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CATTYWAMPUS by Ash Van Otterloo

CATTYWAMPUS

by Ash Van Otterloo

Pub Date: Aug. 4th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-338-56159-3
Publisher: Scholastic

Two preadolescent witches from rival magical families work together to reverse a hex gone haywire.

Magic is not to be performed in the McGill household, but when Delpha McGill finds the family spellbook hidden in a closet, she sets out to learn magic to pull herself and Mama out of poverty. Conversely, Katybird Hearn’s family secretly practices magic, but Katy’s own “conjure gift”—passed from mother to daughter—seems stuck. Born with XY chromosomes and androgen insensitivity, Katy is intersex; Katy knows she’s a daughter but worries that her ability might not fully develop. The feud between the two families—the cause of which no one remembers—ended years ago, but the families, and the girls, maintain a polite distance. Everything goes cattywampus when an argument over a runaway outhouse(?!) leads to the resurrection of angry McGill and Hearn ancestors—warring as though they never stopped. The girls have to put aside their differences to make things right, or it will be the end of both families forever. The even, third-person narration switches between impulsive Delpha and levelheaded Katy, giving voice to each girl’s insecurities and triumphs as she tries to quell her doubts about her place in her family, and in magic. Colloquialisms and vernacular bring the Appalachian North Carolina setting to life. Assume whiteness for most characters; classmate Tyler (who has a magical ability of his own) has two mothers, one of whom wears box braids. Katy’s 6-year-old brother is deaf, and the family uses ASL.

A spirited debut.

(Fantasy. 8-13)