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SPELLBOUND UNDER THE SPANISH MOSS

A SOUTHERN TALE OF MAGIC

From the Spellbound series , Vol. 1

A dreamy and nuanced coming-of-age fantasy.

Novelist Connor Judson Garrett and travel writer Kevin N. Garrett offer a YA novel about a young fisherman who must undertake a quest to save his father from an otherworldly snakebite.

Circa the 1930s, teenager Gareth Greyfin and his father, Samuel, are fishermen of Savannah, Georgia. Gareth’s mother, Freya, died when he was an infant, and though Gareth and Samuel have vowed to sail the world together—to live out Freya’s dream and experience some of the magic found in Samuel’s bedtime stories—fear holds them back. Gareth berates his father, accusing him of being a coward. Then Samuel is bitten by a one-eyed viper, and all Gareth can think about is saving his dad’s life. As the venom brings Samuel closer to death, Gareth takes the elder Greyfin to see the witch Evangeline, who’s shunned and feared by the townsfolk but is an old school friend of Samuel’s. Evangeline sends Gareth on a quest, accompanied by her adopted daughter, Raven, a young woman of about Gareth’s age. Gareth must secure five ingredients with which to brew a cure, and they’re ingredients that he must harvest himself. But Evangeline may have another motive in sending him on a mission: It turns out that Raven can change between human form and that of a raven; as a raven, she can fly, but as a human, she’s unable to walk. Is Evangeline’s potion truly intended for Samuel, or would the witch sacrifice Samuel to give Raven the use of her legs? Joined by an old banjo-playing wanderer named Wally, can Gareth and Raven overcome their trepidation to collect the five magical ingredients?

The Garretts write in the omniscient present tense, and their prose has a fairy-tale quality to it, at once otherworldly and matter-of-fact, blending fantastical elements with a more mundane, bucolic idyll. The setting, which nominally encompasses the interbellum period between the two world wars, feels timeless. Yet, while the Garretts have a gift for description, their narrative style affords little distinction between everyday actions and unexpected or momentous events. (For example: “The trio continues walking as they talk. Suddenly, the earth below crumbles, and the ground gives way. They fall into a pit, the bottom of which is cushioned by a web as thick and strong as a net. Raven turns into a bird mid-air. ‘I guess we have arrived,’ Wally says breathless from landing with a thud.”) The novel’s true strength lies in its supporting characters—particularly Raven, Evangeline, and Wally—who, for all their strange allure, evince very real, very human flaws and uncertainties. The quest is secondary, but it proceeds at a steady pace and offers scope for character development and strange, unsettling encounters. The book’s three parts are prefaced with exquisite, full-page color illustrations from cover artist Pearson; these not only speak to events portrayed, but also give a sense of old-world enchantment and the wistful fragility of life. Such qualities permeate the story and will appeal to lovers of nuanced, morally complex magic and fable. A dreamy and nuanced coming-of-age fantasy.

Pub Date: June 4, 2020

ISBN: 9781950495054

Page Count: 108

Publisher: Lucid House Publishing

Review Posted Online: March 27, 2023

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THE CRIMSON THRONE

From the Spy and Guardian series , Vol. 1

An atmospheric fantasy brimming with intrigue and heart.

A fae guardian and an English spy must team up to protect Scotland from magical invaders.

In the world of this duology opener, Scotland and the fae realm are magically linked; peace in the former ensures peace in the latter. So it’s up to Alyth Graham, daughter of the fae prince and lady-in-waiting to Queen Mary, to protect the barrier that keeps the bloodthirsty Red Caps, fae who rebelled against the Seelie Court, out of Scotland. But when Red Cap weapons turn up in the Scottish court—and in the hands of Lord Darnley, Mary’s scheming husband—Alyth knows something is very wrong. Samson Calthorpe, illegitimate son of William Cecil, Queen Elizabeth’s secretary (who in this universe assumes Sir Francis Walsingham’s role as spymaster), was cursed in childhood by fae magic that causes him to black out and commit violent acts. Samson is among the few humans who knows the fae are real. When Cecil offers him a chance to be rid of the curse in return for spying on Mary, Samson agrees. A chance meeting throws Samson and Alyth together. Their attraction is immediate, but Alyth senses he’s hiding something. As danger mounts, the two work together and begin to care for each other. Samson’s and Alyth’s alternating first-person narratives keep the pace moving. The court intrigue, set against lush descriptions of Scotland, is well-balanced with the fantasy elements. Most characters are cued white.

An atmospheric fantasy brimming with intrigue and heart. (content warnings, historical note) (Historical fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Oct. 7, 2025

ISBN: 9781464236136

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

Review Posted Online: July 3, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2025

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YOU'VE FOUND OLIVER

An aching story of love, loss, and learning to look forward.

This companion to 2021’s bestselling You’ve Reached Sam explores first love, grief, and what remains after saying goodbye.

Nearly a year after the death of Sam, his best friend and secret crush, Oliver, a gay first-year college student, sends Sam one final text—only to receive a reply from the stranger who now has Sam’s old number. What begins as an accidental exchange evolves into a warm and unexpected connection, told in self-reflective first-person prose interspersed with text conversations. The prose blends dreamy flashbacks with present-day scenes showing Oliver’s loneliness, juxtaposing vivid memories of love unspoken with the tentative beginning of something new. The scenes move fluidly across time, showing prom, Halloween, a spring bonfire, and quiet cafe moments, all of which underscore the intensity of Oliver’s love and longing, while his banter-filled messages and blossoming rapport with the stranger he’s texting with offer glimmers of healing. His grief is messy and nonlinear, and the story doesn’t rush his recovery. Thao’s writing is intimate and vulnerable, balancing humor and heartbreak with emotional honesty. Touchstones like white roses, playlists, and quiet nights on campus recur throughout, grounding Oliver’s journey in sensory detail. This poignant story offers a nuanced depiction of grieving and embracing romantic possibilities. In the earlier book, Oliver presented white, and Sam was cued Japanese American.

An aching story of love, loss, and learning to look forward. (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 2025

ISBN: 9780593858479

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: Aug. 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2025

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