Monday, July 25, 2022

A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness

 




Reviewed by Jeanne

Historian Diana Bishop is researching a collection of manuscripts in the Bodleian Library in Oxford when one of the manuscripts seems to glow at her touch.  Being a witch, Diana isn’t quite as flummoxed as some mere human might be, but it’s definitely something very strange.  She decides to quietly send the manuscript back until she can make sense as to what has just happened.

But this incident hasn’t gone unnoticed.  Diana has just attracted the attention of a number of witches and other creatures, including a vampire--a very alluring vampire.

I’d heard a lot about this book, the first in a trilogy, and even more after it was turned into a well-reviewed TV series.  Harkness does a marvelous job of creating a world filled with strong non-human characters and complex societies.  There are three basic groups:  witches, vampires, and daemons, most of who regard other creatures as suspect at best and deadly enemies at worst.  There is a ruling council composed of three representatives of each species, and they are in charge of interpreting the rules and policing behaviors that might be detrimental to the creatures’ existence.  Most of the rules are in place to keep humans from finding out that the various creatures do exist. Running afoul of the Council can lead to severe consequences, including death.

Harkness also does a splendid job of incorporating history into the books.  Given that vampires can live a very long time, there are characters who can claim acquaintance with, say, Shakespeare, and who can remember what it was like to live through historical time periods from the Black Death to Nazi Germany.

While some would find it odd, there’s also a strong scientific thread running through the book as some of the characters seek to find reasons why the various creatures are failing to reproduce. And of course, vampires are always very interested in blood….

Besides the historical and the fantastical, there are romances and complex family connections. The characters are passionate, devoted, loyal, devious, and occasionally frightening.  As a reader I got caught up in their worlds and was up early turning pages to see what would happen next.

The second book is Shadow of Night, followed by The Book of Life.  There is a fourth book set in the same world with some familiar characters, Time’s Convert.

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