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M**H
I wanted to like it - but I just couldn't
I tried - I really did. I *genuinely* wanted to like this book - it even passed my personal "75 Page Test" - if it holds me for the first 75 pages I stick with it. The reviews were largely glowing. As a Modern Pagan Witch I was roped in by descriptions of the author weaving in contemporary concepts of the Wheel of the Year, the Goddess and references to tie-ins with Dion Fortune's The Magical Battle for Britain. The sample rhymed spells calling on the Goddess included in promotional material sounded fabulous. But after an initially intriguing and filled-with-possibilities start, this was ultimately plodding, painful to read and the characters were flat and one-dimensional. I found many of the main characters difficult to like and some even unlikable - Ursule the Second made me want to jump off a Cornish sea-cliff! The "mother-daughter" relationship sales-pitch by many reviewers left me scratching my head - if this is what the "love between mothers and daughters" is all about, I'm thankful I missed all the dysfunction in real life! I can't say the same after having read A Secret History of Witches. Trust your intuition if you're on the fence about whether to read this book or not - there's more genuine magic in that than in Grandmere Ursule's crystal.
B**T
More Like a List of Witches
It took a long time for me to get into this book. The story begins in the early 1800's with a family of witches and follows their line up to the 1940's. Although I understand what the author was trying to do, the majority of the book felt like one long list of names. There were many characters, but they were all underdeveloped. And, it was frustrating to get interested in one witch's story, only to have it end abruptly, and then skip ahead fifteen years. I did not really enjoy this book until I got to the last character, Veronica. Here, the book stopped skipping ahead and actually told a story. Also, for a book titled, "A Secret History of Witches", I would have liked to have learned more about the actual history of their craft. Where did the characters get their power? Why did they have magic, but not other people? Why did some daughters inherit the gift, but not others? Why did they know so little about their own craft, even in the beginning? I did really enjoy Veronica's story and the work she did with her power. I would have liked to have seen that with the previous generations. Overall, it was a good book, but not my favorite.
A**
boring, I cannot believe it was nearly 500 pages
This novel was a struggle from beginning to end. I felt I had to finish it because I purchased it, it was that unenjoyable. Absolutely no depth. I honestly don’t even see the point in the story. A line of 5 witches? Ok. But that’s it!!!! Unimaginative, boring, I cannot believe it was nearly 500 pages. I hate leaving negative reviews, but this book was beyond disappointing.
K**R
"Magically Written"
I love witch stories. This one begins in Brittany, 1821. It traces five generations of powerful mothers and daughters whose magic is both dangerous and extraordinary. The Orchierses fight to keep the old ways alive with uncanny spells and rites. When World War II breaks out, magic is needed more than ever. This is a very unique story, exciting and captivating. It will definitely entertain you. It may also entice you to discover your own witching gifts!
K**.
A Secret History of Witches earns 5+/5 Glowing Crystals...Epic & Engaging!
An epic journey through five generations of fascinating Orchiéres women spanning more than a century filled with secrets, illicit affairs, sacrifice, jealousy, and witchcraft. The journey begins in 1821 France, the Romani clan fearful after hearing another poor woman burned as a witch. In danger, Grand-mère Ursule directs her family to cross the water to an island far away and begin life anew, then using her last breath hides them from the notice of an angry mob bent on killing. When morning comes, the family prepares to flee leaving behind a freshly made resting place for the great witch that had protected them, saved them, and shared with them their future lay miles away. Leaping forward to 1834, “The Book of Nanette” shares the life, love, and magic of the now young woman who had been devastated to leave her grand-mère behind. She learns the way of her sisters, and after a night with a handsome stranger, she is blessed with a daughter she names Ursule to honor her grand-mère. The lineage continues from Ursule to Irène, from Irène to Morwen, from Morwen to Veronica; each of the women are tied together by their ancestry, their witchcraft, and the crystal that has a power only they can manifest along with individual strengths and talents, desires and dreams, acceptances and denials, and differences that make for an intriguing family history and personal journeys.Brilliantly woven through the lives of five women and the eras in which they lived, Louisa Morgan has provided an extraordinary tale of love, sacrifice, family, and magic. Although the women are all witches, they differ in how they embrace their powers, use it to their advantage, and share it with their daughters. The drama does not focus entirely on the witchcraft element; it is part of the women like a religion, kept from the view of outsiders, secret, but my personal enjoyment came from the fascinating personalities, everyday life related to the era, family interactions, and how they related to those around them. The book is organized into five “The Book of...” focusing on each woman through a third-person narrative. Louisa Morgan’s writing style does well to envelop the reader by illustrating the various settings, environments, and lifestyles through descriptive language as well as the tone and personalities through the expressive dialogue. Entertaining. Engaging. Epic in a way I didn’t want my journey to end. Is anyone listening? Book Two...five more women spanning another century to arrive at today?
W**N
Beyond Even Fictional Belief!
I quite enjoyed this book, which is a bit of light reading nonsense , until the section on Veronique.The author, American I presume by the terrible spellings, postulates that the late Queen Mother was a witch, based on the evidence that one of her family was burned as a witch for what was clearly political reasons.It is well known that both the late Queen Mother and Prince Charles are Druids. Whatever!It really, really stretches the bounds of fiction to suggest, even if she were a sister of the craft, that the Queen Mother would share highly confidential info on D Day in this way, just plain ridiculous!There was a New Forest Coven, which according to Doreen Valente made spells to repelled the German invaders, and Aliester Crowley did engage in secret war work.Of course the female protagonists right through the novel are stunningly beautiful, sweet natured, clever, and succeed at all they touch, but that's why we all escape into novelsI had hoped that Veronique would work with the Forest coven, disappointing ending, with a cliffhanger no doubt for the next book.
E**Y
couldnt read the last portion about Veronica
I really quite enjoyed this book about witches and their geneology, until I reached the Book of Veronica. This book started off all right but a bit sudo upper classy and definately how the other half lived, which was fine. Veronica a bit too good to be true, but readable. THEN when it came to Veronica meeting Queen Elizabeth (the queen mother) at the start of WWII and saying that Queen Elizabeth was a witch, I stopped reading this book. I thought it was going too far and I was disasppointed but the the author is American and I suppose she thought she could get away with it. Sorry! but if it had been a British author, writing the President of the USA was a warlock, I don't think the Americans would be best please.
M**T
Following the Orchiere family history
A lengthy novel that follows the lives of the Orchiere family, a family of Romani gypsies who flee France in fear of being burnt as witches.One life follows another each with its own deep secrets, dreams and aspirations. Each faces up to a personal dilemma, some with more success than others.Starting in 1821 when the family flee from Brittany and following the daughters as they mature and grow into their powers. Not all will make the right choice but each will pass on the spark that brings the scrying stone to life to the next. They will face the choices they made and live hard lives often fearful of discovery.I really enjoyed the book but I felt it lacked a vital something.. it needed just a little spark somewhere to lift it into 5*'s. The end felt a little flat.. which was a shame because it's just so close to the next level.
A**Y
Really interesting novel
What I really enjoyed about this book was the slightly unconventional timeline of the story. It follows the same family of witches from 19th century Brittany, to WWII era England, tracking the adversity they faced in preserving their craft and traditions. Thoroughly engaging from start to finish, with well developed, strong female characters that you can't help but be moved by. If you enjoyed 'A Discovery of Witches' by Celia Harkness or Paula Brackston's 'The Winter Witch' then you'll love this. Don't expect wildly dramatic magic, this is a more subtle sort, it is more about the human story and the relationships between the women of the Orchiere line.
R**M
A Secret History of Witches
Utterly spellbinding. Historical story of a generation's of a family who are connected by a Crystal. In each generation one female member of the family can access the Crystal and magic. Some use it for good and some for evil. Very enjoyable unusual read.
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