Showing posts with label Historical fantasy fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Historical fantasy fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

The Vanishing Bookstore

The Vanishing Bookstore was published on New Year's Day 2025. It is a historical fantasy fiction story, a genre I have never heard of before. I decided to give it a try just to mix up my usual reading fare. It was a delightful read.

The publisher's summary:
1692. On the outskirts of Salem, a bookstore stands covered in overgrown vines. Inside, a young woman hides a linen-wrapped journal under a loose floorboard and runs away, panicked by the sound of hounds barking in the distance. The bookstore vanishes into thin air…

Present day. Stepping inside a pale-pink house on one of the oldest streets in Salem, Dora can’t believe she’s about to finally meet the mother she thought died tragically when she was just a child. But the excitement is short-lived. Dora’s mother has fear in her eyes, and with a trembling voice she whispers: ‘my life is in danger, and now so is yours…’

Desperate not to lose her mother all over again, Dora digs into her family’s mysterious past, and stumbles upon a seemingly impossible secret: 
the key to their survival is hidden in a bookstore that no one has seen for generations.

Losing herself amongst thorny brackens and twisted ferns, Dora eventually finds the path that leads to the bookstore. 
But someone is watching her. They’ve been waiting for her.

As she pushes open the beautiful blue door hidden amongst the sharp brambles, and stands in front of rows of crumbling leatherbound books with faded pages, she has no idea of the secrets she is about to uncover. Or that her life is in more danger than ever before…

To my surprise I enjoyed this book. I am not a fantasy fan but the book reads more like a mystery. It is fast paced and kept my attention well. Given the title, I was expecting the story to be about a bookstore. It isn't. It is an engaging story about sisterhood that spans centuries. The witchcraft the sisters were known to practice doesn't become a part of the story until the last 50 pages. I felt uncomfortable reading the specific spells that the characters spoke and their request for Hecate to help them. Hecate originated in Thrace, an area that includes parts of Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey. She was originally a mother goddess of wilderness and childbirth and is the goddess of crossroads, the underworld, magic, witchcraft, and the moon. 

Up until the point where witchcraft became prominent, I loved this story. It reads fast and was engaging. I am rating it 4 out of 5 stars. I cannot fault the author for writing about witchcraft when the book description stated it was magical.