Book Review: A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking

Book Review: A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking

A Wizardโ€™s Guide to Defensive Baking

by

T. Kingfisher

In case the title doesnโ€™t provide enough of a hint, I want to be clear that this is a funny book. Probably the closest Iโ€™ve read to Pratchett without actually reading Pratchett. Yeah, itโ€™s that good โ€“ because itโ€™s doing its own thing and not trying to be a Discworld lookalike.

Sure, there are similarities, but such is the nature of storytelling. It doesnโ€™t have to be a copy just because it looks the same at a glance.

So, Iโ€™ll leave it at how this is its own story, and avoid comparisons.

Originally, I believe, this was meant to be a childrenโ€™s 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, Iโ€™ll slip my niece a copy once sheโ€™s old enough to read in English. Sheโ€™ll be old enough by then.

Thereโ€™s 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 doesnโ€™t go away just because a protagonist lives happily ever after.

Itโ€™s not super serious, but itโ€™s 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 itโ€™s a funny story, right? A cheerful mix of absurdities, murder, and musings on the nature of what it means to be different. Thereโ€™s 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, whatโ€™s 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 Iโ€™ll 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 sheโ€™s just fourteen and she shouldnโ€™t be having to deal with this kind of thing. Itโ€™s 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 Iโ€™ll 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 thereโ€™s a lot more to it than one might first think. Being a bread wizard is not just a silly gimmick.

The voice. The storyโ€™s told by Mona, and itโ€™s always quite clear that sheโ€™s addressing the reader while retelling her adventure. Itโ€™s charming and reassuring, and itโ€™s probably why the story gets away with the more serious parts of it. Thereโ€™s never any real doubt that Mona will be okay eventually โ€“ but itโ€™s still exciting.

The humor. Sure, it gets a bit much with the anecdotes and asides now and then, but that doesnโ€™t mean theyโ€™re 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, youโ€™ll enjoy the rest of the book too.

Find A Wizardโ€™s Guide to Defensive Baking on Goodreads.

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