Publisher: Viking
Age Group: Adult
Pages: 592
Source: My local library.
Summary:
When historian Diana Bishop opens a bewitched alchemical manuscript in Oxford’s Bodleian Library it represents an unwelcome intrusion of magic into her carefully ordinary life. Though descended from a long line of witches, she is determined to remain untouched by her family’s legacy. She banishes the manuscript to the stacks, but Diana finds it impossible to hold the world of magic at bay any longer.
For witches are not the only otherworldly creatures living alongside humans. There are also creative, destructive daemons and long-lived vampires who become interested in the witch’s discovery. They believe that the manuscript contains important clues about the past and the future, and want to know how Diana Bishop has been able to get her hands on the elusive volume.
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A Discovery of Witches had me from the first chapter. The story begins in Oxford, where Diana Bishop, a historian specializing in alchemy, is doing research in the Bodleian Library. Much geeky fun is to be had in author Deborah Harkness's descriptions of the library and the old manuscripts Diana methodically explores. Harkness, like her protagonist--Diana--is a historian; thus, her descriptions of Diana's scholarly practices are probably accurate, and I enjoyed reading about Diana's research.
Diana is the last of the Bishops, a family of powerful witches. For the most part, she neglects her magic. So when one of the manuscripts she requests appears to be enchanted, she examines it as she would examine any normal manuscript, and she sends it back to the stacks. Later, when she wants to glance in a periodical at the top of a tall shelf, however, she decides to use her magic instead of wasting time getting help. A vampire sees her grab the book, and she is forced into meeting him. The vampire's name is Matthew Clairmont, a geneticist, and he is interested in the enchanted manuscript she examined earlier.
In Harkness's world, there are two types of beings: creatures and humans, and there are three types of creatures: witches, vampires, and daemons (freakishly creative and/or intelligent types). All three groups of creatures are interested in this mysterious book, but no one--until Diana--has been able to call it from the stacks of the Bodleian since the 1800s. Before the reader knows it, creatures are stalking Diana, and Matthew steps in as her protector. Also--of course--they begin to fall in love.
From here, Harkness crafts a tale full of mystery, magic, and plenty of historical tidbits. Unfortunately, the plot runs out of steam in the middle of the novel. Also, A Discovery of Witches begins to read like Twilight, but with an adult witch as the leading lady instead of a teenager. Matthew Clairmont is a typically manly and overprotective vampire. While Matthew is getting to know Diana, one of his friends points out that it sounds like he is hunting Diana, and Matthew replies, "'I know. I climbed into her window when she was sleeping. I follow her when she's running. She resists my attempts to help her, and the more she does, the hungrier I feel.'" Sound familiar? Not to mention creepy?
Diana is a strong, intelligent woman with the potential to be a very powerful witch, and I still can't figure out why she goes along with Matthew's overbearing behavior without complaining in any truly forceful terms until page 284, where she says, "'Stop telling me what to do, Matthew. My ideas about vampires may be romantic, but your attitudes toward women need a major overhaul.'"*
Amen, sister.
I may not be able to stand Matthew and Diana's romance, but I appreciate them both as characters. My favorite characters, though, are the secondary ones. Harkness creates a large-ish cast of endearing characters, including Matthew's mysterious family and Diana's two aunts in upstate New York. The settings of the novel--Oxford, France, and New York--are also fun and make for enjoyable armchair travel.
And while I found it difficult to push through the middle of A Discovery of Witches, the end (while not nearly as enthralling as the beginning) is satisfying enough. Discovery of Witches is the first in the All Souls trilogy, and next novel is due out in 2012. I recommend A Discovery of Witches to readers of paranormal romance, historical fiction, travel stories, and mysteries with a supernatural twist. This is a novel that may also have some crossover appeal with teens. A Discovery of Witches contains the kind of characters that take up residence in a person's head and play with one's imagination all day, and I am eager to see where Harkness takes them next.
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*More importantly, I don't understand why the author, an academic and therefore an intelligent woman herself, would create such a fictional relationship. I am interested to see how the tension between Diana's own power and Matthew's overprotective instincts plays out.

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