Wow, wow, wow. I did not want this book to ever end. I don’t give out 5 stars easily, but this was a winner from the beginning.
Magic Bitter, Magic Sweet starts off innocently enough in a bakery with a woman named Maire who has magical powers that allow her to embed feelings/emotions/abilities into her goods. Strength, love, hope, peace, agility…all are things she bakes into her cakes and cookies and scones. However, you quickly learn that Maire has very little memory of her life and is only clear on the past four years when she was found by a kind couple on the side of the road. When a group of bandits take over her town, she is taken into slavery and sold to a man named Allemas. Somehow, Allemas knows about her abilities and forces her to bake concoctions for his “clients.” Throughout all of this, Maire does not know if her friends are alive or if she will ever see them again. A mysterious ethereal being keeps appearing to her (who knows who she is and all about her past but won’t tell her) and her appearance starts changing for seemingly no reason. In the end, Maire discovers all of her abilities, who she is, and what she did to lose her memory.
There are so many details and nuances to this story that it would be an absolute shame to give them away here and not let you experience them for yourself. Instead, I’m going to talk about a few things that I absolutely loved and that are the reasons why I gave this book 5 stars.
[ S P O I L E R A L E R T] I am going to talk about some things in the following portion that will spoil it for you. PLEASE don’t read any further without reading the book first! I promise, it’s worth it!
Holmberg’s characters are electric, particularly Allemas, the “villain.” I was almost disappointed when he suddenly goes silent about 3/4 through the book simply because the writing was so excellent. His desire to be understood, obeyed, and even loved by Maire throughout the story is palpable. He made my skin crawl, but you can also see such a childlike intensity in his character. Allemas is a confusing mix between horrendously cruel villain and pathetically ignorant victim. In the end, when you learn that Allemas is actually Maire’s “son,” all of the actions and attitudes that he adopts throughout the story suddenly makes sense and your heart breaks for him. Specifically the habit of constantly changing his name was a brilliant way of indicating (without outright saying) that he was desperately searching for his identity. He really did want to be loved – but no one taught him how to pursue that love. His character is redeemable in a way that I’ve never experienced in a fictional text.
I also absolutely loved Maire. Holmberg writes her as an incredibly strong character without sacrificing a level of compassion and grace (that later makes total sense because of her role as a creator, particularly of Allemas!). She is scared but brave, lost but searching, timid but fiercely loving. She thinks of others so easily (although the scene was only a few sentences long, I cried when she sent the two children to live with Daneen, a woman whose desire for a child resonated so deeply with Maire). Holmberg was not scared to approach the desire and inability to have children with Maire. This is such an important topic that I believe the author handled with incredible grace and tact, making it a strength in Maire instead of a weakness. This desire influenced her to love Arrice as a mother, to give Daneen children of her own, to help Allemas’ soul be reconciled, and ultimately (as seen in the epilogue!!!) to have a family of her own.
There are not many books where I can’t guess the ending. This was one of the few. Near the end, I began to suspect that Allemas was one of her creations (maybe a gingerbread boy gone wrong?) but it never ever crossed my mind that he was Maire’s “son.” The way that Holmberg weaves her tale gives you zero indication that this is the case, but when you realize what is going on and think back through the rest of the book, it all starts to become clear. I was so impressed by the writing style and the way it firmly kept my attention through the entire book (I read it in less than 24 hours, if that tells you anything). It hits 90 miles an hour from the very beginning and doesn’t stop ’till the last page. It is a magical,mysterious, spell-binding story that I may as well have devoured.
I have two small complaints. The first has to do with the clients that Allemas forces Maire to create for. I assume after reading the book and skimming some of the acknowledgements that mention this genre of research, that these were meant to be fairytale characters. I was clear on the gingerbread house (Hansel and Gretel), but the others were not clear. Was Daneen meant to be a version of the gingerbread man? Who was the man with all the servants he wanted “anti-fatigue” cookies for? Maybe Beast from Beauty and the Beast? Carrying this “fairytale” theme all the way through was the only thing I felt she dropped the ball on (I mean, come one, you could have had a flying fondant carpet for Aladdin, pulled sugar “glass” shoes for Cinderella, a candied apple for Snow White, etc.).
The second complaint is just a small loose-end that I don’t feel was addressed. Fyel (ethereal being and “husband”) tells Maire several times that if she denies anything about her true identity, she will no longer be that thing (a “creator). The clarity for me just never came on why that was or what would happen if she did deny it. Because she was a creator, did her words have more powerful meaning? Would she “create” her identity again if she denied it? Or would she forget her identity forever? The implications of denying her identity could have been a little clearer.
All-in-all, I loved this book. I will read it again. I will read it multiple times. I will probably add more to this review. I am obsessed with it. I’ve been talking about it non-stop and probably won’t for a while. Kudos and many thanks to Charlie Holmberg for weaving this fantastical tale and sharing it with the world.
Many thanks to NetGalley and 47North for providing an Advanced Reader’s Copy in return for this honest and original review.