A Wizard's Guide To Defensive Baking
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Fourteen-year-old Mona isn't like the wizards charged with defending the city. She can't control lightning or speak to water. Her familiar is a sourdough starter and her magic only works on bread. She has a comfortable life in her aunt's bakery making gingerbread men dance.
But Mona's life is turned upside down when she finds a dead body on the bakery floor. An assassin is stalking the streets of Mona's city, preying on magic folk, and it appears that Mona is his next target. And in an embattled city suddenly bereft of wizards, the assassin may be the least of Mona's worries...
Customer Reviews
A great deal of fun and yet very thoughtful
Pitch perfect, with humor and heart. What does it mean to be a hero?
A a positive novel and has an uplifting ending
“A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking” is another heartwarming fantasy novel by T. Kingfisher, which is the pseudonym Ursula Vernon uses for her works for adults. It takes place in a medieval alternate world that features limited forms of magic. Our protagonist is a fourteen year old girl known as Mona. Mona works at her Aunt’s bakery, and this is where she has discovered her limited magical abilities that deal with doughs and breads. She can use magic to make them cook better, or even to make gingerbread cookies dance. She’s happy with her life, and all is well, until she finds a dead girl on the floor of the bakery early one morning.
This event brings her into the spotlight, and makes her a target for those who are trying to eliminate all those who have magical abilities. Mona’s life is now in danger, and soon her whole city is as well. Will we be able to help protect everything that she’s always held dear?
This could be considered a young adult novel, but it clearly can be enjoyed by adults as well. It won a number of awards in 2020-2021, and I think it was deserving of these accolades. It’s a positive novel and has an uplifting ending.
Delightful
I think the only word for this book is “delightful.” In a standard-issue medievaloid fantasy setting, a teenage apprentice baker and wizard finds herself thrust into the unexpected role of saving the city-state from plots and foreign invasion. With the help of an animated gingerbread man and a magical familiar in the form of a sourdough culture named Bob. I mean, what more do you need to know? The protagonist is believably complex and flawed and the baking-based magic (indeed, the general premise of how magic works in the world) is well-realized and woven into the plot and its resolution. I may be biased in my love of this book because the quarantine initiated me into the Sourdough Tribe. But then again, I think it’s just that good.