction is one of my favorite genres. And when it is combined with stories about witches, I am totally there! The author wrote a book about witches and the suffrage movement but, for me, it became something even more. There are so many lessons woven throughout this story.

I loved the character development of the sisters. The family drama and all of its secrets do come to full light by the end. It just goes to show us that without real communication lives can ultimately be ruined. June, Agnes, and Bell are all products of their childhood–pain, abuse, and abandonment. It takes them joining the suffrage movement to bring them, at least, to a common ground. A place where they fight for the same thing and maybe even to a place where forgiveness can begin.

For me, this story became more about the treatment of women and them finally standing up against the powers that hold them down. It takes place in a time where women are property and have no voice. The are treated horribly and the men make all the rules. Also, during this time, the witch hunts were taking place and the burnings were beginning in America. This was not a safe time to be a woman.

It’s also about love. Sisterly love. Motherly love. Forbidden romantic love. Love for your fellow human beings. If you love someone, truly love them, then it doesn’t matter their race, gender, or sexual orientation, which is another lesson in this story. The sisterhood that arises amid this very dangerous time is the beginning of a new way of life, a new way of thinking. We know the actual history of how things turned out for witches and women. But, at the same time, even though we don’t live like our sisters had to, we’re still fighting some of the same fights. I’m sure there are those who would deny us the right to vote if they still could. Women are still mistreated. People of color are denied and dismissed. There are those who still believe that anything outside of heterosexual love is wrong. But , when we read the stories of where we began, where the fight began, we can be encouraged and empowered to keep moving forward. The battle still rages but great things can be accomplished when we lay down our differences and come together for the common good. That’s why stories like this one are so important! The Eastwood sisters did exactly that in this book.

I loved the witch and magic aspect too. I enjoyed imagining that the witchcraft of old is really still here, just hidden in plain sight. This was a truly fascinating part of the story for me. It makes me want to dive further into the history of witches.

While this isn’t a fantasy with dragons and warriors fighting for good against evil, there is an epic battle scene. And, as in all battles, there are heartbreaking losses. I cried and cried over one of those losses. As a reader you ask, “Did that really need to happen?” As a writer, my answer is, “Yes. It really did need to happen.” It doesn’t make it hurt any less, though.

I could go on and on about this book! The storytelling, the characters, the lessons, and the history all come together in an amazing way. I’ll end by saying that this book is now my favorite read of this year so far, and will go on my list of favorite reads of all time. It will take something pretty spectacular to take its place.

I gave this book all the stars and highly recommend it to any fan of historical fiction, historical fantasy, stories of witches, stories of women’s history, and stories about sisters.
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21 people found this helpful
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Eneasz M. Brodski
2.0 out of 5 stars Magic fixes everything
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 3, 2022
Verified Purchase
A revenge fantasy wherein three sisters in the early 1900s fight for women’s sufferage while resolving personal issues, and bringing back magic.

Book Review: This book is pretty much the definition of Light Reading. It flows well, it moves quickly, and it’s not difficult to read. Interesting things keep happening. The characters are very archetypical, so you know who you’re reading about very quickly. The villians are irredemiable and flat, the good guys are unobjectionable and sympathetic. This is a good book if you’re looking for something light to pick you up. Unlike most revenge fantasies, it’s not bloody or angry, it’s actually pretty lighthearted. Which, while not what I look for in a revenge fantasy, actually worked really well for several of our readers. More about that in the Book Club section.

My one major complaint about The Once and Future Witches is the same complaint I had about Alix Harrow’s earlier novel, The Ten Thousand Doors of January (no link, because apparently I never wrote a review of it?? WTF self! We read it in book club and everything!). That complaint is that there is never any inkling of danger. We are never worried about our heroines for more than a few pages. Any time a bit of tension creeps into the story Harrow immediately dissolves it and fixes whatever the danger may have been. It’s as if she’s apologizing for letting the story develope tension.

This becomes so common that when Harrow does try to raise the stakes, we don’t believe it. We go from “never worried for more than a few pages” to “never worried.” Like, “Oh no, everything has been destroyed, and all is lost? Pff, whatever, I’m sure it’ll be fine.” Lo and behold, a few pages later it is. (Doors of January had a similar problem. Late in that book a character was supposedly killed, and no one in the book club believed he was actually dead for even one paragraph.) I guess this is the type of stroy Harrow prefers to tell, since it’s been a strong theme in two novels now, and there ain’t nothin wrong with that, per se. It just made it harder to hold my interest. I would have been fine with it in a novel of less than 300 pages. Clocking in at over 500, I just got too bored to keep going. I made it 70% of the way by the time book club day came around.

Magic also is a complete cure-all for any snag in the plot. If the heroines have a problem, there’s a magic solution. Something inconviencing you? There’s a spell for that! This is basically just an extension of the “tension is not allowed” thing, though.

Anyway, it’s fine if you want a doorstop of light reading. Personally, Not Recommended.

Book Club Review: It’s decent for book clubs. The analysis of what works and what doesn’t for different people is pretty interesting. There were readers in our book club that really loved this. The audience this will resound with is what I earlier described as the “white woke woman.” It’s basically a revenge fantasy for the tarot-loving side of Twitter. So I predit it’ll do well at the Hugos next year. :) They really loved this, and I’m glad it worked for them! It’s wonderful to find something that’s joyful and speaks to you. If you consider yourself that sort of person, I would definitely recommend this, it seems to hit all the right buttons. The conversation was interesting, as basically there was agreement as to what the flaws are, but the degree of how much a flaw mattered varied greatly. What some people found boring others found charming, etc.

One thing that was brought up was the observation that the novel seemed disrespectful to real-life suffergates. It implied that this was a problem that women just needed to try harder or just want it enough in order to solve. It seems true in the novel’s world, due to magic being a tool the women have. In the real world (it was pointed out) there are far more complications, real trade-offs to be made, and sacrafices that many women simply can’t make, especially those with children. Reducing that actual struggle to the cartoony depiction in the book felt revisionist and white-washing.

I dunno how to feel about that. It’s a fair accusation, but also it’s a revenge fantasy, so does it really matter? I’m a huge fan of The Crow, a revenge fantasy for young males, and does it really matter if it portrays society incorrectly, or that Eric is invincible and never in real danger? No, not really, the point is reveling in the revenge. So what if the real world is complicated and messy? I guess it comes down to what you were expecting from the book.

If this was shorter, I would recommend it for book clubs. A few hundred pages of this would be great. For as long as it is, it felt like it was beating a dead horse, and it wore out its welcome with the people who didn’t love it. Several of us didn’t finish it. If your book club is mostly the type of people who would enjoy this, Recommended. But for general audiences, Not Recommended.
28 people found this helpful
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Barb Lieberman
5.0 out of 5 stars To put it simply, I have loved many a book before, but never have I fallen for a book this hard.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 6, 2021
Verified Purchase
Let me start by saying there are no words to describe just how much I love this book. I really struggled to write a review, because everything I write pales in comparison to what is worthy enough for a book of this caliber (it only took me like a month to sit with it before actually attempting, and like two hours to come up with this).

This book is pure magic! The writing is like a spell in and of itself. The way Harrow describes magic is the exact way it feels to read the book. I had goosebumps.

This was only the second book I read this year and I can already tell it is THE book of 2021 for me. I’m looking forward to the paperback so I don’t drain my entire bank account when I buy copies to give to everyone I know. It has become THE favorite book for me. And EVERYONE needs to read it.

I do not read books quickly, let alone books of this size, but I devoured this masterpiece. I probably would have been able to in a single sitting if not for those pesky responsibilities. Even then, I found this book occupying my thoughts when not reading (it really sticks with you) and certain responsibilities fell by the wayside (when I could get away with it)!

The Once and Future witches is like nothing I have ever read before. They say that there’s only truly a finite amount of stories out there. Well, this one breaks the mold. Not only is it a “just one more chapter, oh look it’s now four in the morning” and an “oh the dishes and work and life in general can wait because I MUST know what happens next” and a “I just can’t get it out of my head” book, but it’s also sooooo much more.

I have a small obsession with “everyday” magic. There is nothing I love more than the intersection of the mundane and the sacred and never had I met a book that so perfectly captures it.

One phrase that comes to mind for the book is “divine feminine,” but that word is so fraught and this book is more inclusive and diverse and open than that word sometimes means. The unique takes on popular fairy tales and concepts like “mother, maiden, and crone” felt more right to me than anything else I’ve ever read. I connected with it more.

“Soul deep” might be the closest I can come to a phrase that fits. I found myself wondering how this author I never heard of before could know me so well, and on such a personal level. My anger and my passion and my fire and my wanting and my hopes, my muchness felt justified. All of me felt justified. I was seen, all of me, in a way that is so rare.

You don’t consume this book. It consumes you whole, body and soul. It speaks to the depths of your entire being and the entire being of the world. I’d go on, but I have a nasty habit of spoilers and to spoil even a fraction of this book would be too great a crime that no one should commit.

To put it simply, I have loved many a book before, but never have I fallen for a book this hard.
35 people found this helpful
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She's Becoming Bookish
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most beautiful books I’ve ever read.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 8, 2021
Verified Purchase
Synopsis
Juniper’s finally done it. She’s a criminal now, on the run from her country home. But she wasn’t expecting to run into her two sisters when she arrived in New Salem, and she damn sure wasn’t expecting to find her calling. Women everywhere need her. Witches everywhere need her. She has to fight the evil that’s lurking in the shadows. She has the will, if only she can find the words and the way.

Musings
It’s 1:30am. I’ve just finished what might possibly be the best book I’ve ever read. Tears stream down my face. My heart isn’t broken but made whole by the love and care of the story told. I look in these faces of these characters and see my own and that of the many women I know and love. I see their heartbreak, their pain, their prowess, their skill, their heart, and most of all their will. Nothing matters more than the will of a woman. And if every woman is a witch then so much the same. After all, “a witch is merely a woman who needs more than she has” and magic is simply “the space between what you have and what you need.” I was raised by a house witch. She made things happen that shouldn’t. Put food on the table when there was none. Made homes out of thrifted treasure. Soothed broken hearts with a simple spell. She taught me her words and ways. And for a while I’d forgotten. But like all good tales, what has lost can be found. And I’ve found it with this book.

This book is for all those who know what it’s like to want more than they have and what it takes to scratch and claw to get it. I cannot say enough good things about this book. Sure, I love historical fiction with a witchy, fantasy slant, which this is. And I love character driven stories with strong female MCs. And a little witchy goodness is never unwanted. But it’s more than that. This book is beautiful. The prose and poetry of Harrow’s work envelopes you, pulling you into the world of New Salem & Avalon. You fall in love alongside Bella and Cleo, and you feel the overwhelming rush of emotion when Agnes first holds Eve. You want to cry out in protest alongside Juniper, to hell with this town anyway.
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She's Becoming Bookish
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most beautiful books I’ve ever read.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 8, 2021
Synopsis
Juniper’s finally done it. She’s a criminal now, on the run from her country home. But she wasn’t expecting to run into her two sisters when she arrived in New Salem, and she damn sure wasn’t expecting to find her calling. Women everywhere need her. Witches everywhere need her. She has to fight the evil that’s lurking in the shadows. She has the will, if only she can find the words and the way.

Musings
It’s 1:30am. I’ve just finished what might possibly be the best book I’ve ever read. Tears stream down my face. My heart isn’t broken but made whole by the love and care of the story told. I look in these faces of these characters and see my own and that of the many women I know and love. I see their heartbreak, their pain, their prowess, their skill, their heart, and most of all their will. Nothing matters more than the will of a woman. And if every woman is a witch then so much the same. After all, “a witch is merely a woman who needs more than she has” and magic is simply “the space between what you have and what you need.” I was raised by a house witch. She made things happen that shouldn’t. Put food on the table when there was none. Made homes out of thrifted treasure. Soothed broken hearts with a simple spell. She taught me her words and ways. And for a while I’d forgotten. But like all good tales, what has lost can be found. And I’ve found it with this book.

This book is for all those who know what it’s like to want more than they have and what it takes to scratch and claw to get it. I cannot say enough good things about this book. Sure, I love historical fiction with a witchy, fantasy slant, which this is. And I love character driven stories with strong female MCs. And a little witchy goodness is never unwanted. But it’s more than that. This book is beautiful. The prose and poetry of Harrow’s work envelopes you, pulling you into the world of New Salem & Avalon. You fall in love alongside Bella and Cleo, and you feel the overwhelming rush of emotion when Agnes first holds Eve. You want to cry out in protest alongside Juniper, to hell with this town anyway.
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Kaitlyn
5.0 out of 5 stars Life Changing
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 4, 2023
Verified Purchase
Sometimes, if you're a reader like I am, you come across a book that strikes some chord, deep down in your soul, and opens your eyes to things you haven't quite seen yet. This is one of those books. The sisters, the struggle, the sacrifice, and the triumph are incredible. I don't know how to describe this book, really, because "it's about witches who cause trouble" is so inadequate that it is laughable. If you're not a reader like me, this may sound a little crazy. But if it doesn't, this is the book you're looking for.
3 people found this helpful
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D. Fountain
5.0 out of 5 stars I can find no fault with The Once and Future Witches
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 28, 2023
Verified Purchase
My dear friend Jamie has been begging me to read this book almost as long as I’ve known her. It took me seeing this book in a “what to read after Babel” post to finally crack it open and DAMN I’m mad I waited so long.

Queer romance, suffrage, witchy Salem history, fantasy, nursery rhymes, and more all find themselves woven together in this novel and yet they all work beautifully in unison. I saw a little of myself in each of the three Eastwood sisters and my heart ached for their collective plight throughout the novel.

Written as well as Babel, richer than most historical fiction I’ve read, and a strong lesson in many elements of history repeating itself and doing harm, I can find no fault with The Once and Future Witches in the fuzzy warm afterglow of finishing this book tonight 💛
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars I really enjoyed reading this book.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 7, 2023
Verified Purchase
It was a different type of "witches " story. Good plot line, well written, kept me reading.
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Marzie
4.0 out of 5 stars Perfect Samhain Read
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 18, 2020
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Set in an alternate 1893, Alix Harrow's second novel gives us the story of three estranged sisters who are very different women, who have come through the abuses at the hands of their angry and bitter father by running away from home and each other. James Juniper aka June, is the youngest and she opens the story her flight from a burning house to the town of New Salem where, in a suffragist rally she encounters she miraculously finds her sisters Agnes Amaranth (the middle daughter) and Beatrice Belladona (the oldest). Each of the sisters has a personal struggle, whether June's sad childhood leg injury and anger that is a force of nature, or Agnes' being pregnant out of wedlock, or Bella's struggle with her attraction to women. Possessed of some of the keys of magic like the will, they will seek the words and the ways of magic together, in pursuit of women's equality and a better future for Agnes' soon to be born daughter, Eve. The journey will be long, hard, painful, and sad, though the novel does end with much welcome optimism.

The Once and Future Witches has so many elements I love in stories (witches, suffragists, feminism, sisters, and it's a book about books and libraries) and therefore I find myself in an odd position of being not wholly satisfied with the novel. There was much to love in the idea of the book, such as the sisters' distinct personalities and their fierce and undying love for each other in spite of all they had been through together and apart. I also loved Cleo and her confident, loving manner, Jennie and Inez, all the women who fought in spite of being afraid, and August Lee, who turned out to be a marvelous man. The pacing of the novel felt uneven, however, and the culmination of the battle between the good witches of New Salem, and an old devil somehow felt oddly contrived. I may however, in all honesty, be suffering from reading Alice Hoffman's Magic Lessons, C. L. Polk's The Midnight Bargain, and this novel, all of which have very similar themes of feminism and witches or sorceresses, back to back to back. Overall, however, this is a solid fantasy novel that I can easily recommend as a seasonal read for Samhain/All Soul's celebrations.

The audiobook, narrated by Gabra Zackman, is quite nicely done.

CW: references to sexual assault, burnings, attempted burnings, torture

I received a digital review copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
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