Ratings2
Average rating4
★ "Skillfully crafted and sharply descriptive with horrifying imagery to spare… Powerfully angry and vengeance-laden, with terrifying and very human monsters." –School Library Journal, starred review
A queer, feminist spin on Stephen King’s The Mist, this ode to female-rage is a perfect pick for fans of She Is a Haunting, and a reminder that if "boys will be boys", girls will fight back.For high school senior Nell and her friends, a vacation house on a private Florida island sounds like the makings of a dream spring break. But Nell brings secrets with her—secrets that fuse with the island's tragic history, trapping them all with a curse that surrounds the island in a toxic, vengeful mist and the surrounding waters with an unseen, devouring beast.
Getting out alive means risking her friendships, her sanity, and even her own life. In order to save herself and her friends, Nell will have to face memories she'd rather leave behind, reveal the horrific truth behind the encounter that changed her life one year ago, and face the shadow that's haunted her since childhood.
Easier said than done. But when Nell's friends reveal that they each brought secrets of their own, a solution even more dangerous than the curse begins to take shape. Reading like a YA feminist spin on Stephen King’s The Mist, So Witches We Became is a diverse, queer horror about female friendship, the emotional aftermath of surviving assault, and how to find power in the shadows of your past.
Step into your witchy power or be swallowed by the curse–the choice is yours.
Reviews with the most likes.
This will definitely be a book that I think of far down the line. It's not an easy book even thought it might seem that from the synopsis. I think I thought it would be and then it very certainly wasn't. I think I knew that it would be a book that has more than what meets the eye – but I don't think I was expecting all of this.
The book certainly went above and beyond my expectations. I enjoyed the ride and was solidly in the book a ton. I really like friendship groups and I think all girls are always interesting (I have an older sister, we both went to the same all-girls school so for the most part most of our friends are girls) – there's so many ways that it can go. I liked this friendship group, I think they worked well together and even though they had their issues (as with any friendship group), they ultimately were there for each other. I really liked that – they chose to stick with each other and be there for each other.
Nell was definitely my favourite character. I liked that we were in her head, she was a good narrator and took us along the journey, allowing us to discover things through her. Which I like! Sometimes I prefer to figure out the mystery before the characters and other times I like when the characters and I are in the dark together. I didn't like Dia and Harper at the start – there were things that they did or things that happened and I wasn't exactly there for it. Luckily they improved and I ended up liking them.
I did want more of Harry but also I understood why they didn't focus on him more. But I like how they tied him in at the end. I was annoyed that Harper (his sister) got annoyed at him often and I kept saying “Harper, he's being a good brother!” I think I'm getting old but also like... trust your siblings, I feel? Especially if they're good like Harry.
I liked Tris from when we met her. I think it was a good idea to add her – both as a character and a love interest. I had hoped she would be a good addition and not just simply there (to add another character, I mean), so I was glad to see that wasn't the case. Gavin and Christopher however, I could and would throw both into the lake and not think twice of them. I instantly knew I'd dislike them and then it became even clearer (basically by their first scene). What boys/men think they can get away with just because they want to... will never cease to make me angry.
The plot and pacing go hand-in-hand together. It's a slow pace and it very much could've not been handled well but it did. That's credit to the author because sometimes a medium or even fast paced book can feel slow. I know with another book I'd easily be less interested or even dnf because the pacing is so slow and the plot is taking forever to show (and it's not even that long) but here it works. That's all due to the characters. They're well-written, fleshed out. Their differences work well both against each other and together when they need to. Could the author have introduced the witches earlier? Yes, but I'm actually glad that she didn't! It allowed me to get to know their personalities, how they interacted with each other.