The Witchling’s Girl
Helena Coggan
£20.00
Description
‘Coggan invites you to be with characters who, for all the magic and wonder of the world she creates, are entirely relatable – women bound by duty and justice, love and fear, trying to find their own paths in a world not of their making. It gave me hope; it made me cry. It’s a fantastically good book.’ – Claire North, author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August
In a quiet street far from the river, with an ancient tree growing through its walls and floors, is the House of the Dead. There lives the witchling: healer, midwife and conduit between the world of the living and the world below. A witchling must give up her family and friends and spend her life alone, tending to the sick and carrying the dead down dark tunnels to the underworld.
Haley was born with the gift of death-magic, and at the age of seven her mother abandons her to the witchling to be raised as her successor. But as Haley grows older and learns her craft – as invading armies pass through her town, people are born and die on her floor, and loyalties shift and dissolve around her – she finds it harder and harder to keep her vows and be the perfect and impassive healer.
But if she can’t, it will be her downfall – and that of everyone she’s not supposed to love . . .
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Further praise for Helena Coggan:
‘Vivid and intense. Helena Coggan had me on the edge of my seat’ – Amanda Bouchet, bestselling author of The Kingmaker Chronicles
‘A phenomenal achievement . . . assured, frightening, action-packed’- Observer
‘Tense, exciting, engaging’ – Claire North, author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August
‘A pulsing, labyrinthine, emotionally visceral plot’ – Metro
‘The plot pulses with action and the characters are beautifully complex. This is a book that sparks with adrenaline and longing, all the way to the final page’ – Rebecca Ross, author of The Queen’s Rising
Publisher Review
'The plot pulses with action and the characters are beautifully complex. This is a book that sparks with adrenaline and longing, all the way to the final page * Rebecca Ross, author of The Queen's Rising * A pulsing, labyrinthine, emotionally visceral plot * Metro * Tense, exciting, engaging * Claire North, author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August * A phenomenal achievement . . . assured, frightening, action-packed * Observer * 'Vivid and intense. Helena Coggan had me on the edge of my seat * Amanda Bouchet, bestselling author of The Kingmaker Chronicles * The next JK Rowling * NBC's Today * Praise for Helena Coggan: The Witchling's Girl is an annoyingly good book. There is such craft in it that I had to regularly stop to have awe. Helena has done the remarkable thing of capturing love and hope in a world without heroes, without some glorious prophecy to set you free, but where all you can do is the best you can. It's a trick of storytelling that evades most of us, the ability to express the powerful stories of women in a world that seeks to silence them, to find power in oppression and hope in even the darkest corners of the House of the Dead. She tells stories of birth and death, capturing the humanity of each moment, the intimacy of every breath, while also asking questions about life, freedom, duty, hope and despair. She builds a world out of intimate details, but suffused with magic and wonder, weaving the divine and the mundane into a world you could get lost in. She invites you to be with characters who, for all the magic of the universe, are entirely relatable - women bound by duty and justice, love and fear, trying to find their own paths in a world not of their making. It gave me hope; it made me cry. It's a fantastically good book. * Claire North, author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August * Praise for THE WITCHLING'S GIRL:
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