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The Spellshop

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The Spellshop is Sarah Beth Durst’s romantasy debut–a lush cottagecore tale full of stolen spellbooks, unexpected friendships, sweet jams, and even sweeter love.

Kiela has always had trouble dealing with people. Thankfully, as a librarian at the Great Library of Alyssium, she and her assistant, Caz—a magically sentient spider plant—have spent the last decade sequestered among the empire’s most precious spellbooks, preserving their magic for the city’s elite.

When a revolution begins and the library goes up in flames, she and Caz flee with all the spellbooks they can carry and head to a remote island Kiela never thought she’d see again: her childhood home. Taking refuge there, Kiela discovers, much to her dismay, a nosy—and very handsome—neighbor who can’t take a hint and keeps showing up day after day to make sure she’s fed and to help fix up her new home.

In need of income, Kiela identifies something that even the bakery in town doesn’t have: jam. With the help of an old recipe book her parents left her and a bit of illegal magic, her cottage garden is soon covered in ripe berries.

But magic can do more than make life a little sweeter, so Kiela risks the consequences of using unsanctioned spells and opens the island’s first-ever and much needed secret spellshop.

Like a Hallmark rom-com full of mythical creatures and fueled by cinnamon rolls and magic, The Spellshop will heal your heart and feed your soul.

384 pages, Hardcover

First published July 9, 2024

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About the author

Sarah Beth Durst

38 books3,404 followers
Sarah Beth Durst is the New York Times bestselling author of over twenty-five books for adults, teens, and kids, including cozy fantasy The Spellshop. She's been awarded an American Library Association Alex Award, as well as a Mythopoeic Fantasy Award. Several of her books have been optioned for film/television, including Drink Slay Love, which was made into a TV movie and was a question on Jeopardy! She lives in Stony Brook, New York, with her husband, her children, and her ill-mannered cat. Visit her at sarahbethdurst.com.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 4,956 reviews
Profile Image for Brend.
691 reviews1,150 followers
August 9, 2024
''She and her assistant, Caz, a sentient spider plant..''
Ok. Sold.

Wish I had enjoyed this more but, sadly, I felt like nothing was happening. I get that's part of the cozy fantasy genre but it doesn't mean I have to like it. I think I would enjoy a story like this more as a movie, cause it was more vibes than anything.
Also, there were winged kittens. If I could see those on screen, I would care less about the lack of plot.
Profile Image for Rosh.
1,951 reviews3,329 followers
July 26, 2024
In a Nutshell: A cosy fantasy with an unlikeable protagonist who redeems herself along the way. A whole load of cosy, a little less of fantasy. Interesting (but flat) humans, outstanding non-humans, decent but straightforward storyline. A nice light option for those who prefer cute fantasies and can read without overanalysing.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Plot Preview:
Kiela hates dealing with people. Thanks to her job as a librarian at the Great Library of Alyssium in the capital of the Crescent Island empire, she avoids people at all costs, with her sentient spider plant Caz being more than enough company. But when the rebellion strikes and the library is up in flames, Keila has no choice but to escape with Caz and whatever books she can carry. The only destination that seems safe is her late parents’ home in the faraway island where she had spent her childhood years. She hasn’t been to this abandoned old cottage in more than a decade, but even then, she can sense that something is not right on the island. Luckily, Kiela worked in the ‘spell books’ section of the library, so the books she carried to safety contain magical spells. Yes, it is illegal for any non-sorcerer to cast spells, but this far away from the capital, no one would know, right?
The story comes to us in Kiela’s third-person perspective.


Bookish Yays:
🌳 Caz – Kiela’s assistant and spider plant extraordinaire. He goes so much more than being a talking plant, acting as an overly anxious friend and guide. His banter with Kiela is great fun. The biggest and best reason to read this book is Caz. (Technically, I should put this as a Mixed Bag. The downside of this is that I’ll never be happy with my ordinary, boring, non-talking plants now. I want Caz! 😢)

🌳 The fantastical creatures in the book, which include some we already know as well some innovative new ones. Winged cats and merhorses, anyone? 😍 I also include Meep in this category, and leave it for you to discover who or what Meep is.

🌳 The magic in the book, heavily rooted in nature and hence appearing even more delectable. I loved all the magic of the book, even when it wasn’t friendly.

🌳 The food references, from berry jams to cinnamon buns. My salivary glands rarely get affected by mention of Western dishes in fiction, but the descriptions in this one were yummm!

🌳 All things books – the magic of them, the value of them, the importance of treating them with care. Kiela’s person skills might be zero, but her librarian skills were top notch. Caz was the perfect assistant, being surprisingly passionate about books though he probably knew they are made from dead trees.

🌳 Because of the remote island setting, the story offers nice small-town feels, where neighbours can be helpful as well as inquisitive. The found family trope is used fairly well.

🌳 The indirect focus on the perils of resource hoarding by a select few, climate change affecting ordinary citizens, animals and nature suffering because of human misdemeanours, and parental abuse affecting children – all minor arcs but important and intriguing enough.

🌳 Can’t forget that stunning cover! It is almost like a painting. Don’t miss the adorable winged cat!


Bookish Mixed Bags:
🌱 While this is a cosy fantasy, it is heavily tilted towards the cosy side than the fantasy side. I like cosy fantasies so I was somewhat prepared for what I would get going into this novel. But I wish the writing had not worried so much about making things cosy that it forgot many other necessary requirements of a satisfying reading experience.

🌱 Kiela is a complicated protagonist, and not exactly a loveable one. She is quite grumpy and annoying at the start. She is also too impulsive, naïve, and a short-term thinker. While I don’t mind unlikeable characters (I think they offer far more depth to stories than goody-goody characters), the conversion of Kiela’s people-shirker persona to town saviour and friend is a bit too instant to be convincing. If you necessarily want novels to have likeable leads, this book might not work for you.

🌱 Larran and the other citizens of the town are much better and hence more likeable than Kiela, but their character dev is somewhat surface level. They are either 100% likeable or detestable, no in-between greys. This gets boring. Larran, being the male lead, deserved better character development, but we don’t even know what he looks like, except that he is huge.

🌱 The basic storyline is too simplistic. Except for the fantastical characters and the references to magic, the plot has a typical romcom storyline: a city girl moving to a small village, finding love in various forms, and deciding that her new location is way better than the life she left behind. I wish there had been some novelty to the plot, though the magical beings were imaginative enough to save the book.

🌱 The approach to the story is somewhat episodic, with several conflicts coming and going over the course of the 384 pages. Once a conflict is settled, it doesn’t pop up again. This works well in continuity, but it also feels formulaic after a point. I’m surprised that the major historical event at the start of the book – a revolution in the empire that ends with the emperor being killed and the city overtaken by rebels – is chucked aside after Keila moves to her hometown. Even during later mentions of the rebellion, there are no major details provided. If you begin with a political plot-point, surely that needs to be settled better.

🌱 The world building is highly developed on some points, and lacklustre on others. The townspeople (when they are non-human) and the fantastical creatures get exceptional description, but the ordinary humans barely get any detailing. We get great descriptions of the island setting, but hardly anything about its magical backstory. We know the whats of the magic, but it is taken for granted that we also know the hows and whys.

🌱 This is tagged as a fantasy romance. So I can’t really complain about the dominant presence of the romance, but I will complain that the romance was a bit too insta for my liking. It had elements of grumpy (Keila) vs sunshine (Larran), and was clean, so no steam-related worries.


Bookish Nays:
🍂 Though the writing is in third person, there are a lot of inner monologues, which also leads to loads of repetition. The proceedings are also somewhat slow because of this, though I didn’t mind the slow part.

🍂 Some plot points are too convenient to be convincing. A cottage that has been abandoned in the wild for more than a decade still has everything in working order and the bed isn’t even dusty? A character changes their stance on a topic at the most opportune moment? People pop up exactly when they are needed?

🍂 I think the book should have had a different title. Not only is it a spoiler (because Keila doesn’t take a call about “selling spells” until much into the book, but it is also inaccurate, since there is no actual “spell shop’ in the book.

🍂 The second relationship introduced at the end comes out of nowhere. I think it was introduced just to tick off one item on the inclusivity checklist, but it simply wasn’t needed. A similar forced inclusion is the mention of the pronoun preference of a talking plant. I’m not kidding! (At times, I feel like we are going too far with the inclusivity rep in fiction. Yup, I said it! Yes, we need to be inclusive and treat all gender and sexual orientations equally, but do we need to shove it into every single plot, even when it doesn’t even make sense?)


🎧 The Audiobook Experience:
The audiobook, clocking at 12 hrs 11 min, is narrated by Caitlin Davies. Her exuberant performance matches the cosy tone of the story. She does go a bit over the top during dialogue delivery, but I don’t mind this because it adds greater emotional depth and excitement to the conversations. Her voices for Caz and Meep were fabulous. If you want to give this book a go, I’d definitely recommend the audio version to audiobook aficionados. It would also be a great option for audio newbies as the timelines are straightforward and the characters, limited.


All in all, there are a few gaps in the writing approach of this novel, but there is also enough to enjoy. Caz alone should be a strong reason for you to pick up this ‘cottage-core’ (so many new labels these days!) fantasy-romance.

Recommended to cosy fantasy readers who don’t mind an extra bucketload of cutesy in their novels. This is Twee with a capital T! Be prepared to leave logic aside to enjoy it better.

3.5 stars, rounding up for Caz, Meep, and the audiobook.


My thanks to Pan Macmillan and Tor for providing the DRC, and Macmillan Audio for providing the ALC of “The Spellshop” via NetGalley. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.


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Connect with me through:
My Blog || The StoryGraph || Instagram || X/Twitter || Facebook ||
Profile Image for Robin.
441 reviews3,216 followers
September 2, 2024
screw capitalism i want whatever this is (a cute shop where i sell spells and make jam + a hot man builds me floor to ceiling bookshelves)
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,608 reviews4,289 followers
June 6, 2024
This was EXACTLY what I wanted out of a cozy fantasy romance!! It's precisely the right amount of coziness and small town vibes, but with high enough stakes that there's an engaging plot, and a cute slow-burn romantic subplot. Also the main character has a sentient spider plant named Caz as a companion!

The Spellshop follows Kiela and Caz as they flee the city and political unrest to her childhood home on a small island. Kiela had been a librarian and brought with her crates of forbidden spellbooks to save them. She's not great with people, but she's going to have to learn to be, what with a handsome neighbor dropping by to be helpful. In order to survive, she decides to open a jam shop from her cottage, while secretly offering useful but illegal spells as "remedies" to do things like heal trees and make berry bushes grow. It's incredibly delightful and one of my favorite things I've read this year! the audiobook also hits exactly the right notes. I received a copy of this book for review via Netgalley, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for liz ౨ৎ.
85 reviews276 followers
September 20, 2024
4 stars
“It wasn’t that she didn’t like people. It was only that she liked books more. They didn’t fuss or judge or mock or reject. They invited you in, fluffed up the pillows on the couch, offered you tea and toast, and shared their hearts with no expectation that you’d do anything more than absorb what they had to give.”


if i had to describe this book in a few words, i’d say it’s enchanting, magical, cozy, and heartwarming. this book feels like a warm hug. the kind of book you read with a delicious baked pastry, a warm cup of coffee or tea, and of course, raspberry jam!

this book is for the introverts, the book lovers, the readers who wish to escape to a magical fantasy world.

🧚 “Books should be shared with everyone who wants to open their minds and hearts to them.”

ꫂ➺ kiela - the introverted librarian who loves books and doesn’t like socializing with people!! i loved her tbh, she was so real and i saw myself in her <3 i loved seeing her slowly start to open up to people and letting them in! it felt like a warm hug!

🌿 “Are you ever lonely?”
“How can I be? I have books.”


ꫂ➺ caz - a talking spider plant as a best friend?! yeah i need one of those! i loved caz!! he was hilarious and never failed to make me laugh and just brought so much happiness onto the page <3

🪵 “You know, plants aren’t nearly as emotionally exhausting as humans. You should try to be more plant.”

🪻“I can’t lose books, I’d lose me.

i absolutely loved the friendship these two had! it was so heartwarming and it gave me such joy!!

🌷“Larran thinks you’re the answer to every question he’s ever had.”

ꫂ➺ larran - UGH THIS MAN. he’s the most sweetest, caring and kindest soul ever. he’s awkward, he’s clumsy; everything he did, he did without asking and out of the kindness of his heart. he built kiela bookshelves, he fixed her stairs, he fixed her chimney, he always helped her without asking and just had so much love for those he cares about! i need someone like him!!!!

🌸 “but he’s careful with his heart. Never lets himself become close to anyone.”
“Until you.”
“You can hear it in the way he talks about you,”


🧺 “He was looking at her as if she was all that existed on the entire island.”

🌱 “He turned his head and smiled at her as if she’d gifted him with the sun, the moon, and all the stars.”

I LOVED KIELA AND LARRAN SO SO MUCH!!!! the most precious slow burn ever and they have my entire heart!!!!
Profile Image for manju ♡.
187 reviews1,791 followers
Shelved as 'dnf'
September 15, 2024
pains me to dnf this bc i was so excited but i can’t force myself to finish 😭 might revisit later idk

introverted librarian & her talking spider plant?? sign me tf up
Profile Image for Maeghan &#x1f98b; HIATUS on & off.
299 reviews236 followers
September 5, 2024
W•I•N•G•E•D-C•A•T•S

« He was looking at her as if she was all that existed in the entire island » 💗

This was the most heartfelt, wholesome, coziest and cutest book I’ve ever read 😭 I never wanted this to end. This was everything I never knew I needed 🥹 it’s honestly such a happy book. I smiled the whole way through.

🐱🪽 WINGED CATS 🪽🐱
🪴 A TALKING PLANT
🐎 Horse-fish
🦄 UNICORN
🧜‍♀️ Mermaids and their babies 🥹
❤️ Slow burn romance
🫖 Cozy fantasy

« I like to be alone.
- You can be alone with me »
Profile Image for Gillian.
211 reviews308 followers
September 20, 2024
This book was great! This was such a heartwarming and sweet cozy fantasy about family, friendship, community, love and finding home. The Spellshop follows Kiela, a librarian who must flee after the library catches on fire during the revolution. Kiela goes to the island where she grew up and she discovers friends and love that will last a lifetime.

I was completely swept up in this wonderful cozy fantasy from the very first page. I loved the cozy vibes in this book and I loved that this book focused on friendship and love. The fantasy creatures in this book were great especially the mermaids, merhorses, talking plants, a centaur, and more. I loved the world building in this book, the author explained the world but it wasn't complicated. The plot kept for interesting for most of the book and the pacing was well done. This book felt like a warm hug and a cozy blanket. I was smiling and giggling during most of the book, it was so wholesome. I enjoyed the characters immensely! I love Kiela so much, she is brave, caring, closed-off at first but once she opens up she is so kind, hardworking and resilient. Kiela's character development was great, I enjoyed watching her become more comfortable around other people and find a home for herself. I'm in love with Larran, he is such a sweet cinnamon roll character with a heart of gold and I loved how he treated Kiela. Larran made me blush at all the sweet things he did for Kiela including building her a bookshelf. I really liked Caz (a plant who can talk), he is so funny, helpful, sweet, and caring. I enjoyed the side characters a lot too, especially Bryn, Eadie, and Ulina. I love Larran and Kiela's relationship, they understand each other and caring toward one another. I loved the romantic scenes between Larran and Kiela. I will definitely remember the message of this story and the great characters for a long time.

I recommend this book to anyone who loves cozy fantasy, awesome characters and cozy vibes.
Profile Image for Quirine.
122 reviews2,610 followers
August 21, 2024
If you ever played one of those cozy magical farming games and always wished there was a book like it: look no further. It reads exactly like a cottage core game. Girl comes back to the island she was born on at has to restore the overgrown family cottage, learn how to regrow berries and trees with the right spells and open a magical little jam shop (give me the Switch version, now!). This book did exactly what it needed to do. It was cozy, magical, heartwarming and a perfect escape. There were magical creatures like winged cats, a sentient and sassy spider plant, a hot bookshelf-building neighbor and cinnamon buns.

It wasn’t perfect, in terms of writing. The plot was all just a little too convenient, with minor crises and their solutions following each other up on rapid speed. The main character’s character development happens a little too abruptly (from town grump to town savior and friend of all) and most of the other characters (except Caz! He has my heart) are quite flat. The inclusivity elements felt forced and a little preachy. The first half of the book is an absolute delight, and the second half lost some of its strength as it attempted to touch upon bigger and more difficult themes, but only managed to touch the surface.

But when I grab a book like this, I don’t go to it for the good writing (and this definitely was one of the better ones within the genre!) I go to for it the way it will make me feel. So this one I rated purely for my enjoyment of it and I enjoyed it A LOT.
Profile Image for destiny ♡ howling libraries.
1,877 reviews6,107 followers
Want to read
March 13, 2024
As if I wasn't already sold on the premise of this cozy fantasy, there's also some sort of winged cat??? on the cover and I'm just going to eagerly and hopefully assume it's a pet/companion character I can obsess over 🥹
Profile Image for Lindsey♡ (Semi-Hiatus).
141 reviews161 followers
Want to read
July 9, 2024
ONE MORE DAY✨✨✨
I am so excited to read this! I need all the sweet and cozy cottage vibes!💓
Not to mention look at this cover😍😍
Profile Image for Jareth Navratil.
Author 1 book100 followers
July 29, 2024
I am absolutely in love with the cozy fantasy genre that's exploding in popularity, and I think it's fair to say that Sarah Beth Durst is one of the most practiced and reliable authors in that lane. I think what I love most about the genre is how heavily the plot must rely on the characters, and 'The Spellshop' is no exception. Set amidst the backdrop of a revolution against a tyrannical Empire, the plot doesn't revolve around heroic revolutionaries, or an heir to the throne desperate to escape the fate of the empire...instead we meet Kiela, a junior librarian of the empire's library, who rescues as many books as she can from the flames devouring her beloved stacks. Fleeing with her assistant, Caz, who is a sentient spider-plant, the two abscond to Kiela's home island to wait out the revolution while keeping the tomes they rescued safe. Their initial plans on keeping a low-profile are spoiled by the neighborly denizens of the island who are eager to welcome home their wayward citizen. And Kiela soon cannot resist the siren call of the books she rescued, diving into their spells to attempt to fix the problems plaguing her new home.

I recommend this book to anyone seeking a delicious comfort read.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
Author 77 books1,125 followers
July 27, 2024
What an absolutely wonderful book - like a big warm hug in paper form! (Or like a soft hug from the hilarious and deeply endearing sentient spider plant sidekick in this novel.) The Spellshop is deeply, deeply cozy, but with a sharp enough edge (as the heroine flees the bloody aftermath of a revolution she supports in principle - but that would kill her if she stayed - and then sets up an illicit spell shop that will definitely HELP people, but that could get her executed if the wrong people find out) that it's never saccharine. Instead, it's like the tart, incredible raspberry jam she makes (in scenes that made my mouth water as I read). And I looooooved the lowkey romance subplot, too! There was so much in this book about vulnerability and courage and community, and none of it felt simplistic - it was all carefully thought through, which made its themes really powerful.

I loved the characters - I loved the story - and I finished the book with a huge smile on my face. I'm glad I got it in hardcover, because there will definitely be MANY comfort re-reads of it in the future.
Profile Image for h o l l i s .
2,606 reviews2,228 followers
July 8, 2024
Just keep on scrollin' by.

I'm sorry to say but as interesting as it was to have fantastical creatures and different-looking people populating this very low-stakes cozy fantasy, set on an island, featuring an introverted and somewhat grumpy librarian and her sentient spider plant friend.. I was so bored.

I didn't need stakes, I didn't need something other than the cozy vibes, so it can't be said I wanted something other than what I was getting into; instead I just needed to care. And I did not.

For those who have been loving this, don't get me wrong, I see why. And for those interested in picking this up, I don't want to sway you to do otherwise. This just wasn't the book for me.

All that to say, this is definitely for the reader looking for something to recapture that LEGENDS & LATTES kind of vibe but is still a little (a lot?) different and very much its own thing.

** I received an ARC from NetGalley and the publisher (thank you!) in exchange for an honest review. **

---

This review can also be found at A Take From Two Cities.
Profile Image for kynley.
9 reviews337 followers
August 29, 2024
truly, i adore this book. i did not go into this story thinking it was going to be the best book i ever read, and it wasn’t, HOWEVER, it was perfect for what it was written for. and it was written to feel like a pastry with jam on it and a cup of hot coco (as the author stated in her acknowledgements) and that is EXACTLY how this book feels.

it is a very wholesome story following a woman, Kiela, who pretty much discovers the power of community and what it means to pour into people and have them pour into you. and she does it all with an absolute gem of a character, a sentient spider plant named Caz. who may be one of the greatest fictional characters ever.

i will say, i would have loved a bit more romance. this book is marketed as a romance but, honestly, the love story felt a little pushed to the side. i wasn’t too bothered by this because i enjoyed all the scenes with various characters, but i’m a romance girlie at heart and i felt like they simply didn’t have enough scenes together, nor enough “get to know each other” moments. regardless, their story was sweet and i enjoyed it. it was refreshing from the heart pounding earth shattering romantasies that i typically read lol, it did feel a bit more tangible and realistic, and for that, i do greatly appreciate it.

I ALSO WOULD’VE LOVED MORE SCENES WITH THE FLYING CATS. LIKE SARAH. YOU MADE FLYING CATS. WHY ARENT THEY A VITAL PART OF THE STORY?!

anywaaaaaaay…

overall, this was a book that i could read during a stressful week, and it felt like taking a break. i’m pretty sure it cured all my headaches the past week and a half i spent reading it. every time i opened it, Caz said something hilarious and i got a dose of serotonin and BOOM headache cured. also, i want to live in a cottage with many many bookshelves. so i’d like to jump into these pages and live there.

if you want a cozy, cottagecore, fantasy read, i HIGHLY recommend this. it’s low stakes, but still keeps the pages turning. truly, i’m so glad i picked this up.

ALSO, i like to pick theme songs that i read for books (songs that just seem to fit the vibes) and this is the one i chose for the spellshop:
“Getaway Cabin” by Sidney Bird

ENJOY
xx
Profile Image for Emily✨.
1,864 reviews45 followers
Currently reading
September 28, 2024
"Kiela has always had trouble dealing with people, and as librarian at the Great Library of Alyssium, she hasn’t had to."

The implication that being a librarian is a job that doesn't involve "dealing with people" is hilarious tbh
Profile Image for Quill&Queer.
1,214 reviews493 followers
July 14, 2024
I thought I was getting something with a cosy fantasy vibe and I feel like I've been duped into reading a very basic romance. Sorry but if I'm reading "Oh he can't possibly like me!" on repeat by 30% I'm out.
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,142 reviews2,171 followers
July 29, 2024
Thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ARC. It hasn't affected the contents of my review.

This book does exactly what cozy fantasy is designed to do (I know this was published by Bramble, Tor's fantasy romance imprint, but the romance is not the central aspect of the book; it is a cozy fantasy first and foremost). About an hour in, I wanted to drop my entire life and move into the book so I could have a flying cat and a sentient cactus who can only say MEEP and a spider plant best friend, and do magic with my friends while we drink tea and make friends with tree spirits while eating jam-filled pastry.

Halfway through, I just went ahead and preordered the book.

If you like fantasy and want something wholesome and heartwarming to wish your way into for an afternoon, this might be the book for you. Very glad I read it.

Read Harder Challenge 2024: Read a cozy fantasy book. (Just had to do a last-minute swap bc The Witch's Guide to Magical Innkeeping has been pushed to 2025 sadface.)
Profile Image for Marina.
292 reviews27 followers
March 29, 2024
I'm so overwhelmed.

This was so lovely, so cozy, so delightful like this is the kind of advanced cozy fantasy read ive been craving since..... Welp forever.

Tired of reading high fantasy? Need a break? Well you've come to the right place. Come and rest at Kieras delightful cottage, where for 384 pages (that will pass in the blink of an eye) you get to :

- ride your (hot), kindhearted, and socially awkward neighbors (who might have a huge crush on you) seahorses by the sea

- see and help a mermaid- baby!

- take care of your garden ( DEFINITELY without the use of any magic! Nope. No magical garden around here!)

- transform your cottage into being capable of supporting your cozy little business shop (that JUST sells jam! No books to be found here folks! Noone is sharing any magical remedies around these places!)

- Create delicious raspberry jam (in collaboration with the villages friendly baker of course!)

- With the encouragement of your talking, low-key murderous, book loving, spider plant companion ( it's a long story) , find your own little place in the village slowly yet surely with a unique found family the friendship of which is so heartwarming to read of.

- Help the nature of the village and in turn have cloud- made bear spirits AND a unicorn show their gratitude to you.

Overall? This was excellent and at its core a story centered around the importance of sharing knowledge, appreciating / caring about books and nature, and accepting yourself as well as finding acceptance from the community around you.
Profile Image for Jan Agaton.
1,075 reviews1,104 followers
August 29, 2024
one of the coziest books ive ever read, but it was a bit too long and the main character got annoying, and pitching this as a fantasy romance is a bit of a stretch. loved Caz & Meep though! I kept picturing Meep as the orange guy from Chicken Little & Larran as Wreck-It Ralph & idk how to explain myself tbh
Profile Image for Ashley.
533 reviews83 followers
July 7, 2024
This is perfect for fans of Legends & Lattes / Bookshops and Bone dust. Low steaks and very cozy. I especially loved the world building and magic in this one.

Our FMC is an introverted librarian who escapes to her childhood home with her talking spider plant. She realizes that the island here is suffering so she takes her cherished and spells book to use to help the locals under the guise of having a Jam shop.

You meet so many interesting characters in the book. I especially loved Lorren and his merhorses. The creatures in this book were exceptional.

The narration was great. The voice was realizing and able to convey the characters.

Thank you to Macmillan audio for the advanced listener's copy.
Profile Image for Kat.
241 reviews191 followers
July 25, 2024
Damn it… I was prepped and ready to be a hater. By every meaningful metric, I did not particularly enjoy the experience of reading this book. I felt basically no compulsion to pick it back up when I wasn’t reading, and thought about dnf’ing a couple times. And yet.

The Spellshop effectively asks: what if the Legends & Lattes formula was Hallmark instead of D&D? It kicks off with the fish-out-of-water city girl returning to her quaint island hometown. She moves into the house conveniently left to her by her late parents, struggles to integrate with the quirky townsfolk, and reconnects with the perfect golden retriever man who has secretly had a crush on her ever since they were kids together. But all of these romantic staples are infused with aggressively cozy fantasy - the childhood friend is a merhorse farmer, there are centaurs and other magical beings mixed in with the townsfolk, and the city girl integrates into the island culture by starting a spellshop. Every element of this story is familiar, and that’s very much by design.

By the end of this book, I realized that my problem with it was entirely a me problem. I’m just not a huge cozy fantasy person, and this is COZY. Having read a decent handful of other cozies, though, I can recognize the ways that The Spellshop actually surpasses a lot of its contemporaries. This is a subgenre that tends to struggle to say anything meaningful, and often fumbles its ethical subtext in its refusal to address unpleasant realities. When a book purports to be cozy, we have to ask: “cozy for who?” Legends & Lattes is a prime example: the entire plot literally hinges on a magical allegory for cultural appropriation, and the book is deeply uninterested in even taking that into consideration. Everything must remain glossy and easy and surface-level.

The Spellshop’s ethical subtext is thoroughly realized and fairly cohesive. This book is very decisively about fascism, about protecting the most vulnerable community members, and about each individual’s ability and moral obligation to break from unethical systems in the ways that we can. It’s about book burning and hoarding vs freely sharing knowledge. It’s unsubtle in its messaging, and I won’t say it always exactly nails every point - it IS hard to balance critique of fascism with a centaur bakery - but damn if it doesn’t try, and I’ll absolutely give it the A for effort.

Don’t get me wrong, this is very much a glossy book. It’s sweet to the point of being saccharine. It’s aggressively cutesy, with winged cats and mermaids and lots and lots of jam and baked goods. The villains are very obvious, the romance is very simple, and everything will very obviously be ok in the end. Also, the main character was honestly pretty unbearable (in the beginning - her character arc is actually solid). But this book succeeds in what it sets out to do and then some. The ending was actually outstanding, and really won me over even though I’d been feeling lukewarm on the book for most of my reading experience. It’s light and charming but also actually thoughtful and meaningfully compassionate, and if you enjoy cozy fantasy at all, you’ll probably love this one.

I also liked the tree spirits a lot 🐻🌲

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an audio ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Soft Nectarine ~.
233 reviews290 followers
July 28, 2024
MOANA does homesteading in a cottage core inspired romantasy 🍯🫐 to save her island & its people she will have to open a jam shop…and her heart! EPHEMERAL CUTNESS!!!

“It takes a village to open a heart, and just one man to steal it.”

🫐🍓 🫐🍓 🫐🍓 🫐🍓 🫐🍓 🫐🍓 🫐🍓

Kiela is a librarian on the RUN!! When her library goes up in flames she grabs as many books as she can carry & her sentient plant assistant Caz and escapes to a remote island 🐚✨ but when she returns to her childhood home she notices an ISLAND IN PERIL! Lack of magic has ruined the soil, dried up springs, endangered wildlife & villagers. Good thing Kiela’s books contain spells that can save the island 🌴 FIRST THING FIRST! She must open jam shop to disguise her (illegal) magical remedies and maybe convince her handsome neighbor to build her a jam shelf.

You will LOVE this book if you enjoy

🐚 cottage core & island life vibes

🐚 magical creatures like cloud bears, centaurs, unicorns, cats with wings, mermaids and a sentient cactus

🐚 cozy homesteading gaming like Fae farms, Animal Crossing or Fabledom

🐚 ARTS & CRAFTS with spell books

🐚 slow burn romance with a merhorse herder Lassen!

The epitome of COZY COTTAGE CORE!! Every single detail of this book made me want to live in a magical cottage and do arts & crafts it the back garden. Don’t expect much from the plot but who needs it when everything is so cutely ephemeral! 🐚🧜‍♀️

Cozy romance & found family moments! It was very sweet to see Kiela slowly become more reliant on her neighbors. I really connected to her antisocial tendencies when she said…

“It wasn’t that she didn’t like people. It was only that she liked books more.”


cottage core
fmc in academia
slow burn romance🔥
small town
fantasy island life
found family!
HEA
Profile Image for Jena.
805 reviews178 followers
June 29, 2024
In the past, I've read a couple low-stakes, cozy fantasy books and come to the conclusion that the genre isn't for me. However, The Spellshop drew me in with its cover and promise of a talking spider plant. And overall, I'm really glad I picked it up! Yes, this book can be slow at times, a part of the genre that I don't love, but the plot is still interesting and I loved the world of this book. The world building and setting are really cute, but not overly complicated. And I really liked the main character and her plant companions. I do wish there were a few more scenes of romantic development, but other than that I have no complaints.
Thank you to MacMillan Audio for the audio ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Ricarda.
209 reviews38 followers
July 26, 2024
Not quite "Legends & Lattes" territory, but still a pleasant and cozy read. It could have been a little less heavy on the romance though, especially with the main character being painfully oblivious towards it for the majority of the book.
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