Begone the raggedy witches

Celine Kiernan

Book - 2018

"On the night that Aunty dies, the raggedy witches come for Mup's family. Pale, cold, and relentless, the witches will do anything for the tyrannical queen who has outlawed most magic and enforces her laws with terror and cruelty -- and who happens to be Mup's grandmother. When witches carry off her dad, Mup and her mam leave the mundane world to rescue him. But everything is odd in the strange, glittering Witches Borough, even Mam. Even Mup herself. In a world of rhyming crows, talking cats, and golden forests, it's all Mup can do to keep her wits about her. And even if she can save her dad, Mup's not sure if anything will ever be the same again. First in a new trilogy by Irish author Celine Kiernan, this tale of f...amily and forbidden magic charts a fresh path through the landscape of beloved fantasy tradition -- and promises to bewitch any reader in search of stories to love."--

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Celine Kiernan (author)
Other Authors
Victoria Semykina (illustrator)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
270 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780763699963
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

From the author of Into the Grey (2014) comes this exciting first adventure in the Wild Magic trilogy. When Aunty dies, everything changes: Mup sees the witches for the first time. When they take her father, Mup must journey with her mam, her baby brother, and her dog, Badger, into another world to save him. Along the way, Mup uncovers family secrets and the cold reality of the Witches Borough. While the adult characters, from Mup's perspective, are often cold or distant, and the witches' rule brings darkness, the story isn't without its lighthearted moments; Mup's brother (who becomes a dog) offers comic relief with his playful and innocent personality. Crow, a raven who can only speak in rhymes, may resonate with readers the most, as he struggles with speech and with his anger toward adults for letting him down. Kiernan finds magic in music, rhyme, and freedom of speech in this brilliant adventure into another world.--Elizabeth Konkel Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

To save their family, Mup, her mam, and her baby brother cross a magical border into the realm of witches; there Mup discovers secrets about her heritage as well as another side of herself. Kiernan creates a rich new story in the fantasy tradition, with familiar tropes such as human-animal transformations and rhyming riddles alongside fresher elements (including a dark-skinned protagonist). Readers will look forward to the projected sequels. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

As witches scheme to break her family apart, a young mixed-race Irish girl must rescue her father and risk losing her mother.Pearl "Mup" Taylor first spies the raggedy witches the night that Aunty dies. Long ago, Aunty brought Mup's white-presenting mother across the border into the mundane world to protect her from her motherAunty's sisterthe queen of the Glittering Land. But when Aunty dies, witches kidnap Mup's human, Nigerian-Irish father as he's on his way back from a North Sea oil rig in order to lure the queen's heir, Mup's mother, back across the border. Danger lurks everywhere as Mup, her mother, little brother, and Aunty's ghost stage a rescue missionand as the power of magic steadily calls to her mother, Mup fears she will lose her entire family in the Glittering Land. Kiernan has crafted something at once familiar and delightfully surprising with this fantasy quest. Like biting into an unassuming brownie to discover it has a heart of Nutella, Mup's narrative has all the hallmarks of a traditional misadventure with the fairy folk, but the unusual deployment of the "chosen one" trope, a plot-driving interweave of magic and family tension, and ineffably Irish elements of worldbuilding and characterization deliver readers an unexpected twist of richness.It's fortunate a trilogy is planned, for readers will surely demand more of Mup. (Fantasy. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.