Thinking
about my herbs, thinning them, replanting some, drying others makes
me hearken back to the days when I loved to read a good witchy book.
So, in the mood for a little escape fiction, maybe a little intrigue,
sorcery or magic I picked up this lovely little item in a local used
book store. Mostly I was drawn to the beautiful dust cover thinking
even if I don't get to it right away it will be beautiful on my
bookshelf. The spine illustration alone would make me buy this book.
Opening it made me happy also, the end pages are reproductions of a
witches spell book which begins, “To determine if a man's mortal
suffering be caused by bewitchment, catch his water in a witch bottel
and throw in some pins or nayles and boil it upon a very hot fire,”
in elegant script. Ok, gotta have it. There is a nice book trailer at
http://www.physickbook.com/.
If
you like a bit of romance with your magic, which I do, you've got it
here. Connie Goodwin needs some peace and quiet to finish her
research for her doctoral dissertation. So, when her mother asks her
to check on things in the old house left them by her grandmother and
maybe clean it out a bit, she sees an opportunity to have a respite
to do her work. She finds the house neglected and in disrepair. When
she finds a strange key in an old Bible she starts on a journey
connecting the key to the Salem witch trials, to her family, and to
herself. She also meets a hunky man to hang around with for the
summer.
I
can't imagine how it would feel to have family connections to people who were actually Salem witches but it is fun to go on this quest through the house, through
archives, and through time with Connie and Deliverance. Then there is
also her nefarious advisor who adds creepiness and intrigue to the
story. The search for the physick book or herbal recipe, incantation,
spell-making book that Connie remembers from childhood is an
excellent plot line and the shift into the past of 1692-1725 was well
executed. The Deliverance Dane story was my favorite as I didn't feel
I got to know Connie as well as I wanted to. Following a doomed
family, seeing how the charges and trials unfolded, and then
watching the family orchestrate a way for some to escape felt real
and believable. Having Connie come to the realization that she
inherited some of those magical gifts worked well too, even though it
was a bit predictable at times.
The
author's postscript is delicious! And, if I understand the author
information correctly Howe has ancestors who were witches in Salem,
Massachusetts during the witch trials. I would like to see a real
Physick book, heck I actually want one! Not a deep or philosophical
read and probably not one for book groups to ponder but fun. A really
good magical-mystery-love-historical fiction romp.
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