Ratings2
Average rating3.3
Pride and Prejudice and Witches
After a mysterious fire at their home in Regency London displaces Gentlewitch Edith Rookwood and her now much-reduced family to their ancestral seat of Netherford Hall in Kent, she faces a new threat in the form of her tenant—the chaotic and lovely Poppy Brightwell.
The repairs on the old pile are prohibitive, Edith’s standing is uncertain, and her inheritance has been challenged by a forgotten American branch of the family. It is clear she needs to marry, soon and wisely—but the lively girl from Harrow House gradually comes to occupy all of her thoughts.
As tenants, rivals, suitors and enemies start to circle Netherford, and dark secrets about both women’s pasts come to light, Edith and Poppy must confront what it means to fight for love and family, and to be their authentic selves.
Featured Series
2 primary booksLove in Netherford is a 2-book series with 2 released primary works first released in 2024 with contributions by Natania Barron.
Reviews with the most likes.
Rating: 3.5
tldr;Netherford Hall is a fun read and though I had some issues I will still recommend it and will continue reading the series. I'm invested in the characters individually and hope to see more interactions and growth in the coming installments!
What I loved
What I didn't love
spoilers, please to not read unless you've finished the book!
The only thing I'm actually concerned about is the relationship and romance between Viola and Silas. He's supposedly in love with her and vice versa but we only saw their initial interaction and so I think if the second book picks up where book one of ends then it's going to be very difficult for Barron to make their romance believable for reader's
1.75/5
I was disappointed by this book. I was expecting something better, frankly.
For a book that is marketed as a Pride and Prejudice sapphic retelling with magic it lacks the most important part of the book: the romance between the characters. The chemistry just wasn't there, there was no banter or any connection, really. Is it a retelling? A bad one. It's more of a distorted copy - one that includes all the iconic lines from the original book like “it is the truth universally acknowledged” etc. Unfortunately, the style it was written affected the book.
Jane Austen lived in 19th century so she wrote the way she spoke. It feels authentic because it was authentic to her. Unfortunately, Natania tried to copy Austen's style too much. It didn't feel genuine or effortless - it felt pompous and disgenuous.
The characters weren't written well. Poppy was a fun character, but the rest weren't. Where Edith was supposed be a brooding Darcy and Poppy a light-hearted Elizabeth, it gave them a role reversal. Darcy (Edith) was the one who struggled trying to keep the family together from cousins who tried to take away everything, while Elizabeth (Poppy) ... What, exactly? There weren't many elements from Darcy's live in Poppy, perhaps except for a loving sister. But unlike the original book, Poppy wasn't the eldest and she didn't have to be a parent to her siblings.
Like I mentioned, the writing was just bad. The chapters were long and pov changed between the paragraphs so fast, it was jarring. I couldn't get into a mind of one character and try to understand their motives and try to like them, before I was ripped away from them, forced into someone else's pov and the process began from the start again. I didn't like that, and it made me enjoy the book even less.
Thank you, NetGalley and Rebellion publishing for providing me with an ARC for my honest opinion.
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I really wanted to like this one more than I did.
Netherford Hall is the start of Natania Barron's paranormal Austen retellings. This particular book is a queer Pride and Prejudice retelling with witches, and vampires. I love anything related to Jane Austen, and you all KNOW how much I love paranormal romances, so yeah, I jumped at this one. Unfortunately, it didn't really HIT the way I wanted it to. I don't think it's really the author's fault, either. I think this one is fully on me.
Netherford Hall is written GORGEOUSLY – Natania Barron is an AUTHOR, I just found myself not really caring about the characters, one way or another. I did like how bright Poppy was, but I thoroughly did not care about Edith, like, at all. She had a horrid backstory, and a horrible event happen to her and her family and it just didn't feel like she cared very much? It would have been nice to see some emotion on page, instead of her being sooo stoic. I know she's supposed to be Darcy in this Pride and Prejudice retelling, and that's literally what he's known for, but still. I want to care about the characters, especially the main two!!
The background / additional characters were lovely, though. Tons of representation – POC, queer, etc. All well done, and without really drawing attention to it in any particular way. This version of Britain is perfectly content to let people live their love lives however they want, which is so very refreshing. I wish more romances were written like this – we have enough prejudices in real life, thanks, we don't need to read about them, too! (Not all the time, at least) I really adored Edith's uncle, Auden, and I hope that we see more of him in future books.
I have an ARC of the next book in this series, The Viscount St. Albans, but I'm not sure I'm going to dive into it right away. I might need a bit of a break before I jump back into this world. Hopefully, I like the next book better than this one. Three and a half stars.