A Wizardโs Guide to Defensive Baking
by
T. Kingfisher

In case the title doesnโt provide enough of a hint, I want to be clear that this is a funny book. Probably the closest Iโve read to Pratchett without actually reading Pratchett. Yeah, itโs that good โ because itโs doing its own thing and not trying to be a Discworld lookalike.
Sure, there are similarities, but such is the nature of storytelling. It doesnโt have to be a copy just because it looks the same at a glance.
So, Iโll leave it at how this is its own story, and avoid comparisons.
Originally, I believe, this was meant to be a childrenโs story, and it shows in places โ not in a bad way, but in how a lot of things just work out in a way they rarely do in stories for adults. Eventually, it ended up as a book for grown ups, but if I remember, Iโll slip my niece a copy once sheโs old enough to read in English. Sheโll be old enough by then.
Thereโs definitely darkness hidden away behind the words. Sometimes it comes out and stabs someone, but a lot of the time, it just lurks there. Ominous. Brooding. Serious. The story itself ends well, but the darkness is of the kind that doesnโt go away just because a protagonist lives happily ever after.
Itโs not super serious, but itโs the kind that asks questions that make you think, and that stick around after you turn the light off for the night.
I did mention itโs a funny story, right? A cheerful mix of absurdities, murder, and musings on the nature of what it means to be different. Thereโs also magic and baking: weaponized gingerbread men, a breadcrumb circus, and Eavesdropping For Dummies using scones. Not to mention a sentient carnivorous sour-dough starter.
So, whatโs it about?
The story begins when Mona, a fourteen-year-old wizard with a talent for dough, finds a dead body in the bakery one very early morning. Then there are complications, and the story ends in a spectacular display of defensive baking and horses.
What Iโll whine about
The storytelling meanders quite a bit. There are a lot of amusing observations sprinkled across the narrative, and for the most part they made me smile. Once in a while though, I found myself wishing the story would just get on with it and get to the point. Perhaps I have an upper limit for how many humorous anecdotes I can put up with on a page.
Mona, the main character, often reflects on how sheโs just fourteen and she shouldnโt be having to deal with this kind of thing. Itโs a long time since I was fourteen, but I have no memory of ever thinking like that. Do kids do that?
Then again, I grew up pretty safe and sheltered, and I never really had to worry that someone would kill me because I could make bread walk.
What Iโll gush about
The magic. At first it seems a bit silly and rather limited, but throughout the story, understanding grows, both for Mona and for the reader, and thereโs a lot more to it than one might first think. Being a bread wizard is not just a silly gimmick.
The voice. The storyโs told by Mona, and itโs always quite clear that sheโs addressing the reader while retelling her adventure. Itโs charming and reassuring, and itโs probably why the story gets away with the more serious parts of it. Thereโs never any real doubt that Mona will be okay eventually โ but itโs still exciting.
The humor. Sure, it gets a bit much with the anecdotes and asides now and then, but that doesnโt mean theyโre not really funny the rest of the time. I had plenty of good chuckles reading this.
Final words
If the title makes you smile in a happy kind of way, youโll enjoy the rest of the book too.




