Fledgling witch Maud answers a call to help her unlikely friends save their people from a dangerous sleeping curse.
Likable witch-in-training Maud returns in this follow-up to Overy’s The Gingerbread Witch (2022). After receiving a mysterious fire post from witch hunter Gretel (of “Hansel and Gretel” fame), Maud sets off to ensure that she and her other flash old friends are safe. What she discovers is a mysterious, unleashed curse. Working with Gretel and Ludo, Maud encounters powerful, unforgiving witches, visits a dragon library, and surprises even herself with her resourcefulness and loyalty to her friends. Readers will enjoy the return of Maud’s companions: scene-stealing squirrel Nuss, who is made of gingerbread and hazelnut mousse, and sweet wolf pup Grim. What makes the story so compelling isn’t just the high-stakes magic or the thoughtful reimagining of “Sleeping Beauty” but rather the close relationships between young people who under normal circumstances wouldn’t and shouldn’t be friends. One particularly moving scene finds witch hunter Gretel declaring her friendship and loyalty to Maud. Queer representation is effortlessly included; most human characters are described as having light skin. Readers will come for the magic and adventure but will stay for the deep connections between characters and true-of-heart tests.
Satisfying and meaningful.
(Fantasy. 8-12)