Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries

English language

Published Nov. 29, 2023 by Little, Brown Book Group Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-356-51912-8
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

(20 reviews)

9 editions

Fae and frolics - a slow-pace romance fantasy

Emily Wilde is a scholar from a 19th century Cambridge (UK), but in a world where the Fae are elusive but very much accepted as real. While continuing her work to complete the Encyclopedia of Fairies of the title, she travels to investigate the Fae of Scandinavia, and we follow her tale through her journal entries. What’s clever is a unusual and sensitive portray of Emily, who we see finally able to overcome some social ineptitude and start a slow-burning romance with her dashing academic rival and Cambridge colleague, Wendell, who of course has a mysterious background. My favourite parts were the Fae stories themselves (including the interludes outside the plot - literal stories within the story presented as journal footnotes); there’s nothing particularly new there, everything is very traditional folklore - it’s just very well done. What does jar is that the author clearly has no idea of Cambridge …

This is My Second Time Reading in One Year

(This is my original review from Goodreads, I read it in January and reread it this December. Easily a book I'm going to continue returning to yearly.)

I went into this book highly skeptical of it being able to pull off the combination of academics and fantasy, but it is now easily one of my favorite books in its genre.

The characters each have their own voices and distinct characterizations; from gruff but kindhearted townsfolk, to the "mousy" but dedicated main character, to, of course, the flamboyant but loving love interest, who I found was delightful to read.

The world is as fun to read about as the characters. Fawcett has a beautiful way of narrating that makes everything feel fresh and interesting, which only makes it more powerful when the characters come upon anything magical in their environment.

The book isn't perfect. In some spots the story felt a …

Review of "Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries" on 'Goodreads'

In a small attempt to break my habit of only writing reviews of books I hated, this one was AMAZING. I fell for Emily almost immediately, probably because as an introvert myself, I identified strongly with her.

I had it as an audiobook, and the narrator was excellent as well, sounding so exactly like you would imagine Emily to sound that it was so easy to get immersed in the story.

I have preordered the next book already and I really hope it will be the same narrator. I forgot to check.

None

One doesn’t need magic if one knows enough stories.


I think I expected more from this book, but I did enjoy what I got. There's such a strong sense of setting here, and it's precisely the kind of setting I love: a tiny community on the snow-covered edge of the world, surrounded by forests and mountains and frozen lakes, all of it touched with fairy magic. I enjoyed the way the fairy lore was handled: the academic approach to it, the relationship between the fairy magic/tradition and story tropes, and how close the fairies here are to what I expect from them based on folklore: fickle and cold-hearted and dangerously beautiful. The second half of the book was particularly strong in terms of this.

I also very much liked the mixture of cozy fantasy and fairy folk horror, or at least the concept of it. In practice, the coziness part …

Review of "Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries" on 'Goodreads'

4.5 stars.

This first book in the adult series "Emily Wilde" was not perfect, but it's the first time I have read a book like this one, making it difficult for me to rate it. I see all the aspects which need some improvement and I see why this book doesn't work for several people. Nonetheless, I have enjoyed much more than I expected because I could relate to Emily. I will start listing the cons and then come back to the reasons why it is still worked out for me.

Most of the issues are just the consequences of the diary format. Emily brings with her a fieldwork notebook and we see her entries over a time of 6 months. This means that we have only Emily's point of view (besides for a couple of entries by Wendell), leaving the characterization of othe characters very limited. On the other …

avatar for Wigwam12@ramblingreaders.org

rated it

avatar for tonieee

rated it

avatar for DollyWhiskers

rated it

avatar for patchworkbunny

rated it

avatar for asiem

rated it

avatar for bobkopp

rated it

avatar for root

rated it

avatar for proudblond

rated it

avatar for otterlove

rated it

avatar for btuftin

rated it

avatar for RobynGoodfellow

rated it

avatar for TheCacklingCrow

rated it

avatar for tcoil

rated it

avatar for Esther

rated it

avatar for auntie.terror

rated it

Lists