Fourteen year old Mona is a baker but she is also a not-very-powerful wizard - her medium of choice is dough. She can make pastries dance and bread light and fluffy - nothing extreme or dangerous. But when someone starts killing off all the wizards her minor wizard status doesn't matter and she has to run or be killed. But the people killing off the wizards have to be stopped and Mona doesn't let her lowly abilities stop her - a wizard's got to do what a wizard's got to do.
Review of "A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking" on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Great book and a fun read. Only reason I didn't give it 5 stars is it badly needs an editor/proof reader.
SPOILERS BELOW
There are parts where the author obviously changed Uncle Albert's name but it never got corrected. There are times where the golems are referred to as cookies when they aren't. Just little things like that. The story is fantastic and fun, but just little English major nitpicking really.
Review of "A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking" on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
A 14 year old whose magic only works with baking. Her accidentally-created familiars, a bucket of sapient sourdough starter called Bob, and an animated gingerbread man. A city being undermined from within by totalitarian forces and under attack from the outside. And the army and other wizards unavailable...
T. Kingfisher is my favourite author discovery of this year, and since I do a lot of baking myself I couldn't wait to read this one. It's a YA book, no matter what her publishers think; yes, it starts with the discovery of a dead body, but have you ever read the original Brothers Grimm fairy tales? Kids love that dark stuff. It's in the same tone as "Minor Mage" (possibly in the same universe but it's hard to tell, they don't directly relate at all). Whether Kingfisher's characters are adult or teen, they always have a very down-to-earth and practical view …
A 14 year old whose magic only works with baking. Her accidentally-created familiars, a bucket of sapient sourdough starter called Bob, and an animated gingerbread man. A city being undermined from within by totalitarian forces and under attack from the outside. And the army and other wizards unavailable...
T. Kingfisher is my favourite author discovery of this year, and since I do a lot of baking myself I couldn't wait to read this one. It's a YA book, no matter what her publishers think; yes, it starts with the discovery of a dead body, but have you ever read the original Brothers Grimm fairy tales? Kids love that dark stuff. It's in the same tone as "Minor Mage" (possibly in the same universe but it's hard to tell, they don't directly relate at all). Whether Kingfisher's characters are adult or teen, they always have a very down-to-earth and practical view of the situation that I greatly appreciate. They generally have heroism thrust upon them, rather than starting out or viewing themselves as the heroes of the story, and are just trying to get through things a step at a time. So as Mona, 14 year old baking wizard, finds herself caught up in political plots after finding the body of a murdered girl in her aunt's bakery, she becomes involved very much against her will and has to think up novel ways that baking magic might be used to protect her and her loved ones and maybe even the city itself.
I particularly enjoyed the sapient sourdough starter Bob, and since the whole world seems to have made a sourdough starter during this pandemic year, the book is particularly amusing. I never named mine but I think it may now become known as Bob also ... although hopefully it will remain a little less intelligent! Highly recommend this book for any fantasy lovers, baking lovers, and teen readers in your life. And hey, support your local bookstore and order a few copies from them for Christmas presents this year!
Review of "A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking" on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
It is a well-known fact that if you want to make me rave about your book forever and forever the number one thing you can do is be clever. Be imaginative. Think of something that is a smart variation on something I've seen a million times and I will love you forever. That is the magic of this book. We've all seen the story of the young person who has to save everyone despite only have a little bit of talent. The genius of this story is to make that little bit of talent the ability to use magic to make baked goods and use that to power a hero's tale. Mona is fourteen and works in her Aunt Tabitha's bakery. She uses her magic to make the dough behave and sometimes to make gingerbread men dance for customers. Once she accidentally put too much magic into saving a sourdough …
It is a well-known fact that if you want to make me rave about your book forever and forever the number one thing you can do is be clever. Be imaginative. Think of something that is a smart variation on something I've seen a million times and I will love you forever. That is the magic of this book. We've all seen the story of the young person who has to save everyone despite only have a little bit of talent. The genius of this story is to make that little bit of talent the ability to use magic to make baked goods and use that to power a hero's tale. Mona is fourteen and works in her Aunt Tabitha's bakery. She uses her magic to make the dough behave and sometimes to make gingerbread men dance for customers. Once she accidentally put too much magic into saving a sourdough starter and now there is a carnivorous sourdough starter named Bob who lives in the basement. But really her life is pretty quiet until small magic users like her start to get targeted by the government and a murderer at the same time. Suddenly she is in hiding with only a street kid named Spindle who is able to help her. This book was both amazing funny and introspective. Should magic users have to register with the government?
"It seemed like once you agreed that the government could put you on a list because of something you were born with, you were asking for trouble." How many layers of authority have failed if it is up to a fourteen year old to save the city from an invading army?
What are you capable of with even just a little bit of talent if you start thinking big?
There are even discussions about post-military service PTSD and the concept of heroism in here. I have to admit Knackering Molly whose magic is based around horses had me in tears but I cry over anything horse related.
But overall the book is fun.
"The enemy warrior clearly had no idea what to make of the berserk woman charging at him, with her housedress flapping madly over her jingling armor. He gaped at her. Aunt Tabitha whacked him with the hammer so hard that his helmet got knocked halfway around his head, and he fell down. She kicked him a few times. Aunt Tabitha had very definite opinions about people who tried to invade her city."
"The gingerbread man began to dance a very respectable hornpipe. Don’t ask me where the cookies get the dances they do—this batch had been doing hornpipes. The last batch did waltzes, and the one before that had performed a decidedly lewd little number that had even made Aunt Tabitha blush. A little too much spice in those, I think. We had to add a lot of vanilla to settle them down."This review was originally posted on Based On A True Story