“How ironic that I’d become the prisoner Grace had accused me of being all along.”
What a surprising read this one was! This is a short book (less than 200 pages), yet it doesn’t feel like it, and in the best way. There is a lot happening, and it’s never what you would expect —at all. The pacing is fast, and everything is important here. I, honestly, didn’t see most of the twists happen (which is pretty rare), and that effect of surprise was helped (a lot) by the choice of the multi POV (and writing style). The whole thing is pretty mesmerizing, and I’ll surely read this story more than once.
I loved the many references to fairy tales, and to witchy folklore (in a wide sense). It kept me engaged, and it contributed to the mystery lingering in this story as you wonder what truly happens (again, for the best).
Because, in the end, I Live to Serve the Witch is before anything else a story about identity, about who you are, from where you come from and what do you want to do. It’s a story about love (even though well intentioned), about how it can break you, heal you, confuse you, about how you can hurt someone just because you love them. And it’s a story about perspective,about how differently the same event can be perceived, about how someone’s truth can be someone else’s lie.
Believe me, no matter if it's a short one, it’s a story you truly want to read!
Thank you to the author and Colored Pages PR for the eARC. My opinions are my own.