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Well Witched [Hardcover]

Frances Hardinge (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

8 and up3 and up

Ryan and his friends don't think twice about stealing some money from a wishing well. After all, who's really going to miss a few tarnished coins?

The well witch does.

And she demands payback: Now Ryan, Josh, and Chelle must serve her . . . and the wishes that lie rotting at the bottom of her well. Each takes on powers they didn't ask for and don't want. Ryan grows strange bumps—are they eyes?—between his knuckles; Chelle starts speaking the secrets of strangers, no matter how awful and bloody; and Josh can suddenly—inexplicably—grant even the darkest of wishes, the kind of wishes that should never come true.

Darkly witty, wholly unexpected, and exquisitely sinister, Frances Hardinge's Well Witched is one well-cast tale that readers didn't know they were wishing for.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Starred Review. Grade 4–7—From the author of Fly by Night (HarperCollins, 2006) comes this contemporary fantasy. After Josh, Ryan, and Chelle steal coins out of a decrepit wishing well in a nearby village, they discover that they are now in the debt of the well witch, who expects them to serve her by fulfilling all the wishes made by people who have tossed coins into the well. At first they go along with the idea; having received special, if unnerving, powers from her, it's an intriguing challenge to make wishes come true. But some wishes are vengeful, misguided, or downright evil, leading Ryan and Chelle to finally stand firm against the angry witch. Josh, however, becomes swept up in his own increasing powers. There is an undercurrent of creepiness that runs through this story, whether it's the sinister, centuries-long influence of the malignant well witch or the ways that ordinary people can become warped, and many scenes and images are deliciously shiver-inducing. The tone is down-to-earth, quirky, and quietly witty, just like Ryan, whose intriguing perceptions of the people and things around him are a vital part of this book's appeal. Fans of dark fantasies such as Neil Gaiman's Coraline (HarperCollins, 2002) will find this tale irresistible.—Eva Mitnick, Los Angeles Public Library
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Hardinge, the English writer whose first novel was Fly by Night (2006), sets her second in contemporary England, where friends Ryan, Josh, and Chelle become stranded in an outlying area and need bus fare home. Josh’s idea of climbing down into an old wishing well and swiping coins answers their immediate problem. But after they learn that the ancient spirit living in the well has granted them weird, unwieldy powers and demands that they make other people’s wishes (those made on the stolen coins) come true, events begin to spiral out of control. First published last year in England as Verdigris Deep, this compelling, though sometimes disquieting fantasy is richly layered with fine, figurative language, quirky but believable characters, and old magic playing its way out rather blindly from the past to the present. The many young readers who look to fantasy as their best source of adventure stories will enjoy the many suspenseful scenes here, though they may find the narrative’s darkness and density oppressive at times. Still, there’s no denying Hardinge’s power as a storyteller, her ability to create beautiful, precise imagery, or her expectation that her readers will grasp the subtle ideas and reflections woven into the novel. Grades 5-8. --Carolyn Phelan

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins (May 27, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060880384
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060880385
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,477,334 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Do you know what you wish? Are you sure that what you wish is what you want?, May 27, 2008
This review is from: Well Witched (Hardcover)
I've been around the block when it comes to loving first time authors, if you know what I mean. That pretty little debut novel comes out and suddenly you can't stop talking about it. You proselytize "your" find to the high hills in an attempt to convince the world around you that what you have here is pure unadulterated gold. Then the author's second book comes out and inevitably the crush fades. You notice flaws in the new book. It could never live up to the pristine glory that was the author's first title, so you swallow your disappointment and move on with your life. Now in 2006 there was a little novel by the name of Fly by Night that came from first-time writer Frances Hardinge. People who know me know that I was head over heels for that title. And when I received her second book to be published in America, Well Witched I knew that I was either going to see lightning strike twice or be deeply disappointed. And what I found made me reevaluate my take on Hardinge's writing, but in a good way. A very different beastie from her first outing, Well Witched has a slow start but once the action starts hopping it becomes a heady examination of power, wishes, and whether or not it's fair to label something evil if it's merely misunderstood or out of place.

Well what would you have done? Here they were, stranded in a small village that they were NOT supposed to be visiting in the first place, and Ryan, Josh, and Chelle had just missed the cheap bus out. Now they'd have to scrounge up some money for the heftier fare, and where on earth were they supposed to do that? Really, when you think of it, it was only logical rob the wishing well. Right? I mean, it's not like it was going to miss the dough. But then, soon after, strange things start happening to the three kids. Josh seems to affect everything around him electrically. Chelle starts speaking the thoughts of certain people she's near. And Ryan's got these warts on his hands. Innocent at first and then... less so. It soon becomes clear that the three are under the thrall of the spirit that lives deep inside the well and they have a job to do. For each coin they took they must make that coin's wish come true. At first it's fun stuff like getting someone a motorcycle or helping them fall in love. Soon, though, it becomes clear that even if the wishes are death and dismemberment, they must help the wishers achieve their desires. And when one of the three starts taking the job a little too seriously, there are consequences involved that none of them could foresee.

At first, you're not sure why you're getting everything from the point of view of Ryan. It's like reading a Harry Potter book and finding that you're inside the brain of Ron the entire time. Ryan is Josh's right-hand man. He's not particularly brilliant or funny. He's just a normal guy and it's JOSH that's the star of the show. As the story continues, however, it becomes clear that Ryan has a streak of good old-fashioned decency that will get him through this experience with a lot less damange than Josh.

I admit to you right now that when I began reading the book I was disappointed by the plodding pace. Maybe "plodding" is too strong a term. Let's call it "purposeful" then. It takes a while to get going. I liked learning about Ryan's family and that kind of stuff, but the other two main characters didn't gel for me. Even the powers the three receive were okay, but I didn't really get into them. It wasn't until the characters started to get proactive, going out there, finding wishers, and making wishes come true that the pace picked up. And when the villains of the piece started showing their true colors and the morality of what they were doing was called into question, then I found I couldn't put it down. The story's basically a roller coaster ride. If you can sit through the slow trip upwards, the downhill plunge is worth your hard earned cash.

Technically it's a fantasy novel but you might also be able to call it a horror. There elements in this book that screenwriters would kill to rip-off if they knew about them. I mean, what would happen if you opened your eyes in front of the mirror and found that your reflection had kept its own closed? And what's more, when those eyelids DID open, what if they released gushing torrents of murky water? Consider too the warts on Ryan's hands. I don't want to give anything away, but imagine waking up in the middle of the night, looking at your hands, and seeing lines of hairs running through the center of each wart. I'd have nightmares about that, if my brain was smart enough to think it up on its own. Mind you, I don't think that these elements make the book inappropriate for children. Just bear in mind that there are psychological elements that play on our fears rather than our fantasies in this story.

Hardinge is the queen of the description. Nobody matches her in this respect. Nobody. Listen to some of these lines as they appear throughout the story:

"Chelle was biting her lower lip, her upper lip pulling down to a point, like a little soft beak."

"I hate scars and things, they make my stomach feel like it's unpeeling..."

". . . and it's tricky because she always makes me feel like, well, you know what it's like, when somebody's watching you and you can feel it like dead leaves down the back of your sweater. . . "

"She had big, vague eyes and a big, vague smile, and was always very busy in the way that a moth crashing about in a lampshade is busy."

"There was a pause while his brain hopped back and actually heard what Ryan had said."

"... this was different, and this was hate. This had brewed itself to a blackness like ink."

Regarding shopping carts: "Ryan had always thought that carts had far too much body language for objects with no heads or limbs."

Harding is also able to point out things about a person that we recognize without having thought of them before. Like when you pray to God in such a way that you hope that God would be impressed by your bravery. She gets people and the little crazy things that make us human. It makes her inhuman water spirit all the more frightening when you couple that kind of pitiless sense of black and white against humans and their charming flaws. The spirit doesn't care if people make bad wishes or want to take them back later. All she cares about is granting them. I like books where human characters encounter someone alien and you feel that distance and that strangeness.

The redemption of Chelle is one of the finest things about this book. In fact, when you think about it, the whole novel is about redemption. Nobody in this story is really "evil" even though incredibly evil things occur or almost occur. And I was as gung-ho to see the bad guy get it as anyone, but Hardinge doesn't play by those rules. This isn't a book that's going to merrily kill a character for sport. Death is a desperate dangerous thing, and everyone in this book knows it.

There are things that don't make sense, a slow start, and some lines that don't work with the rest of the text, but on the whole Hardinge's book is captivating reading. The central idea is that when we wish, we aren't wishing for what we really want. We're wishing for the outer shiny layer, not the nut of the wish. Hardinge prefers nuts, and by the end of this book you will too. A scintillating tale worth discovering.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a fantasy out of sight!, October 5, 2011
This review is from: Well Witched (Hardcover)
Well Witched
A book review based on Well Witched by Frances Hardingey

I recommend this book Well Witched for many good reasons, but you have to like horror and fantasy books. The novel is both funny and serious. It was entertaining to read, but it was slow at the beginning and got more intense near the end. I could not stop reading it. I wanted to see what happened at the end! I am a fifth grade reader, and I think this book would be more appropriate for middle school students. I could read it loud and clear all the same! This was a very interesting book about three kids granting people wishes just to lift a curse placed on them by the Well Witch.
Three kids are going to go on a bus ride, but they miss the bus. They do not have enough money for the next bus. In order to go to their favorite hangout before school starts, they have to rob the well in a small place called Magwhite. After they rob the well, bizarre things start to happen to them. They realize that they have the power to grant the wish attached to the coins that they stole. They have to tell the Well Witch, Saint Margaret the White that they cannot grant wishes any more. The Well Witch needs help from Ryan, Josh, and Chelle, because she does not understand what people are wishing for anymore. It all gets harder when one of the kids goes crazy and does whatever it takes to grant a wish!
The main characters have very different personalities and families. Josh is a tough kid that always wears sunglasses. He does not like his mother, and his mother does not like him. Ryan is a kid that is ignored by his family. His parents fight all the time and he thinks that they might get a divorce. His mom digs in to people's lives and writes for gossip magazines. His father writes reviews for plays and suggests actors. The girl named Chelle is not very smart and is not liked very much. The author did not describe Chelle well enough in the book for me to grasp why her character was not liked by anyone else other than Ryan, Josh and her mom and dad. They work together as a team well in the novel.
The Well Witch really is not a witch at all, but a water spirit with magical powers. She is short-tempered. She treats the kids like her servants, but she takes care of them, too. This spirit-like character reminds me of Greek mythology, and something you would not see in an average fantasy book. She grants wishes, but sometimes, bad things would happen. It was not always, what the person wished for to happen.
Overall, Well Witched was an enjoyable book. The novel had some death and murder in it that would scare younger children. Some characters I could not understand and some characters were extra, and they were not needed in the book. The book was slightly boring, but it did have some very thrilling parts. There is a pattern to the novel, and it was predictable at times, but I thought the author wrote an interesting twist to the average fantasy.


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Please!, June 26, 2009
This review is from: Well Witched (Hardcover)
Frances Hardinge is one of those writers you pray will keep writing. I was totally engrossed with Well Wished as I was with Fly By Night. Her stories are exciting full of magic and entralling. I get so caught up in her books I can't wait to read another when I am done. I would read anything she wrote she's good, real good. If you like fantasy and suspense she will be a favorite. Her books are full of the unexpected infact way out of the realm of normal. I love her books and would recommend her to anyone.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
well spirit
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Miss Gossamer, Donna Leas, Will Wruthers, Crook's Baddock, Glass House, Saul Paladine, Pipette Macintosh, West End, The Haven, Margaret the White, Temple Street, Ebstowe Funfair, Water Clock, Well's Angel, Wet Will, The Aunts, Eastgate Library, Mother Leathertongue, Jeremiah Punzell, Miss Macintosh, Holistic Soul Repair, Chosen One, Jacob Karlborough
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