An Inevitable Magick
Lex Kelly
2024 - Rose & Thorn Books
You can never go home again, but sometimes you don’t get a choice about going back.
Liv Terrabella left Havenwood, California, over a decade ago, following her mother and younger sister away from the only home she had ever known and the group of friends she cared for, including her high-school sweetheart, Jaxon Hawthorne. Now, ten years later, Liv, along with her younger sister, Ivy, has returned to the ancestral magic house of the Terrabellas, as well as all the broken relationships she had left behind. But there is more than just the chance to reconnect with her past at stake for Liv. The Terrabella women have long had roots in earth magic. As one of the oldest magical families in town, they have had a certain responsibility in protecting Havenwood, a sanctuary for all magic users and other outsiders seeking safety within its borders. But Liv has been away from Havenwood for a long time, and her now deceased mother had cut both Liv and Ivy off from their inherited magic. Both of them struggle to understand their power, as Liv also attempts to reconnect with the fractured relationships with her old friends, particularly with her long-lost love, Jaxon. As a mysterious threat prods at the protective borders of Havenwood, Liv seems to have arrived back home just in time to help solve the mystery of just who could be endangering both her hometown and her family.
Author Lex Kelly’s debut novel, An Inevitable Magick, hearkens to familiar urban fantasy tropes: the witchiness of Charmed, the small-town feel of Gilmore Girls, the magic house of Encanto. In that sense, there is nothing particularly new or different here. What is interesting, however, is the story of Havenwood itself. Built in the nineteenth century as a haven for those who couldn’t quite fit in elsewhere, particularly those of magical descent, it is an interesting mix of mystical and mundane, a town where the witches and wizards live side-by-side with the normies, and everyone just accepts this. The idea of a community built around everyone seeking sanctuary together and working together to build a town in which everyone is equally protected has a lot of promise, particularly as it mixes quaint, small-town politics with an intriguing navigation of what it looks like to be a magical person living openly and honestly in a place that accepts it. Take that metaphor as you will, but it provides an interesting change from the Harry Potter-style hidden magic in broad daylight, which often is the case in urban fantasy. While this sort of acceptance seems only to be in Havenwood - or at least this is the reason given for why Liv cuts herself off from magic when she leaves town - the fact that nobody hides it or feels the need to keep it secret is a fun twist in the story.
Where the book falters, however, is in the pacing of the story and its character development. At the heart of Liv’s journey is a mystery: Why is it her mother rejected her magical heritage and fled Havenwood after Liv’s grandmother’s death? It is this decision that has created the trauma that has come to define both Liv and Ivy’s lives. Cut off from their heritage, they are struggling to figure out how to reconnect, both to themselves and each other. The shared, painful emotional journey of these two sisters should have been the focus of this novel. Instead, Kelly focuses her story not on the Terabella women, but instead on Liv’s relationship with Jaxon, her childhood sweetheart. The romance between the two, which frankly was a foregone conclusion from the moment they reconnect in the novel, feels as if it swallows the story up completely, pushing the true heart of the novel - Liv and Ivy’s relationship - completely to the side. Ivy becomes a tertiary character in the story, and consequently never sees any real development into a character in her own right. Rather, she is turned into a trope of a whiny, bratty, self-centered teenager with a bad attitude, which perhaps would be acceptable if Ivy were intended to be a fifteen-year-old. The fact that she is a young woman in her early twenties acting like this feels weirdly misplaced, and makes little sense when you try to wrap your head around their fractured relationship dynamics. Ivy’s old enough to live on her own. If she doesn’t like it, she can go! Why is it so important that she still lives with her parentified older sister? What is their story together? Why is it that Ivy hates Liv so much, and what was it like for these two abandoned girls growing up with a mother dealing with mental illness and her demons? These are the things I was most interested in from the story.
As for the romance part of the story, which frankly, takes up an outsized chunk, it is fine. Nothing is sweeping, intriguing, or different with the relationship of Liv and Jaxon. They are the typical “childhood sweethearts reconnect” sort of story, well and good. Why it takes such a central focal point in the novel is frankly confusing when the emotional heart of the story seemed to be much more in the relationship between the sisters. Yet the simmering, “will they/won’t they” of the Liv/Jaxon relationship takes so much of the plot's real estate that when they finally decide they will, their steamy encounters take up another giant part of the plot. I never cringe at good smut in a book, but for the first time, I think I have finally found a book that perhaps has a bit too much smut for my liking. Many key setups in Kelly’s overall story are left by the wayside in favor of Liv and Jaxon’s sexy times in the woods/greenhouse/actual houses (plural), among these is, sadly, Ivy, who is a character I am supposed to at least care about when we get to the climax of the story. The fact that I don’t means that when we get to the big reveal at the end of the book, it sort of feels…meh! Okay, sure, now we have this as a plot point, but why is it important? And why should I care? Kelly hasn’t built it up or earned an emotional response out of me, and because of that, it left me feeling rather unfulfilled at the end. Yes, we went on a journey, but not a particularly exciting one. I wanted to see more out of this.
Overall, Kelly’s story is an intriguing premise for a first-time book, but it suffers a bit from not understanding what sort of story it's trying to tell. Is it a torrid, bodice-ripper romance? Is it a Charmed-like modern magic fantasy? Is this a tale exploring generational trauma and the lasting damage it can cause? Yes! It is all of those things, but sadly, the most interesting part of this story is the one that gets the least attention. Here is to hoping that this problem is fixed for Kelly’s subsequent novels in the series.