Viking, 2011
43 chapters, 580 pgs.
HC $28.95
for: adults
Rating: 5 (I really don't want to give it a 5, but it was lovely writing, a hard-to-put-down plot and storyline, characters that were so well defined I felt as if I knew them, and a strong, smart, librarian/scholar protagonist. Everything I love in a book. And I loved this book.....)
First line/lines: The leather-bound volume was nothing remarkable. To an ordinary historian, it would have looked no different from hundreds of other manuscripts in Oxford's Bodleian Library, ancient and worn. But I knew there was something odd about it from the moment I collected it.
Setting: Contemporary Oxford, for the first third of the book; in the countryside near Lyon, France for the second third; and upstate New York for the third third.
OSS: Diana Bishop, a noted American historian and college professor who has always tried to ignore her roots as a witch, becomes involved with a vampire while trying to unravel the secret of an ancient book of alchemy.
As I read the last page, I was quite disappointed that I didn't know the final, "final," outcome, but decided to like the ending because of the hugely entertaining possibilities, and started to examine the fine print of the book. A DISCOVER OF WITCHES IS PART ONE IN THE ALL SOULS TRILOGY. LOOK FOR THE NEXT NOVEL IN 2012. NO NO NO NO NO !!!!!
How will I ever remember every character and their part in the story between now and when a sequel comes out?
Witches and vampires and daemons. All hate each other and have for millenniums. Humans factor very little in this book (if at all), all the main players are creatures - namely witches, vampires, and daemons. They are not supposed to mix, to fraternize, and a natural animosity usually even keeps them from being friends. Until Diana Bishop and Matthew Clairmont meet. KABOOM! Sparks fly. Literally.
Diana has always suppressed her witch tendencies. She wants to be ordinary. But a subhuman amount of adrenaline keep her running, rowing, and doing yoga whenever she's not researching. She has no close friends (oddly), and the two aunts that raised her after her parents' murder worry obsessively about her. Although she is very attractive and has had lovers before, there are no males in her life. She has kept herself aloof emotionally, which is the perfect for what is about to happen.
Diana is no wimp. She is no Bella - thankfully. She is more of a Hermione, with a touch more determination and spunk (though Hermione did gather those possessions as she matured.) Diana comes from a long line of Bishops, originating, she thinks, from Bridget Bishop who was killed during the Salem witch trials in the late 15th century.
I loved the first third of the book, the part that took place in Oxford. The French part was really interesting, the American third had so much change and new information to absorb that I didn't enjoy it quite as much. I can't believe that I decided to read an almost 600 page novel, but I'm really glad I did!
2 days ago
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