With thanks to the author for an advance review copy in return for an honest opinion.
I read the first book in this trilogy thanks to a recommendation, then looked out for the second instalment, and enjoyed them both tremendously. I’m inclined to say that this third one is the strongest yet. The first book focussed on Angie, a 50-year-old rather frumpy good-hearted woman who is abandoned by her husband for a younger model. She helps out an old lady in the village, Frieda, who is a powerful witch, and in doing so starts to discover her own hidden powers. The second book give us some of the old lady’s back story, introducing the teenaged Penny with the extraordinary life force, and this third one pulls the various previous strands together.
In an opening that draws you straight in, Angie wakes up one morning to a strange empty feeling in the house, and discovers that Frieda has been taken by some malevolent presence in spite of all the protection spells around the house. This is the story of how Angie and Penny, now a 63-year-old physics professor whose job is under threat, go about finding Frieda and defeating her abductor.
The storylines in all three books work extremely well if you’re after a good witchy story. But as a 54-year-old reader, what also really resonates is the feminist sub-theme of older women being marginalised once their youth, beauty and child-bearing potential have waned, and how they can grow into their true powers in the post-menopausal years. And there is also an acknowledgement of the importance of the environment and the balance of nature as the source of life - for the witches, and the house, and by extension, for all of us. This isn’t high literature but it’s a fast-paced and well written bit of escapism with some bigger themes - enjoy!