Magic beans, a boy brave enough to confer with witches and a girl strong enough to defy a tyrant are the ingredients for another original tale with familiar folklore roots.
Thirteen-year-old Rudi, who first encountered the Brixen Witch a year earlier when she helped him retrieve stolen village children, once again heeds her advice. After red-haired Agatha brings beans she’s stolen from Petz’s tyrannical resident witch, a giant, to Rudi’s home province, the old woman on the mountain tells Rudi to return them. Magic has rules: Witches and their magic must stay home. Rudi and 9-year old Susanna, who recognizes the beans’ magic, travel through a beanstalk to neighboring Petz, where they meet Agatha again and learn how sad conditions are there. The greedy giant-witch of that frozen province has taken every good thing, including summer. The three enter the giant’s lair to return his beans but make things worse by coming home with a hen, whose eggs are, of course, golden. Perhaps Agatha goes along too easily with Rudi's plan to return all the Petz magic, and perhaps Rudi is a bit too dutiful, but the characters are awfully likable, and this tale is set so believably in a traditional Alpine world that it's easy to go along with the make-believe.
A satisfying, stand-alone sequel that will certainly send readers back to read The Brixen Witch (2012).
(Fantasy. 8-12)