![]() ![]() With the bewitchingly frustrating Meiner King, the granddaughter of their coven ![]() When another coven, rumored to have a sordid history with black magic, arrives But all that really matters to her isĪscending and finally, finally becoming a full witch-plans that are complicated Struggling to cope with her somatic OCD the aftermath of being outed asīisexual in her conservative Irish town and the return of her long-absent SYNOPSIS: Seventeen-year-old Dayna Walsh is (I bought the finished copy in the picture myself) Thank you to the FFBC for having me, and NetGalley and Freeform for the eARC to review. ![]() This post is part of the Fantastic Flying Bookclub Blog Tour, and I encourage you to check out the full schedule here, and read some of my co-blogger’s opinions as well! As usual with the FFBC, there is also a giveaway for a beautiful finished copy of the book for a reader in the US – click on this link here to enter. I love that elements that rank among my favourites are such a trend at the moment – this book is perfect for fans of Toil and Trouble, Sanctuary, Amy Rose Capetta, Sarah Gailey, and the many other recent sapphic witch books! ![]() Latimer hits the pulse of the time perfectly. Once more onto the breech, my friends! A mix of modern queer witchery and ancient Celtic legend, Witches of Ash and Ruinby E. ![]()
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