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After the Forest

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After the Forest is a dark and enchanting fantasy debut from Kell Woods that explores the repercussions of a childhood filled with magic and a young woman contending with the truth of “happily ever after.”

Ginger. Honey. Cinnamon. Flour.

Twenty years after the witch in the gingerbread house, Greta and Hans are struggling to get by. Their mother and stepmother are long dead, Hans is deeply in debt from gambling, and the countryside lies in ruin, its people starving in the aftermath of a brutal war.

Greta has a secret, the witch's grimoire, secreted away and whispering in Greta's ear for the past two decades, and the recipe inside that makes the best gingerbread you've ever tasted. As long as she can bake, Greta can keep her small family afloat.

But in a village full of superstition, Greta and her mysteriously addictive gingerbread, not to mention the rumors about her childhood misadventures, is a source of gossip and suspicion.

And now, dark magic is returning to the woods and Greta's magic—magic she is still trying to understand—may be the only thing that can save her. If it doesn't kill her first.

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

374 pages, Hardcover

First published September 26, 2023

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Kell Woods

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,828 reviews
Profile Image for Esta.
200 reviews1,646 followers
September 24, 2024
Happy release day!

I do appreciate well-done adult fairytale retellings and this Hansel and Gretel 15 years after they escaped from the witch, with a sprinkle of Snow White and Rose Red (Brothers’ Grimm) was a creative take that I hadn’t seen done before.

The question is, what would life look like in Hansel and Gretel’s life after they escaped a macabre death by a witch after being abandoned and presumably left for dead in the woods by their parents? That is traumatic AF, and no doubt would carry on into your young adolescent and adult life with some forms of PTSD as well as trust issues, amongst other things.

Hansel, aka, Hans, I almost felt sorry for with his extreme drinking and gambling coping mechanisms--almost--if he wasn’t such a dick to his sister. And poor sweet, naive Gretel, aka, Greta, seems to be much of the villager's fodder for nasty rumours and gossip. From there, we dive into a world full of enchanted forest vibes, good and evil witchy magic, shape-shifters and a dark backstory that explores Hansel and Gretel’s Hans and Greta’s past.

I loved the meticulous historical detail of the era of witch hunts and burnings, and how Kell Woods blended this historical element with fantastical elements and lyrical prose. There is a cute romantic plot too, for the romance fans.

It did take me a few chapters to become truly engaged in the story, and maybe that’s because it was in third-person narrative which made it a little more difficult for me to connect with the MC, but that is obviously a subjective preference.

I learned before reading this that Chapter 25 has graphic animal cruelty, which allowed me to skip this chapter, and a trigger warning for any other animal lover who intends to read this.

All in all, I definitely recommend this book for fans of adult fairytale retellings with a historical fiction element. A big congratulations to Australian author Kell Woods for an enthralling and original re-imagining. Can’t wait to see what she does next if this is her debut.

My heartfelt thanks to NetGalley, HarperCollins Publishers Australia, and Kell Woods for the opportunity to read this work in exchange for an honest review.

--

A dark historical fantasy set 15 years after Hansel & Gretel escaped the gingerbread house.

RTC.
Profile Image for Terrie  Robinson.
637 reviews1,354 followers
November 4, 2023
After the Forest by Kell Woods is a Beautifully Written Debut Novel!

A Retelling of Hansel and Gretel twenty years after...

Greta and Hans are struggling and the threat of losing their home, due to Hans' gambling debts, looms large. The land around them is ravaged from a long and treacherous war. The village is full of gossip and chatter about what Greta did in the woods so many years ago and why her gingerbread is so bewitchingly delicious.

As long as Greta can bake, she can keep the money coming in.

You see, Greta has held a secret ever since the debacle in the woods. She spirited away with the 'whispering' grimoire, the witch's book of spells, incantations, and recipes. The most cherished recipe inside is for the hauntingly delicious gingerbread Greta bakes and sells to the village.

As Greta struggles to understand her newly discovered powers, she wonders if her magic is enough to keep her safe from the dark magic she has witnessed recently in the woods...

After the Forest is a well-written story with beautiful prose and characterizations that keep the flavor of the original Fairytale while existing in the newness of the Retelling that's entertaining and imaginative.

I must admit, I did struggle with the slow pace of this story in the beginning and at 14 hours in length, it did feel a bit too long. Further editing could have easily solved both issues.

After the Forest audiobook is narrated by Esther Wane, whose range of voicing skills and narration brings a magical essence to the story.

It should be mentioned that there's a scene, in Chapter 25: Baiting, of animal cruelty involving bears and dogs that is particularly gruesome to read or listen to. Skipping this chapter will not ruin the flow of the story and proves that great Fiction can be written without the inclusion of animal harm.

After the Forest still remains an impressive debut novel, the audiobook is beautifully narrated, and I look forward to what this talented author comes up with next.

3.75⭐rounded up!

Thank you to NetGalley, Macmillan Audio, and Kell Woods for an ALC of this book. It has been an honor to give my honest and voluntary review.
Profile Image for Jayme.
1,538 reviews4,436 followers
August 12, 2023

“Once Upon A Time, next to a great forest lived a poor woodcutter with his wife and his two children. The boy’s name was Hansel, and the girl’s name was Gretel.”

In this magical DEBUT novel, by Kell Woods, it’s twenty years after the children pushed the old crone into the oven, and the siblings are still struggling to get by in the aftermath of their traumatic childhood and a brutal war because Hans has a gambling problem and is deeply in debt.

Greta is keeping them afloat by baking and selling the BEST gingerbread in the land.

Ginger. Honey. Cinnamon. Flour.

Greta had escaped the witch’s house with a secret. She has the witch’s talking Grimoire, (spellbook) and it has whispered the secret recipe for the addictive gingerbread in her ear. And, that is only the beginning of the magic that she possesses and is just learning about.

But, although the village loves her gingerbread-the villagers are full of suspicion, and she is an outsider, often gossiped about.

This DARK conclusion to the siblings story has all of the ingredients you’d expect from an adult fairytale…

Witches, Wolves, and Bears.

Snow, crimson red Apples and Blood.

And, a wonderful narrator in Esther Wane, who brings it all to life!!

What better way to hear this story then listening to a few chapters a night? It brought back memories of having a bedtime story read to me as a little girl.

⚠️ TW: I had read in the fantastic review by BOOKISH SPY that there was a very descriptive scene of animal cruelty-bearbaiting involving dogs and bears in Chapter 25, so I skipped that chapter. I was able to avoid something that I CANNOT read about, and was still able to follow the story to its conclusion without listening to that scene.

Available October 2, 2023.

A Macmillan Audio production from Tor books. I thank them for the gifted copy, and it was my pleasure to offer a candid review!
Profile Image for EveStar91.
267 reviews263 followers
August 7, 2025
Greta sank to her knees. She grasped the web as Mira had done, flicking her fingers over the strands. She could pull on them, if she wanted to. Instinct told her so. The mountains, the trees, the very earth, would lend her their strength. How had she not felt it before? Gently, gently, she took up the strands. There was a slight resistance, like the intake of breath before song. And then it came.

Fifteen years after the escape from the gingerbread house, After the Forest follows Greta and Hans' life as a darker retelling of Hansel and Gretel, mixed with elements of Snow White and Rose Red, some shape-shifting and historical witch burning. It is the story of their lives as adults, coping with what happened in the forest so many years ago in different ways, in a village filled with superstition.

Kell Woods blends the fairy tale elements beautifully together with flowing prose, showing Greta's growth into a young lady coming into her power and still looking out for her brother whose coping mechanisms include gambling and drinking, and all of these strands work well together. The dark tones of the novel, given by the various magics explored and the all too human behaviours when faced with death, grief and fear, suit the medieval adult hardships that were depicted. There is a lot to recommend this novel, and especially the author!

However, some elements felt extraneous to me, which weren't balancing the above elements, like the animal magics and curses (without spoilers). I couldn't get invested in these strands, which also affected the plot progression towards the end. The theme of step-motherly love felt overused here, which might have just been a by-product of its use in fairy tales to explain away children roaming in the woods after dark. The novel was worth it however for Greta's coming into her power.

🌟🌟🌟1/4
[3/4 star for the premise and the whole book; 3/4 for the story and themes; Half a star for the world-building; 3/4 star for the characters; Half a star for the writing - 3 1/4 stars in total.]

You need never be afraid while the forest is near. It will protect you. Just say these words… “Leaf that’s green,” Greta whispered. “Earth and air…” The witch seized her by the hair and dragged her to her feet. “Protect me, forest fair.”
Profile Image for Jamie.
463 reviews733 followers
September 23, 2024
After the Forest is a dark and bewitching reimagining of The Grimm Brothers' Hansel and Gretel, although it's so much more than just a retelling – it's the story of what comes after. When this book begins, the events of the famous fairy tale are years in the past and Greta (Gretel) and Hans (Hansel) are adults who are still trying to forget the traumatic ordeal that took place in the witch's cottage so long ago.

Honestly, the first 15-20% of this book was a bit of a struggle. It wasn't bad by any means, but I was just completely uninterested in the characters and nothing much of note happened. Once I made it through those first chapters, however, things picked up quite a bit and I found myself completely immersed in the story.

The best way I can think of to describe this book is that it's, well … a fairy tale. This are witches, shape-shifters, narrow-minded villagers, romance with a handsome and mysterious stranger, bewitched baked goods, an evil villain (complete with magic apples), and an ending that … well, I won't tell you how it ends because I don't want to spoil anything, but let's just say that it's very fairy tale-ish.

I really liked the main characters in this story. They're imperfect and flawed and in some cases not entirely honorable, but they have intriguing backstories and complex personalities. The plot is imaginative and well-written, and after that first 15% or so of the story I found it to be fast-paced and entertaining.

I'm not normally one who enjoys romance in books much, but the burgeoning relationship between Greta and Mathias wasn't too irritating as far as these things go. I mean, sure, it's a fairy tale so they're head over heels for each other within 2.5 seconds of meeting and discussing marriage shortly after learning each other's names, but otherwise I found it rather sweet.

Overall, After the Forest is an original and enjoyable debut novel that nicely complements the Grimm Brothers' original tale. I look forward to reading more by Kell Woods in the future.

Many thanks to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for providing me with an advance copy of this book to review.
Profile Image for Kate O'Shea.
1,304 reviews191 followers
September 3, 2023
Not for me, I'm afraid.

I thought this would be a sort of modern update of what happened to Hansel and Gretel "after the forest" so to speak. In a way it was but it was so mired in fairy tale that I became increasingly frustrated by it.

Great, now grown, appears to have fewer brains than when she was a child as she seems incapable of comprehending that the book that speaks to her and helps her make her famous gingerbread (which appears to be the only income the family has?) might actually be magical. Or that the magic might be evil magic, despite the fact that she got the book from the evil witch who tried to eat her brother?

Everything seems to surprise her - people turning into wolves and bears, her memory being faulty, not everyone being decent human beings, her brother's inability to stop gambling away everything they own any time they do have money. This total shock at everything isn't helped by the narration as Greta seems to be permanently on the point ... of tears ... and ... keeps stopping ... talking when ... when ... when she's upset. The other part of the narration that grated were the bizarre accents of Rob, Christophe and Matteus - Scottish? Northern Irish? Bewildered.

I'm sorry I found almost the entire book irritating. I should have stopped reading the minute I turned the narration speed from 1 to 1.75 but I am a glutton for punishment. Plus I also have this quaint idea that no book stays awful. I am often wrong.

I apologise to Kell Woods and Esther Wane. Had I seen the other cover for this book I would never have picked it up. My fault entirely.

Thanks to Netgalley and Bolinda Audio for the advance review copy.
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,882 reviews4,747 followers
August 21, 2023
2.5 Stars
I love fantasy inspired by fairy tales so this novel sounded right up my alley. This one ask the question of what happens after. I adore this premise.

However in terms of execution, the narrative really fell flat. I should have absolutely loved this one, but instead found myself disconnected from the characters and the story. I wanted a smart commentary, but found the themes a little soft and forgettable. I wanted to love this one and ultimately found it fine.

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book from the publisher.
Profile Image for Jsiva.
123 reviews131 followers
October 28, 2023
Enthralling and full of rich detail. I kept thinking that the story would link to another older fairytale, but that was not true. It touches upon little hints of fairy tales such as Snow White and Red Rose or Rumpelstiltskin. I appreciated the historical grounding with places, timeline, historical figures, and events. This made this work more realistic. The plot drags in certain places (near the climax) and at times I was like why are you describing a place when I want to get to the action but... it was a good way to build anticipation and not be formulaic. The ending also went on longer than it needed to, I think the same ideas could have been shared without much meandering. I really looked forward to reading this everyday.
Profile Image for Story Eater.
399 reviews93 followers
August 15, 2023
If you love Katherine Arden, Juliet Marillier, and Alice Hoffman, you’ll love this book. Its subtle, enchanting, and woodsy atmosphere are so perfect for a spooky fall reading season. I loved the mystery and foreboding intricately woven throughout the story that, despite the slower pacing, still kept my attention hooked until the very end.

Fairy Tales are a bit of a reading desert for me. I cannot remember enjoying a retelling like this for a while. I often find myself hating retellings because many are just the same fairytale scene for scene with different characters or creatures with some kind of spin to them that is odd, grating, or completely ridiculous. It’s monotonous, to say the least. I’ve read great ones, to be sure, and enjoyed some, truly; but After the Forest possesses a magical quality I haven’t experienced since reading my last Marillier, McKillip, or Arden novel (about 6 months ago from the writing of this review).

My profuse thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ALC, for which I willingly (and heartily) give my own, honest opinion.

See the full review on my blog!

Blog / Instagram / Literal / BookBub
Profile Image for Me, My Shelf, & I.
1,419 reviews300 followers
October 29, 2023
This is a tricky one to rate because I think there were elements that were alright and it's close to something I should love, but I never actually enjoyed myself? I really do like reading, I swear! I'm not just a curmudgeon (even if I feel like it lately).

Note: mild spoilers in the inspiration section because they are not in the synopsis, but I felt they were obvious from their first appearances on page. ymmv

Inspirations:
After the Forest is marketed as a Hansel and Gretel retelling of what happened to them after they became adults. However it also draws from several other tales such as Snow White, Rumpelstiltskin (just a drop), and from the real world including famous events like the witch trials and Elizabeth Bathory. (I would also be very surprised to learn the author had never seen the Hansel and Gretel film, because I felt its influences too.)

I wish that the witch trials were more emphasized in the synopsis because this is the kind of setting that's a very hard sell for me and you have to write a real banger for me to consider it worth it.

Misogyny:
And that's because witch trials go hand in hand with rampant misogyny and women lacking any agency. I don't enjoy being in the POV of a character who has to act on the whims of the men around her because it makes her life feel suffocating and her choices absent. Not to mention that it's coupled with sexism, threats of sexual assault, objectification and dehumanization, and I just don't have a fun time reading about those very real world issues unless we're absolutely dismantling the system and/or the perpetrators by the end of the book. Especially in the first half of the book, these themes and circumstances come up often and I hated it. After at least one Herr Heuber scene I put the book down for the day because why would I want to keep reading?

At least with a book like Slewfoot the frustrating obstacles and misogyny are interrupted by moments of pure joy and self-efficacy, so I can enjoy the reading experience.

The Setting/World-building:
This is firmly set in the real world but also magic is real and people have literally witnessed it happening. But it's weird because it didn't change the trajectory of our history in any way, shape, or form. It takes place in the 1600s in Germany but it's the same normal history that happened down to the dates and city names and everything. Not necessarily a super negative thing, but I would prefer a world that integrates magic instead of tacking it on.

The Magic System:
The magic is the only thing about Greta that really develops or changes her character from the beginning of the book. At the beginning of the book she has a good, kind heart. And at the end of the book she has a good, kind heart.

Mild spoilers:

The Characters:
I liked exactly one character in this (Rob) and his was the only storyline that I liked. I would have gladly read a short novella from his POV, trialing what he went through in this book. He had character growth, interesting moral dilemmas, antagonists, and grit.

Greta herself isn't the most active protagonist. She's not entirely passive, but she often lets people stop her from getting involved or investigating further so potential storylines of interest are cut short and she just goes home. I watched her go home a LOT in this short novel.

Meanwhile, being around Hans, Jacob, Conran, Herr Heuber, and the Trittens was exasperating. Apart from Jacob (and maybe Hans a little at the end?) they feel like very outsized villainous caricatures. If anything, I felt they made the story less dynamic as they either put a halt to interesting developments or pushed us back into the misogyny and witch trials some more. Perhaps if I had better understood their internal thoughts that made them behave this way I could've found them more believable, but mostly they just felt like annoying obstacles without depth.

I also feel like the author wasn't interested by any of them because they're all dropped at the end of the book. There's no resolution in storylines with them. Aside from a brief interlude with Hans, we literally never see them again and they're handled off page, I guess.

The Romance:
She thinks he's hot and such a fine specimen of man from the moment she sees him. He's mysterious and plays it tight to the vest... which leads to one of my least favourite tropes: miscommunication!
guy throwing confetti in a campy way
The interactions between them are few and brief, so I didn't feel enough build-up and pining and emotional investment in their relationship. Especially not to the point where there are a couple of grand statements sprinkled in. I was like... what? That came out of nowhere.

My Biggest Complaint:
I coined a new term while reading this: conversation fatigue. Because dear god did everything in this take place in dialogue. Nothing happened for 90% of the book, it was just characters talking to each other. Sometimes they'd talk and get mad, so they'd leave and go talk to someone else. But even if they went to the middle of the forest by themselves, the next scene would be someone finding them so they can talk some more, then that scene would cut to another scene where they've left and are now talking to yet someone else. So. Much. Talking.

It didn't help that I found the dialogue to be rather stilted and simple and younger leaning than the prose. I think that the author wanted to give an old timey feel to the words and the people in a small, remote village? But it also made them very naive and simple and their conversations didn't hold interest for me as a result. Maybe if she had broken a bit of the 4th wall and used a wider, modern vocabulary, they would've been more expressive? Whatever the root cause was, I just know that the end product wasn't my vibe.

Overall:
Ultimately I think this book falls between fine and average. The competence of the writing and ability to maintain story threads is average to alright (omg, this makes me feel like the bar is so low), but the character development and engagement of my interests is pretty poor. If I didn't have such a beautiful copy to read (honestly this physical book is so well crafted and lovely to hold) I think I would have DNF'd. Which means that while I generously wanted to give this a 3/5, I don't think I can honestly rate it above a 2.

Ending on a funny note: Every time Mr Shelf looked at the book while I was reading it, he'd read the author name (Kell Woods) and make Legally Blonde jokes (Elle Woods). lmao

Alternate Recommendation:
For a book with many of the same vibes, but a stronger and more enjoyable execution in my opinion, I'd recommend Slewfoot by Brom.
Similarities: witchiness, witch trials, an evil man coming after her land because of debts, discovering magic, fae type creatures
Divergences: horror, no romance
997 reviews89 followers
Read
October 18, 2023
DNF @ 34%

I'm a huge fan of retellings, but I couldn't get into the story and couldn't connect with the characters.

Overall, not for me.

***Thank you to NetGalley, Kell Woods, and Macmillan Audio for graciously sending me the audiobook to review. As always, all thoughts are my own.***
Profile Image for Natasha Lester.
Author 18 books3,436 followers
July 4, 2023
After the Forest is as deliciously irresistible as the gingerbread Greta bakes in the book. A touch of magic, a dash of mystery, a sprinkle of love and lashings of elegant writing make for a gorgeous debut novel that you'll want to consume in one gulp. Kell Woods shows that she's a born storyteller with a wonderful imagination and I, for one, am now a huge fan.
Profile Image for Melki.
7,252 reviews2,605 followers
October 7, 2023
Not every fairy tale character gets a happy ending.

Take the strange case of Hansel and Gretel. Here were two frightened kiddos held captive by a forest-dwelling witch who planned to serve the fatted Hans as an entrée. They escaped only when brave Gretel pushed the old hag into her own fiery oven. Now it's years later, and the pair are not widely regarded. Judging by how much the townsfolk enjoy the recreational sport of burning witches, you'd think they'd be lauded as heroes, but Greta is eyed with suspicion for her red locks and strange ways . . . though the villagers do love her tasty gingerbread. Hans, on the other hand, has become a hard drinking gambler, who owes money to half the town.

Tough times indeed, and they're about to get a whole lot tougher.

This is an interesting retelling - more of a reimagining, actually, since the writer takes liberties with the original Grimm story. If you enjoy grownup fairy tales, fantasy, and witchy magic, this one should keep you enchanted.

Thanks to NetGalley and Tor Books for the read.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
548 reviews314 followers
did-not-finish
January 13, 2024
DNF - 15%. This is the kind of not-good that makes me nitpick individual lines, which means that it's time to stop. Hansel and Gretel has never been a favorite story, and while the concept of what-came-after seemed interesting, I dislike the characters so much that I don't care about their before OR after.

Let's start with our milquetoast heroine Greta. She managed to kick ass (literally, the rear end of an evil witch into an oven) as a tiny tot, which was surely a fluke because, at 22, while she's still baking - gingerbread these days, not witches - she's also worried about being called a witch, worrying about what children think of her, worrying about her reddish hair, trying to haul her no-good brother Hans out of trouble, blushing at tall, broad-shouldered strangers.

The most interesting thing about Greta is her sinister talking magic cookbook (I mean, yes, I'll have one, please) that allows her to make magic irresistible gingerbread. Does she use this to lure people in? No. She sells it to pay off Hans's gambling debts.

Sigh.

The best thing I can say about the writing is that it doesn't piss me off every page. Maybe once every ten pages or so, I'll come across a line that snags my attention. Such as:

The bear was enormous. Larger, surely, than any of God's creatures had a right to be. The mound of muscle atop its sloping shoulders meant it reared tall as a common man. Its black fur gleamed. It gave a long, dusky breath, then, horribly, swung toward her, enormous paws strangely silent on the forest floor.


OK, a couple things here. Surely if it reared, the mound of muscle would not contribute to its height, being behind its head? Or are we using 'rear' where we should simply use 'stood'? The hell is a dusky breath? The only context in which I'm familiar with giving breath is CPR, and whatever a dusky breath is, I probably don't want someone to give me one, even if I'm dying.

"A bear is a rare sight in these parts."
"Yes. This one was huge. And black as the sky, there." She pointed to a patch of icy stars between the pines.


Greta, why are you pointing to bright things to illustrate blackness? Why are stars icy? I think most stars are busy doing nuclear fusion, which releases huge amounts of heat, and even red giants, which are relatively cool at ~2500 degrees C, are way, way too hot for ice.

OK. It's clear this book's not for me. First DNF of 2024 in the books!
Profile Image for Krystal.
2,178 reviews488 followers
October 20, 2023
An excellent debut from this Aussie author, full of forest friends, magic, witches, and gingerbread.

I enjoyed the mix of old and new with this one. There are some familiar themes with new twists and the whole thing felt very dark and foreboding. Really enjoying sinking into it.

Some of the characters were a bit cliche - like beat down Greta and her gambling brother - but they had enough spirit of their own to overcome the sameness and carve a story of their own. Greta was a fierce spirit and I liked that she kicked back a bit.

There were a lot of different ideas here so it did seem to go for a long time, but it wasn't a deal breaker for me as I was always entertained.

For a debut, this was a fun read and a great twisted fairy tale. I'll look for more by this author.

With thanks to the publisher for a copy
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
1,982 reviews763 followers
December 19, 2024
Once upon a time tv show meets The Bear and the Nightingale in this spellbinding, atmospheric fairytale.

I am surprised this doesn’t have bigger hype!
Hansel and Gretel escaped the witch and are now adults. Gretel sells her gingerbread so they can survive despite Hans’s growing debts with the help of a TALKING GRIMOIRE!
As the story progresses, we get to learn about magic, a dark history, and the forest….

This is a hard book to pin down.
The story combines fairytale with folk tale with historical fiction.
The romance almost seems rushed, but it truly isn’t and when you think it starts to be too easy, Woods introduces a high stakes twist.
The atmosphere and description was incredible for Winter.

‘And old enough to know that womenfolk have little enough power of their own. That is why they must have their charms and their tricks. Their books and their ink and blood. Their eyes, their smiles, their hips; their lace and silk, their ribbons and thread …These are your weapons, dearie. You must use them as best you can.’

I think because of this the pace was very uneven. Whilst this added to the surprises, this did mean tension and attention weaned as I tried to figure out where this was going.

Trigger Warning - Animal cruelty in chapter 25 for cruelty-bearbaiting.

If you want something similar to The Winternight Trilogy or Uprooted - this is for you!

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Profile Image for Books_and_Crafts.
468 reviews2,466 followers
November 23, 2024
3.5-4 I really don't know how to feel about this one.

It was not an easy read by any means. I didn't flow or make much sense for a lot of it yet I couldn't stop... Maybe I just needed to see if there was something worth it at the end of it all. The end was worth it, yes but there's still so much that could have been different.

It has just about every fairytale you can think of mashed into a story of twisted Grimm tales. Which I really like.

It follows Gretel years after she and Hans escape the witches cottage. Hans is now grown and has a severe gambling addiction and Gretel is under suspect of being a witch for various reasons. She stole a sentient book from the evil witches cottage before they escaped and it has been helping her ever since. The story gets strange from here as historical and religious happenings spill into her little world.

I may need more time to think on this review. I am still trying to wrap my head around it.
Profile Image for Emms-hiatus(ish).
1,151 reviews63 followers
December 24, 2023
DNF @ 31%

This book is dull, dull, dull. It's trying to do too much, weaving different fairy tales together, in the most bland, uninspired, and unsuccessful way. Add in a FMC TSTL, and really what is the point?

Not for me.
Profile Image for Hillary (abookishmarriage).
670 reviews81 followers
September 3, 2023
I loved this book, and considering how little I've seen it around, I'm hoping that it picks up steam heading into the fall because I'd love to see it advertised more. I enjoyed this book SO much, as an in-depth folklore/fairytale story that builds well on the original tale while not being afraid to stray into new territory. I can't recommend it enough.

Kell Woods is a strong writer who avoids over-writing but still provides a beautiful, sweeping style that fits the fairytale energy of the story. This is technically a Hansel and Gretel retelling, but it does so many different things with this story and incorporates many different fairytale elements (and even bits of other stories, like Rose Red and Snow White). Greta is a compelling character motivated both by a love of family and by a desire to be free, which fits completely with her backstory.

I was also impressed by the way that the story builds the central conflict throughout, and while I don't think that the ultimate showdown and villain are completely surprising, there are some fun twists along the way that somehow feel a bit surprising while also completely fitting the type of story that Woods is telling here.

When I read a fairytale retelling, I'm usually paying attention first and foremost to atmosphere and characters, and I think that Woods nailed these elements. Something about the story feels universal and accessible, as a fairytale story should, while also feeling like it's about real characters and a real world that feels completely lived in.

I'm excited for more people to read and review this book because it's such a fun read!
Profile Image for ʚ Aileen ɞ.
596 reviews344 followers
November 27, 2023
Wowzie. When I first started this book, I didn‘t think it would fascinate me the same way The Bear and the Nightingale did. RTC.

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Have I already mentioned that I love retellings? I'm especially curious about this one since it's about Hänsel & Gretel (German folklore) and I know their story by heart. Please don't disappoint me!

#IllumicrateOctoberBook
Profile Image for Irmak ☾.
282 reviews53 followers
January 1, 2025
started off so good but it was so slow and some things did not make any sense. so many things were thrown into it to make it interesting but they ended up flat and not making any sense. Greta was such a dud.
Profile Image for J  (Midnight Book Blog).
190 reviews709 followers
Read
December 20, 2023
The first part, 4.5/5. The second part…not my favorite ):
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So excited to start this, thank you Tor for the ARC!
Profile Image for Brend.
803 reviews1,715 followers
October 2, 2024
As far as retellings go, this is one of the good ones.

I you enjoy werewolves and shapeshifters, but don't wanna pick up one of those urban fantasy books with yassified people on the covers, this could be your chance to ready a good fantasy, with interesting lore and very three-dimensional characters.
Profile Image for Gloria (Ms. G's Bookshelf).
903 reviews193 followers
October 19, 2023
⭐️4.5 Stars⭐️
This book had me enchanted and imagining the smell of delicious gingerbread, what a gorgeous debut for Aussie author Kell Woods.

After the Forest is a historical fantasy story of Hans and Greta (Hansel and Gretel) fifteen years onwards from the fairytale. It’s magical and beautifully written, a perfect witchy read for #spookyseason!

1650: Hans and Greta are struggling financially, her brother Hans has gambling debts and Greta has a witchy secret that helps her make the most addictive gingerbread in the land and bring in an income to keep them afloat. The village is superstitious of Greta and she must hide the magic she is still trying to understand.

I loved this dark and magical fairy tale and the atmospheric forest imagery and romance element.

An impressive debut and the perfect story for lovers of fairytales, retellings and historical fantasy settings!

Publication Date 04 October 2023
Publisher Harper Voyager AU

A huge thank you to Harper Collins Australia and Harper Voyager Australia for a copy of the book to read

Profile Image for Mona.
186 reviews7 followers
September 3, 2024
Eigentlich alle Zutaten für ein Lieblingsbuch - Märchen, düster, atmosphärisches Setting, bisschen Romance aber kein Romantasy - nur dass final dann doch ein bisschen Würze gefehlt hat. Mag sein dass einiges auch ein bisschen zu tropy und vorhersehbar war. aber final hatte ich doch eine gute Zeit.
Profile Image for Bookish Spy.
372 reviews8 followers
June 20, 2023
After the Forest was such a new take on fairytale retellings. It had romance, mystery, and darkness. Much closer to how fairytales were originally told for adults before they became children's bedtime stories.
The writing in this book was so enthralling that I could picture every scene, which made the story even more gripping. There was always so much happening and bits and pieces of all different fairytales, not just the aftermath of Hansel and Gretal.
I would honestly say that this was a book I could easily recommend. However, the only thing that would make me pause before recommending this book to someone is the intense and very descriptive scene of animal cruelty. It was hard to read as an animal lover, which honestly shows how good the writing was, but it wasn't an easy thing to stomach.
That, however, didn't make me stop reading or even consider it because I needed to see how the story would end.
I will definitely be reading any books Kell Woods releases in the future.

➛ 𝟒 𝐬𝐭𝐚𝐫𝐬

𝘛𝘩𝘢𝘯𝘬 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘵𝘰 𝘏𝘢𝘳����𝘦𝘳 𝘊𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘪𝘯𝘴 𝘈𝘶𝘴𝘵𝘳𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘢 𝘷𝘪𝘢 𝘕𝘦𝘵𝘨𝘢𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘺 𝘧𝘰𝘳 𝘱𝘳𝘰𝘷𝘪𝘥𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘮𝘦 𝘸𝘪𝘵𝘩 𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘈𝘙𝘊 𝘰𝘧 𝘈𝘧𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘍𝘰𝘳𝘦𝘴𝘵 𝘣𝘺 𝘒𝘦𝘭𝘭 𝘞𝘰𝘰𝘥𝘴. 𝘔𝘺 𝘳𝘦𝘷𝘪𝘦𝘸 𝘪𝘴 𝘩𝘰𝘯𝘦𝘴𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘮𝘺 𝘰𝘸𝘯.
Profile Image for Sanja ✵.
410 reviews
January 21, 2024
My biggest problem with this book is that I have no idea what the plot is supposed to be. Even now when I read the synopsis, there’s no clear storyline that the books are supposed to focus on. It’s just like it’s been fifteen years since Hans and Greta were abducted and now stuff happens. This made the book super slow and uninteresting. Which is so frustrating, because the premise is fantastic.

I also found the characters frustrating and uninteresting. Greta was so incredibly dense that I just found myself annoyed with her. The romance felt beyond flat and I couldn’t for the life of me get myself to care.

I also don’t understand how the witch that abducted Hans and Greta could see Greta’s pet mouse, but not the fact that Hans held out a chicken bone and not his actual finger.

The only saving grace is the premise, but so much more could’ve been done with that.
Profile Image for Rian *fire and books*.
628 reviews218 followers
October 15, 2023
DNF at 34%

I don’t know why, but I just DGAF. There’s a lot of characters and I keep forgetting who they are and why they matter. There’s a plot point happening and I’m not sure why it matters? So I’m just walking away.

It was probably just about to get to the magical bits but… 🤷🏻‍♀️


I just barely managed to skip this before my Illumicrate renewal so I’m glad I was able to do that. Maybe it’s me, but I probably won’t try to pick this up again.
Profile Image for Brooke - Brooke's Reading Life.
895 reviews179 followers
March 17, 2025
**3.5 stars**

This was an interesting fantasy retelling of the story of Hansel and Gretel. Retelling is perhaps not the best word as it is actually set years later after the events of the fairytale, when Greta (Gretel) is now aged 22. This book is beautifully written and very descriptive, combining a unique story of magic with elements of well-known fairytales. It is a wonderful debut for the author. I do think there was a lot going on at times with all the different concepts within various storylines, and it could be easy for some readers to get slightly lost while reading. In terms of the main character, Greta seemed wilfully naive at times in relation to the magical happenings around her which was frustrating to me at some points.
Overall: those that enjoy historical fantasy and/or fairytale retellings would likely very much enjoy this novel.

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