Bad Witch Burning is a contemporary fantasy by Jessica Lewis that is slated to be released in August by Delacorte.
I received this as an ARC and have tried to make sure my review is as unbiased as possible. That said, I absolutely love this book.
Trigger Warnings: animal death, physical and emotional abuse of a minor, gaslighting, murder/manslaughter with some gore. It’s not super graphic, but it does happen.
This book is light on the world building and heavy on the characters, immersion, and emotional response. It hit me hard from the author’s note/dedication and continued until the end of the book (and beyond, really, because the book hangover for this was real!) It’s unapologetically #ownvoices and #BlackGirlMagic and shines a harsh light on real world issues faced by teens every day, with a new spin on zombies/undead/necromancy and ghosts.
I never thought of myself as someone who enjoyed …
Reviews and Comments
Science Fiction and Fantasy author @ www.skaeth.com Mastodon at: @skaeth@writing.exchange reader, writer, dreamer, worldbuilder Co-founder of IndieStoryGeek.com
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S. Kaeth rated Two Witches and a Whiskey: 5 stars
S. Kaeth rated Becoming the Dragon: 3 stars
S. Kaeth reviewed Bad Witch Burning by Jessica Lewis
Review of 'Bad Witch Burning' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Bad Witch Burning is a contemporary fantasy by Jessica Lewis that is slated to be released in August by Delacorte.
I received this as an ARC and have tried to make sure my review is as unbiased as possible. That said, I absolutely love this book.
Trigger Warnings: animal death, physical and emotional abuse of a minor, gaslighting, murder/manslaughter with some gore. It’s not super graphic, but it does happen.
This book is light on the world building and heavy on the characters, immersion, and emotional response. It hit me hard from the author’s note/dedication and continued until the end of the book (and beyond, really, because the book hangover for this was real!) It’s unapologetically #ownvoices and #BlackGirlMagic and shines a harsh light on real world issues faced by teens every day, with a new spin on zombies/undead/necromancy and ghosts.
I never thought of myself as someone who enjoyed contemporary fantasy because I love lots of worldbuilding, but I’ve read a string of contemporary fantasies lately that are changing my mind and this one is no exception. It doesn’t suffer at all from the real world setting, and in fact, that aids the story because the focus is on the characters, who feel multi-dimensional and fully realized.
The magic is not a hard magic system, but it isn’t prone to info-dumps either. While the main character, Katrell, already has her powers at the beginning, they’re easily explained as we see them in action, and the exposition is delivered in brief snippets that are strong with voice, so it didn’t feel like exposition. And then when her magic suddenly does change, the nature of those changes are discovered by the reader and Katrell hadn’t in hand.
The plot is easy to follow and straight-forward, delivered in a single point of view, first person (Katrell) present tense. I normally favor third-person, but it really worked here to pull me in. The storytelling is straight-forward without tons of descriptive language. There are descriptions, but they aren’t poetic. They’re mostly focused on Katrell’s emotional response to the events and the motivations for her choices, which make this a fast-paced, tightly woven story without fluff but which packs a lot of emotional punch.
Quick bit about the plot: Katrell is our protagonist, a 16 year old who’s balancing so much trouble and responsibility that high school seems like the least of her concerns. She is far more worried about having a roof over her head and something to eat, even if it’s just a couple of Pop-Tarts or some crackers and peanut butter (hidden in her room) for a meal. She juggles (badly) school and two part-time jobs, taking as many hours as she can get because her mom is “in between jobs” (and has been for months), and her mom’s deadbeat boyfriend-of-the-month comes over, eats all their food (which is why she hides food), and never helps with any bills. They’d have been homeless by now if it weren’t for her side-scheme. Katrell can talk to the dead, and people are willing to pay for conversations with their dearly departed loved ones.
But then a ghost tells Katrell to stop talking to the dead or she’ll “burn everything down”. Katrell tries, but then her hours get cut and rent is due. As if that wasn’t bad enough, her mom’s boyfriend threatens her and her dog, and when he hits her, her mom won’t defend her, just telling her to respect him so he won’t get angry and hit her more. Katrell has no one to turn to. Her mastiff is her loyal companion, but he wouldn’t hurt a flea, and her mom tells her it’s her fault, but also promises that it’s “you and me, forever” and “things will get better soon”. Things spiral from there.
I’m not going to go more into the plot because I don’t want to spoil anything. From here on I’m going to talk in vague terms.
But the characters are where this book really shines. Let me tell you about the characters.
Katrell’s voice is so strong and she’s easy to root for even when she makes awful decisions. Her desperation comes through, and her relationship with her toxic mother is the first time I felt really seen, from how she lies to herself to allow herself to keep holding on, downplaying her mother’s abuse and focusing only on the rare good times, believing her mom despite her lies. She’s desperate to prove she’s the good daughter, desperate to keep them financially afloat, and killing herself with too much responsibility and nowhere to turn.
But it’s not just Katrell. Every character’s motivations made sense, and each had their own goals and struggles.
Will is her best friend, and Will’s tragic experiences in the foster system reinforce Katrell’s determination to stick with her mom. Will’s facing her own struggles too, slowly learning to trust her newly adoptive parents, even with such things as being able to look them in the eye or speak to them. She’s got her own goals too, pursuing an art competition even in the face of bullying (mostly due to Katrell refusing to let her give up). And nothing is wasted in this book as even Will’s struggles with learning to drive play a role in impacting the plot. Will is the light shining for Katrell on how things can be.
Katrell and Will’s friendship is awesome. Even when they fight, even when Katrell goes and does the very thing Will tells her not to do, they clearly care about each other. Katrell pushes Will to keep improving, to not let fear stop her, but also she’s patient with her, tries to protect her, and tries to think of Will’s wishes and safety—at least, until she's drowning under her mountain of mess (that she built herself) and sets her world on fire. And Will is fiercely loyal to Katrell, including delivering hard words to Katrell when she needs them.
Mike the guidance counselor is amazing. He doesn’t know exactly what’s going on with Katrell because she can’t bring herself to trust him, but he’s pretty sure her home life isn’t good (though he has no idea how bad it is) and he tries to help. He role-models healthy boundaries for Katrell and good goal-setting, which she then uses with Will to encourage her. Mike and Katrell’s scenes are short but sweet and full of impact.
I loved how even minor characters impact the plot, whether they’re setting fires and contributing to Katrell’s burning her life away, or whether they’re there helping to slosh water on the flames. If it was just Will, things would’ve ended differently (even though Will is amazing), because the lifeline wouldn't hold up to the fire. It's too easy for something to go wrong, or to rationalize that you're really still all alone. But four lifelines, all from different people who are showing her what love really means, that's why she can fight back to the surface.
This book was incredibly emotionally engaging for me and deeply immersive. It’s possible that it’d be less emotionally intense if I didn’t see my own childhood in Katrell’s relationship with her mom. I don’t normally cry with books but I did with this one, and I cried after too. I struggled to put the book down to do anything else. The chapters are short and snappy, and there’s no filler. I think every plot point that came up was used, as I mentioned above with Will and Mike. The cover is probably the thing I like least about this book. It’s good, but it’s just not my favorite. But I did come away from the book with further musings on the impact poverty can have on kids especially, as these concerns drive so much of the book and ring with truth.
This book is heavy but it's a good kind of heavy. The troubles Katrell's really dealing with are troubles people deal with every day. The Revenants are just the figurative piece. And Katrell is so determined and Will is phenomenal and their interactions are so wholesome, it keeps it from being too heavy in my opinion.
S. Kaeth rated Seasons of Albadone: 3 stars

Seasons of Albadone by Élan Marché, Christopher Warman
Four seasons. Four stories. An aspiring enchantress searches for a way to lift a terrible curse. A drunken father makes …
S. Kaeth rated Crown Duel (contains Crown Duel and Court Duel): 5 stars
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Crown Duel (contains Crown Duel and Court Duel) by Sherwood Smith (Crown & Court (1-2))
It begins in a cold and shabby tower room, where young Countess Meliara swears to her dying father that she …
S. Kaeth reviewed Sol Invictus by Ben Gartner
Review of 'Sol Invictus' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
I did receive a free ARC to review, but have tried to make this review unbiased regardless.
There’s so much to say about Sol Invictus, mostly because there’s so very much to love! It’s a worthy successor to an excellent new series for middle-grade readers, and it'd be lovely to see it available in schools and libraries everywhere. My true review would be 4.6 stars.
I love the history and humor and the growth in both main characters. There’s so much action and humor, I can see this grabbing the attention of even reluctant readers, and the vocabulary is advanced in spots, which I like because it’s a chance to expand children’s vocabulary naturally in an interesting way. I also love the Non nobis solum- the theme of working together to succeed.
As a homeschooling parent, one of my favorite things to do is to bring a joy and love …
I did receive a free ARC to review, but have tried to make this review unbiased regardless.
There’s so much to say about Sol Invictus, mostly because there’s so very much to love! It’s a worthy successor to an excellent new series for middle-grade readers, and it'd be lovely to see it available in schools and libraries everywhere. My true review would be 4.6 stars.
I love the history and humor and the growth in both main characters. There’s so much action and humor, I can see this grabbing the attention of even reluctant readers, and the vocabulary is advanced in spots, which I like because it’s a chance to expand children’s vocabulary naturally in an interesting way. I also love the Non nobis solum- the theme of working together to succeed.
As a homeschooling parent, one of my favorite things to do is to bring a joy and love of learning to subjects, and my three kids have really picked up on it, loving multiple subjects that are stereotypically seen as dry, from math to grammar to history. S (age 9) especially loves history. One thing I really enjoyed about the story is that it reinforced the learning we had already done in our studies of ancient Rome in an entertaining way, and the kids quickly remembered terms like Gaul and Franks and their previous learning about the Tetrarchy and Constantine.
The humor was well timed, spattering through the story and lightening other heavy themes. The weighty situations provide a lot of discussion topics for the kids to think about and consider. Nearly every chapter produced audible reactions from the kids, from laughter and giggles to cheers or groans, and usually they were begging for another chapter. Toward the end, we nearly had a mutiny because of the cliffhangers!
The storytelling was engaging and interesting, and I really enjoyed how the kids acted like kids, including the all-too-familiar bickering. I love Sarah’s bravery even to the point of being rash, and I really appreciate John’s anxiety, since my youngest also struggles with anxiety.
The prose itself felt light, which seems pretty standard for a lot of MG books, and the two main characters felt kind of along-for-the-ride for much of the story as well, but again, that’s also fairly standard for a lot of MG books. The introduction of potential other time travelers was really interesting and I wish it had paid off more than it did, with the kids hearing about "Alex" being brought down after the fact, in a history book.
But really, overall the story was very strong and well written, and certainly equal in quality to other traditional published MG stories we’ve read with the boys. The history is a lot more immersive and detailed than in the Magic Treehouse series, including the Merlin Missions, and I like this series better as a result, especially since the main characters learn and grow. One of the great things about these books is the simple detail of the recipe at the end. There’s nothing quite like tasting history and it’s something we do when we’re learning history. By having the recipe at the end it helps kids to bring history and the story home and really make it real.
--------------------Spoilers ahead-------------------------------------
Kids’ Review below:
J (age 7) - 5 stars (well, technically he said 5,000 stars out of 5). But not as good as the Magic Treehouse.
S (age 9) - 4 stars. Better than the Magic Treehouse, but not as good as the Warriors series. (It needs a lot more talking cats to be 5 stars.)
A (age 12) - 5 stars! Way better than the Magic Treehouse. As good as the Eye of Ra. He loves it!
Overall thoughts: A really liked it. S is wondering if there are multiple eyes (like the eye of Zeus, etc.) J really likes it too and is waffling between liking this more or liking Magic Treehouse more.
Worldbuilding: S loved the Eye of Ra. A noticed that the dominus and the emperor ate the same dessert but he was thinking the emperor might have even better desserts. A liked the mysteries of Mythros. A thought the worldbuilding aided the story, and S and J said it made them curious to know more.
A said there were big cliffhangers like the cat books (Warriors series).
S - “but not as good as the cat books. Nothing can beat the cat books.”
J- “It’s better than Jack and Annie because the Eye of Ra is more portable than the Magic Treehouse.”
Plot: The battle at the end was hard to follow but everything else was easy to follow for S. A thought it was straightforward except for the battles. J had trouble with understanding some of the plot because he was introduced to new words.
Characters: A and S - roles were clear. A wishes he knew what happened to Aurora. They should have told her to write more stuff down so people would know more about them. All the kids really liked John and Sarah. S liked how John was worried about the other people trapped in time and he really liked how there were more time travelers, which made him wonder if there were more eyes, or if not, how did they get there? The kids also really enjoyed the side characters and that they each had their own motivations and showed nice and mean parts of themselves, not only good or only bad. Except Marcus.
Storytelling: Descriptions were rich and they could picture everything in their head. They really want to make libum cheesecake and eat it for themselves (we’ll definitely be doing this). They could imagine a lot of the action sequences and really liked that. J really liked imagining the eye of Ra necklace as they traced it over and over.
Immersion: The kid never wanted to stop reading. All the cliffhangers made them want to keep going, and the story was really interesting. S learned stuff during the reading, like more about marmots, and about hardtack, everyone learned more about the Roman empire and way of life, including new details from when we studied it.
Emotional Response: All had very strong reactions to the story, with lots of yelling and gasping and giggling and speculating throughout.
Thought Provoking: S wants to learn more about marmots and said it was very inspiring. J wants to know what happened to Aurora. A can see this book and the previous one as a movie.
Cover: They like the cover, but they thought John and Sarah looked a lot different.
S. Kaeth rated Daughters Of Nri: 4 stars

Daughters Of Nri by Reni K Amayo (The Return Of The Earth Mother)
A gruesome war results in the old gods' departure from earth. The only remnants of their existence lie in two …
S. Kaeth rated Forerunner Foray: 4 stars
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Forerunner Foray by Andre Norton (Forerunner #3)
When a highly skilled sensitive comes into contact with a strange green stone, she finds herself trapped in the past …
S. Kaeth rated The squire's tale: 5 stars
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The squire's tale by Gerald Morris
In medieval England, fourteen-year-old Terence finds his tranquil existence suddenly changed when he becomes the squire of the young Gawain …
S. Kaeth rated Sleeping giants: 4 stars

Sleeping giants by Sylvain Neuvel (Themis files -- book one)
"17 years ago: A girl in South Dakota falls through the earth, then wakes up dozens of feet below ground …

Inda by Sherwood Smith (DAW books collectors -- no. 1371)
Acclaimed author Sherwood Smith's first adult fantasy novel, set in the bestselling world of Crown Duel.Indevan-Dal is the second son …

Witchmark by C. L. Polk, C. L. Polk (Kingston Cycle)
In an original world reminiscent of Edwardian England in the shadow of a World War, cabals of noble families use …