Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Hemlock & Silver

Rate this book
From New York Times bestselling and Hugo Award-winning author T. Kingfisher comes Hemlock & Silver, a dark reimagining of “Snow White” steeped in poison, intrigue, and treason of the most magical kind

Healer Anja regularly drinks poison.

Not to die, but to save—seeking cures for those everyone else has given up on.

But a summons from the King interrupts her quiet, herb-obsessed life. His daughter, Snow, is dying, and he hopes Anja’s unorthodox methods can save her.

Aided by a taciturn guard, a narcissistic cat, and a passion for the scientific method, Anja rushes to treat Snow, but nothing seems to work. That is, until she finds a secret world, hidden inside a magic mirror. This dark realm may hold the key to what is making Snow sick.

Or it might be the thing that kills them all.

360 pages, Hardcover

First published August 19, 2025

1741 people are currently reading
65140 people want to read

About the author

T. Kingfisher

57 books22.6k followers
T. Kingfisher is the vaguely absurd pen-name of Ursula Vernon. In another life, she writes children's books and weird comics, and has won the Hugo, Sequoyah, and Ursa Major awards, as well as a half-dozen Junior Library Guild selections.

This is the name she uses when writing things for grown-ups.

When she is not writing, she is probably out in the garden, trying to make eye contact with butterflies.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2,021 (41%)
4 stars
2,142 (43%)
3 stars
600 (12%)
2 stars
87 (1%)
1 star
20 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,726 reviews
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
3,036 reviews59.2k followers
August 20, 2025
As a devoted fan of T. Kingfisher (Ursula Vernon), I knew I'd love this dark and intriguing retelling of Snow White. The premise alone had me hooked!

The story follows Anja, a skilled healer and poison expert whose curiosity knows no bounds. She's constantly experimenting with poisons and their antidotes, sometimes even testing them on herself in her quest for knowledge.

Her world turns upside down when the king arrives at her workshop with a horrifying confession: he killed the queen after discovering her cutting out their elder daughter's heart. Before Anja can process this revelation, he begs her to examine his younger daughter, Snow, believing she's been poisoned by palace enemies. Having been recommended by her father, Anja feels duty-bound to assess the twelve-year-old princess and search for a cure.

With help from two guards—including Javier, who becomes an unexpected friend (and possibly more)—Anja begins investigating. She examines Snow's room, studies her daily routines, interviews palace staff, and even encounters Snow's delightfully narcissistic talking cat, Grayling.

However, as she delves deeper, she discovers that Snow's condition might not be poison-related at all. Instead, it seems connected to mysterious mirrors that act as portals to a supernatural realm where a sinister force awaits. For Anja, who has always relied on science and knowledge, this presents an impossible challenge: how can she use magic—something she barely understands—to heal the princess without endangering everyone involved?

While the opening chapters felt somewhat slow and dense, the story hit its stride after the first quarter. True to Kingfisher's style, it delivered surprising twists and intelligent storytelling that kept me completely engaged.

Special thanks to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for providing this remarkable Snow White retelling through Kingfisher's unique vision. I'm grateful for the opportunity to share my thoughts!

medium.com
instagram
facebook
twitter
Profile Image for MagretFume.
229 reviews280 followers
August 17, 2025
To me one of the best books of 2025 and T. Kingfisher. 

I listened to the audiobook version and the narrator was perfect, it made the book even better and the experience more immersive. 

The story draws inspiration from the tale of Snow White, but I feel like this is more of an original story than a real retelling, and to le that made it way more interesting. 

The world building is subtle but so magical, and the characters are compelling and complex. 

I absolutely loved the main character. She's smart, funny, unapologetic and so relatable. 

I'm so glad I got to enjoy this book, I can't Recommend it enough. 

Thank you Macmillan audio for this ARC! 
Profile Image for Marquise.
1,937 reviews1,273 followers
August 29, 2025
Why does it appear that nobody else has noticed that T. Kingfisher recycled the plot of Thornhedge as the "solution" to the "mystery" of the poisoning of Snow in Hemlock & Silver?

I got trolled for calling her out on that one plot, and yet here we have people heaping praise on this retelling as one of her best.

I disagree, I don't think it's her worst but it's neither her best nor a good one for me. And not because it's a retelling that doesn't follow the fairy tale plot, that's irrelevant. It's the recycling and reuse of old stuff as well as the silliness and the plotholes generously scattered all over the story.

I should kick off by stating that I don't mind that this veers away from the fairy tale, Snow White is one of the most flexible tales to retell, in fact. It can be done from every angle, very loosely or very closely, and have anyone as the narrator, and still be a good retelling if written well. It's because this is one of those tales whose core theme is like putty and applicable everywhere, there's stories that aren't retellings of it at all but have the theme or some of its elements. It's an universal archetype despite the fairy tale being German. And it's very, very hard to screw up. This is gold for writers, because most other tales are more rigid and not as easy to retell.

So when I saw that this was told from a POV I had never seen before, that of a female healer specialised in poisons that is hired by the king to investigate the mysterious illness of his daughter, Princess Snow, I was very intrigued and hopeful. Original angle, I thought. Fresh take, I thought. Surely this is going to be a hit of a story, I thought.

Trust writers specialised in awkward bumblers to find a way to ruin their own good ideas. This was painful to see unravel from the initial chapters that presented an interesting, plain, single, goofy, independent professional woman and concluded in an ode to Special Snowflake and the most predictable and devoid of pathos solution to a non-existent mystery.

THE GOOD
Anja is the good here. Or rather, Anja's point of view, because Anja herself is a recycled character. This kind of old plain ladies with annoying personalities are so common in Kingfisher's retellings I'm tempted to assume they're author avatars. Anja is the same old spinster from Kingfisher's last book and the book before that; she doesn't stand out as a character but as a POV tasked with telling a story.

This book is what I call "peripheral retelling." What I mean by this is a fairy tale that is retold from a secondary or tertiary perspective that isn't the main character(s). For example, in Snow White the main characters would be Snow and the Stepmother (you could argue the dwarfs are too), they are the core theme (their relationship/rivalry), whilst the mirror, the dwarfs, the prince, the huntsman, etc., are all in the periphery. You get the idea. This kind of POV offers even more flexibility to an already very flexible fairy tale.

So how do you fuck up such an original POV? Well . . .

THE BAD
. . . You do it by making your original, fresh perspective into a bumbling Special Snowflake that somehow never pays for being a bumbler.

See, Anja is a healer that specialises in poisons. Nothing extraordinary by itself, but for one thing: this realm is called the Kingdom of Poisons, and the atmosphere and technology makes me think it's early to mid-1800s level of civilisational and technological advance, so with that name and that level of tech there should be practically guilds and schools for poison study and scholarship, but somehow NOBODY in this country ever thought of studying poisons to find antidotes until Anja miraculously had the genius idea to think that every poison has a mirror/antidote?

Seriously?

I mean, the author even has child Anja directly ask an experienced healer about poisons and antidotes, and the healer doesn't know anything! So, essentially, this author makes Anja the discoverer of antidotes and the concept of antidotes in a realm that supposedly has existed for centuries and that has 'poisons' in its name. That's incredible levels of Special Snowflakery that stretches belief past breaking point, if you ask me.

And to make things worse, it's our Genius Not-Like-Other-Spinsters Special Bumbling Snowflake who is the only one that knows that the makeup women use (ceruse) is toxic because of lead. But she never shares that knowledge, doesn't do warning campaigns of any sort like for the poison children lick from paper in this world. She merely uses the knowledge to make fun of pretty and vain women (Kingfisher has this habit to mock pretty women that you suspect is some sort of personal insecurity for how insistent it is in her books). In real life, ceruse was used without knowledge of its toxicity, maybe some scholar noticed its effects here and there, but it wasn't established knowledge in the past, and as soon as it was established scientifically that lead was poisonous, it was eliminated from beauty routines. Yet, in this world, somehow they still use toxic ceruse that causes scars and damages skin but nobody but Anja knows why, and yet she still does nothing but self-satisfiedly congratulate herself for being an unattractive woman Not Interested in Feminine Beauty Products that she comments contain poisons. It's simply another plot point to make her look special, different, not like other girls. All her knowledge of the health damage from slow poisoning is modern transferred to the past, like mercury poisoning, again used in this book to make Anja look special and knowledgeable because somehow she is also the one that figures out the old tyrant king was mad because of mercury poisoning. Modern knowledge. Even the treatment for hemlock poisoning that Anja uses here is modern, that's not how they'd have treated hemlock poisoning in the past, but sure, make your special snowflake character "discover it" with no formal training but reading books and a tutor. Her "independent single professional healer" schtick is having a rich dad with connections in court that indulges her eccentricities, what a great feminist message.

And to enhance how ridiculous this "special knowledge only I possess" aspect is, the author fucked up by having this expert in poisons mistakenly state that prickly pear is only fine to eat if cooked right.

I mean, it's a common enough plant/fruit that she made a mistake about. But that raises the question of what other plants/poisons she's portrayed erroneously here that I don't know because botany isn't my field?

At least all this insistence in making Anja know so much about poisons and unrealistically find treatments and cures only she can think of should've been forgivable if it led somewhere, if it served a plot purpose. Bah! Why not have Anja find out that what is poisoning Snow is some mysterious new poison she doesn't know, a real one, and have her use her supposed wits to find a cure/antidote? Why not even have Anja find the antidote for hemlock that still doesn't exist today? It's a fictional world, there's creative room to invent this.

That would be logical, wouldn't it? And would actually make for a better story. But oh no, let's go for the easy answer, the supernatural answer . . .

THE UGLY
. . . and here we arrive to the solution to the mystery, if it can be called a solution. Spoilers ahead, so be warned.

If you go back and read my review of "Thornhedge," you'll see that I complained that Kingfisher's baddies are cartoonishly evil, and how it wasn't right to have a child be born evil and be evil for the sake of it. I was trolled for that specifically. "But Marquise," they said, "it's a changeling child and changelings are Evil in Celtic mythology." Paraphrasing, this was the crux of their argument.

And now that Kingfisher has again recycled that very same point by , but this time making the changeling be "good" for no reason at all, even though HER MOTHER is evil because she's supposed to be like all supernatural beings . . . readers are oddly silent. Not a word about how silly, convoluted, and implausible this is.

Once again, Kingfisher has slipped one past her adoring fanbase, and they've not even noticed it.

I don't like it when authors insult the readership's intelligence, though. I did notice that Kingfisher merely swapped "evil because" for "good because" with equally zero explanations for either. There was absolutely no reason for Sleeping Beauty to be born an evil child, but Kingfisher stans whined it was logical because Faerie. There is absolutely no reason why Snow White is a good child here, but . . . meh, I don't even care what Kingfisher stans will say, and I'm sure they will find some excuse for this plothole too.

Probably the author herself read reviews, I wouldn't be surprised. I've read most of her retellings, and some of the changes she's made throughout the years does make me suspect so.

The solution to the "mystery" comes very quickly when we are very close to the end of the book, and you can tell the author is in a hurry to cram in as much as possible after having Anja leisurely bumble and stumble around for two thirds of the book, to the point she leaves holes and loose threads all over the ending. The last chapter could've been used to show the king's reaction to what has been happening to his daughter, have him deal with the horrible tragedy he himself unknowingly unleashed, or maybe show how Snow will deal with all that trauma. In sum, give the book the necessary emotional closure, give it pathos and address the events in the first chapter with all the strong, complicated emotions that would be the consequence.

But Kingfisher wastes it on a cat and a mirror-woman, and doesn't seem to even notice that for a character that "doesn't believe in magic" (her own words), Anja takes to magic and magical events & beings too easily and too fast. The entire "solution" to her incompetence is magic, when you think about it. Quite the good little magic-atheist she is, so sceptical and scientific-minded she accepts magic and magical creatures with hardly a bit of questioning. It's just clownishly comical how oblivious this author can unintentionally make her characters.

And as a corollary, I could see the solution to the mystery practically , which is why my interest wasn't in the solution to the mystery that I had already guessed but in the king's reaction and the consequences. A Greek tragedy in the making . . . and Kingfisher omitted and preferred to avoid the hard topics and drop the hot potato. A Greek tragedy . . . and it's all handwaved with a careless It Was All Magic, Folks.

How did I guess so easily? Mostly because I have read many retellings and having the mirror be the culprit or at least an accessory to the culprit isn't new to me, and a little because Kingfisher made the mistake of showing her cards too early. To an experienced reader of retellings, it was all so easy to see coming.

I have my doubts I'll pick up another retelling by this author, I think I've given her enough chances, and it's been a mixed bag. I did hope this would be one of the hits for me, and I do think Kingfisher can do retellings best when she goes for "periphery" perspectives (she sucks at primary perspective, to be frank) and she does have creative ideas. But she somehow often manages to shoot herself in the foot one way or another, and I'm bone-tired of her silly "humour," her ignorance of historical context, her barely-hidden contempt/attraction attitude towards fairy tales, her limited scope (never understood the praise for her supposed worldbuilding, she often sets her retellings in one house, like here, and her "worlds" are just a glimpse of where she is living, like here the Kingdom of Poisons is very obviously the US Southwest, possibly New Mexico, which makes her prickly pear mistake funnier), and her protagonists that are usually tropes of pretty evil woman and genius plain bumbler maiden aunt.

I suppose she has nothing to offer to the likes of me anymore.
Profile Image for Yun.
620 reviews35k followers
September 5, 2025
I can't resist fairy tale retellings. All those beautiful princesses, all their tragic misfortunes, and of course all the furry creature companions. What's not to like? And since Snow White is at the top of my list, there's no way I was going to pass this up.

And right away, I thought we were off to an auspicious start. We meet Healer Anja—your typical smart, independent, poison drinker. Her research has saved quite a few folks from certain death, and she would like to continue to do so in peace and quiet. But the king arrives at her door with a unusual request, and soon she's swept away on a secret mission to save his daughter Snow.

The premise sounds fascinating, so I settled in and eagerly awaited the moment when we would get past the setup and the tale would really take off. And I waited. And then I waited some more. You can see where I'm going with this. It wasn't until a hundred pages in that Anja even arrives at the palace to start her investigations.

So herein lies my biggest issue with this story. The pace was so sluggish and leisurely, it was hard to keep my attention. There was a lot of filler, including tons of details about every animal god and the history of every poison/antidote known to this world. But it's all made up and completely irrelevant to the storyline, so who cares?

Anja also started to grate on my nerves. She is both a fretter and a foot-in-the-mouther, and let me tell you, the combination was not pleasant. We are privy to her every thought—however middling, hesitant, and bumbling it may be—as well as her entire trial and error process in figuring out Snow's problem. I'm sorry, but I just don't need that level of detail.

And yet, even after all that thinking out loud, Anja was still somehow really slow on the uptake. Everything had to be completely spelled out in order for her to understand what was going on. I mean, I don't expect every main character to be super clever, but I also can't be hundreds of pages ahead of them.

And the real kicker is, even after all that, I didn't really understand what happened at the very end. Everything had been wrapped up, and then the story tosses in one final twist. It wasn't a very good one since I had seen coming from two hundred pages prior, but no matter, I can look past that. What I cannot look past was the explanation that accompanied it, for it made absolutely no sense.

Served in the tale's typical hemming and hawing style, every additional hesitating statement moved me further and further from clarity, until I had no idea what was going on anymore. It was like the author had completely forgotten the story she had written and all the rules she had made up for the universe, and just served up some random tidbits because they sounded good.

Not gonna lie, this was kind of a disappointment. I've heard nothing but great things about T. Kingfisher, and this being my first by the author, I thought it would serve as the gateway to a whole feast of fantasies heretofore unexplored. Instead, I'm left wondering if maybe this author isn't really for me.

~~~~~~~~~~~~
Connect with meInstagram
This was a pick for my BOTM box. Get your first book for $5 here.
Profile Image for Nataliya.
964 reviews15.7k followers
August 25, 2025
I’m surprised to realize how much I genuinely enjoyed this.
“I just want to save people and then have those people go away and, ideally, not take arsenic again. Is that really so much to ask?”

By now I’ve figured out precisely what works for me in most books by T. Kingfisher. It’s her signature narrative voice — the offbeat gentle humor with touches of snark here and there, the slight crotchety side to the inner monologue that often echoes the inner mess of my brain, and the trademark narrow focus her characters have on something a bit odd and niche, like mushrooms or plants or chickens, or in the case of this book healing people from poisons. (I still giggle recalling Kingfisher’s Hugo Awards acceptance speech that somehow veered into ode to slime molds — she’s got that endearingly awkward “I’m passionate about these weird things and that’s that” vibe completely down).
“There is a crazy-wild delight that comes over you when you discover something new, something extraordinary. If you try to share that and people look at you blankly, it’s crushing. But if there’s someone else there to say really?! and take fire with enthusiasm alongside you—well, that will keep you going for a long time.“


I typically don’t give two hoots about fairytale retellings, but here Kingfisher, as she’s done before, uses the fairytale as mostly just a springboard for the story that is very much her own, and I quite like that. We get Snow White (minus all seven dwarves), the apples and a mirror, but shifted quite a bit in a narrative that sets its own course through the eye of a local healer with exceedingly broad knowledge of poisons and medicine, a mid-thirties and socially awkward yet knowledgeable and a bit grumpy Anja.
“The problem with being plump, middle-aged, and a woman was that people expected you to be motherly, as if that was your default state. I am not.”

I loved the mirror world which reminded me of an absolutely terrified mirror-related dream I had as a kid after which I tried to avoid those cursed reflective surfaces for a few days until I realized that my poorly brushed hair was more of a threat to my well-being than any mirror-related alternate reality. I loved the grumpy cat (or maybe more than a cat but rather “His Gloriousness, God-King of the Deserts, Lord of Rooftops, Kin of Mirrors, Heir to the Mantle of Harar, He Who Treads the Serpent’s Tail, Whose Claws Have Scarred the Bark of the Great Tree”).
“No sense asking why he was like this. He was a cat. If cats were helpful, they’d be dogs.”


The story starts slowly, yet somehow I didn’t mind as I was quite interested in Anja’s insistence on methodical and rational approach to things, including the puzzle of a young girl’s apparent chronic poisoning. I would have loved an entire book devoted to Lady Sorrell, as it is always the case for me when I meet Kingfisher’s no-nonsense old ladies characters (I plan to age into a no-nonsense old woman, so maybe it’s instructional). And I enjoyed that the romance side plot was very much a side plot, not getting in the way of the story.

4.5 happy stars and a strange craving for apples.
Profile Image for jenny reads a lot.
649 reviews631 followers
August 12, 2025
A dark reimagining of Snow White that feels familiar, while telling a stunning new version of the beloved fairytale. T. Kingfisher is quickly becoming an auto buy author.

What’s to love…
- dark fairytale
- strong, sturdy, & tall, over 30 FMC that’s smart, mature, and just a bit quirky
- dare I say this is a book features a woman in STEM? yeah I’m saying it. Definitely a woman in STEM - Anja dedicates her life to the study of poisons. It definitely gives off chemist/biologist vibes!
- romantic subplot that is slow burn and epically adorable
- ANIMAL companion (the feistiest cat)
- no spice
- laugh out loud funny
- weird af (and I mean that in the best way possible)

What’s not to love…
- My only complaint is that it starts a bit slow, but once you’re at the 40% mark the pacing is perfect and you won’t want to put it down.

Audio Narration: 4/5
Pausing and inflection is great. Pacing is a bit slowed down sounding at 1.0x but consistent so easy to speed up. Narration sounds great sped up! Voices for other characters are not quite as varied as I usually like, but don’t stand out in any negative way, so I guess neutral I feel neutral about this aspect.

Aside from the minor issues, I think the narrator does a great job bringing the FMC to life and the audiobook was such a fun way to read!

4.5⭐️| TikTok | IG |

Thank you NetGalley and Tor Publishing for the eARC and Macmillan Audio for the ALC. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Debra.
3,164 reviews36.3k followers
July 26, 2025
T. Kingfisher reigns supreme in writing dark, gripping, highly imaginative books that I crave! Hemlock & Silver is her reimagining of “Snow White”! I love T. Kingfisher's writing, clever, original, and dark plots. This book had me rubbing my hands together and thinking "yes, my pretty" as this twisted tale of poison, treason, and intrigue began to take shape! I enjoyed the world building and the interesting, quirky, odd, and intriguing characters. I love that her characters are not always pretty - they are odd, they have faults, they don't quite fit in, they are awkward; and yet, they are equally compelling, likeable, intelligent, and kind. Along with the dark, fantasy themes, there was also humor and wit sprinkled throughout Hemlock & Silver!

Healer Anja has always been curious! She has always been intrigued by poisons, and her curiosity has led her to drinking poisons to find their cures! She is a bit different, a bit odd, a bit determined, quite clever, and very smart. When she is summoned by the King to save his daughter, Snow who is dying, she can't refuse. Will her unorthodox treatment save his daughter?????

Reading this book feels like taking a step into a fairy tale where mirrors are magical, dark worlds exist, and cures might be hard to come by. Anja will need to persevere, use her intellect, her wits, and her unorthodox ways to get to the bottom of things. She was such a wonderfully drawn character!!! But wait, there is more! There is a scene stealing talking cat!!!! What more could a reader ask for?

Highly imaginative, beautifully written, gripping, mysterious, dark, twisted and original! This book starts on the slower side and normally I would take issue with this, but Hemlock & Silver worked its magic on me and I was able to just go with the flow. Plus, when I think of fairy tales, I think of children, but this is not a tale for children. It's a tale for adults with an adult female character being the main focus which was a breath of fresh air! Another solid and enjoyable book by an author who continues to dazzle, delight, terrify, and enchant me! If T. Kingfisher writes it, I am going to read it.

Thank you to Macmillan Audio, Tor Publishing Group | Tor Books and NetGalley who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All the thoughts and opinions are my own.

Read more of my reviews at www.openbookposts.com 📖

Profile Image for Ricarda.
431 reviews211 followers
May 4, 2025
I am a T. Kingfisher enthusiast and I am always after her new releases. Emphasis on releases, plural, because the woman publishes up to 3 books a year. Iconic. Her first new release of 2025 is about 35-year-old healer and poison lover Anja who is sent to attend to the King's daughter Snow. Snow is plagued by a mysterious illness and no other physician could help her so far. Anja tries to find the cause of the sickness with her special knowledge of poisons and so the first half of the book is about her observing Snow's eating habits, examining her surroundings and questioning the staff of the estate. It is a slow-moving story, but I liked how all possible options were talked through and that everything was presented in a detailed way. There is barely any fantasy in the first half of the book and it focuses more on plants and poisons, which are themes that I LOVE in books. The second half than introduces some cool mirror magic and a talking cat (my beloved), but I do have to say that it kinda overshadowed the poison theme. I wish there was more of a mix of the medical and the magical parts of this story, so that they wouldn't feel so separated. Once the mirrors were introduced, the story really focused on them and that part felt a little repetitive and didn't really hold my attention. I guess it might be the exact other way around for other readers, though. But considering that Hemlock & Silver is a Snow White reimagining, it was really no surprise who the culprit was and it took way too long before Anja figured it out too.

This book feels way less like a fairy tale than previous books by T. Kingfisher, like Thornhedge or Nettle & Bone for instance. It's more like Snow White is playing out somewhere in the background of the story with some recognizable elements thrown in from time to time, but with focus on a whole new character. And I liked Anja a lot. She really found her area of interest and is always hungry for new knowledge, but she has the hardest time with other people and rather spends her life with her venomous snake. And bless T. Kingfisher for casually putting fat protagonists in her books, many other authors just don't do that. The funny tone of the book was a pleasure too. There are just always sentences that crack me up, but they never make the overall story seem silly. Hemlock & Silver might not be a contender for my new favorite Kingfisher book, but I can easily recommend this one for fans of the author (which should be everyone in my opinion).

Huge thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan / Tor for providing a digital arc in exchange for an honest review.

-----------------------------------------
New T. Kingfisher that is possibly related to Nettle & Bone?! Say no more, I'm in. Update: It's a Snow White reimagining!
Profile Image for megs_bookrack ((struggling to catch up)).
2,100 reviews13.7k followers
September 2, 2025
This was so bloody brilliant. I absolutely adored this MC, Anja. She's easily my favorite protagonist of the year so far. I would lay down my life for her.

I'm a huge Kingfisher stan. I was expecting to love this, but I was actually surprised how swept up into the story I became. The audiobook -- I was transported. It's so good.

🖤🐈‍⬛️🐍🖤🐈‍⬛️🐍🖤🐈‍⬛️🐍🖤🐈‍⬛️🐍🖤

Full review to come...stay tuned!!!

Original:

ARC received! Thank you, Tor & Macmillan Audio!!



Original:

...a dark reimagining of “Snow White” steeped in poison, intrigue, and treason of the most magical kind.



Proving dreams come true, T. Kingfisher is gracing us with a Snow White reimagining.

I cannot wait for this! 2025 is looking good!!
Profile Image for ashlyn.
292 reviews385 followers
July 28, 2025
I’ve been in a fantasy slump for months but this book had me hooked from the very first page.

Anja is a sarcastic little plant witch who poisons herself on purpose for research, yay for girl math! There’s a broody silent guard who probably needs a hug, a dying princess named Snow who’s got more flair than a soap opera, and a narcissistic cat that acts like it’s the real main character. Obviously I was obsessed.

The writing is sharp, the world feels fresh, and the vibes are dark fairytale meets cozy cottagecore with just enough weird magic to keep me turning pages. I didn’t expect this book to fix my burnout, but here we are.

Huge thank you to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for the ARC I would die for this cat and his dramatic little attitude. I didn’t know I needed to be healed by a grumpy little healer and her toxicologist fantasy until now.
August 29, 2025
This is most definitely NOT the Snow White you are looking for. Oh yes, this story does feature an apple, poison, a mirror, and an evil queen, but the similarities stop there (no silly dwarves, yay!).

The main character is not Snow White, but one of Kingisher's trademark unconventional heroines. She's middle-aged, plump, unmarried, socially awkward, delightfully grouchy, scrumptiously unapologetic, and has a wonderful tendency to go on the most unwillingly hilarious tangents. She's also a poison expert healer with a chime-adder colleague pet and rooster test-subjects assistants.

Then there's the feline bastard sidekick, Grayling, aka one of the ugliest, most vindictive, most beautifully haughty, exasperating, unhelpful, grumpy talking cats ever. (I want Kingfisher and Matt Dinniman to team up and write a Grayling/Princess Donut crossover. Now that would be slightly amazing.)

Add to that quirky everything, lots of hahahahahaha, creepiness galore, snark aplenty, a bit of romance (but the Kingfisher, non-allergic or convulsion-causing kind), and you get one of my two favorite books of the year.

Nefarious Last Words (NLW™): Kingfisher takes fairytales, punches them in the gut, knocks them on the head, gives them a thoroughly vigorous shake, and turns them upside down...Much to my absolute glee, joy, and delectation...And to the original pathetic Snow White's utter and complete dismay.



P.S. Grunts are very useful. Just so you know.



[Pre-review nonsense]

I'm pretty sure Snow White will never recover from this one.



Review to come and stuff.



[October 2024]

I can't believe we have to wait until August 2025 for the book to be published.

Profile Image for Alina ♡.
186 reviews72 followers
August 25, 2025
☆☆☆☆

Thanks to Netgalley and Pan Macmillan | Tor for this ARC.

T. Kingfisher has a unique talent for weaving whimsical retellings that feel fresh, cozy, and clever, and Hemlock & Silver is no exception. This book really showcases her ability to blend humor, magic, and just the right amount of tension. These are elements I’ve come to love from her.

Kingfisher’s pacing and character work are much stronger here, and there’s a wonderful mix of heart and mystery that makes it a great read for fans of fantasy that balances darkness and light.

Now, if you’re familiar with the fairy tale at the heart of this story, you might find the plot predictable at times. But honestly, that doesn’t detract from the enjoyment. Kingfisher’s signature wit and warmth breathe new life into the familiar, making even the predictable moments feel engaging and fun.

Overall, this is a cozy, enchanting read that leaves you both satisfied and eager for more of the authors signature storytelling. Highly recommended if you're looking for a story that offers both charm and depth.
Profile Image for Scottsdale Public Library.
3,508 reviews441 followers
August 19, 2025
Healer Anja has her work cut out for her; mysterious mirror worlds, a mysterious and handsome guard, and a mysterious, albeit snide and shrewd-talking cat.
What’s not to love?

Then again, Princess Snow and her affliction aren’t too lovable yet Anja has to put her personal feelings aside and figure out why the princess has been falling ill. Is someone in the court poisoning her? Is it simply Snow’s sadness at the loss of her sister and mother?
Healer Anja chases the truth, the mysterious possibly-not-a-cat cat, and tries to hide from her budding feels for her protective guard.

Kingfisher’s characters always have the best sense of observant humor and this tale is no exception. I love her worlds and characters and the relationships she creates along the way.
Yet another great fairytale retelling in which Kingfisher makes the story her, and our, own. - Sara W.
Profile Image for Lance.
764 reviews319 followers
Want to read
January 31, 2025
All aboard the T. Kingfisher hype train 🚂🚂🚂

AND it’s a Snow White retelling!!
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,693 reviews4,616 followers
August 2, 2025
Not quite what I expected but excellent! But am I surprised? No, it's T. Kingfisher!

Hemlock & Silver is a retelling of Snow White, but through the perspective of a side character and coming at it in a completely fresh way. Strange mirror worlds, a mysteriously ill princess, and a violent royal history weave together a creepy and novel take on a classic fairytale. The main character is a woman obsessed with poisons and antidotes, hired by the king to uncover what is making his daughter ill. But what she finds goes far beyond anything she expected...

This was eerie and tragic in the best possible way. I absolutely recommend it and the audio narration is great too! I received an audio review copy via Netgalley, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for DianaRose.
689 reviews85 followers
July 10, 2025
firstly, thank you to the publisher for an arc and an alc!

updated to 4.5 stars because the narrator did a fantastic job

in the past six months, i have read a large majority of t.kingfisher’s backlist and have become obsessed with her writing — both her horror and fantasies are terrifyingly creative and satirical, and extremely attention grabbing.

while i loved this dark snow white retelling — which also reminded me of alice in wonderland because of the talking cat involved — i found myself dragging through the first 40%. the plot really didn’t pick up until halfway through, which to me was a tad disappointing.

but of course, t.kingerfisher’s writing knows no bounds, what with her descriptions of creepy crawling centipedes with fingers for little legs and creativity by depicting an entire alternate world in mirrors.

as for the narrator, she did a fantastic job. i always think satirical humor works best in a narration, and t. kingfisher's narrators nail it every time!

overall, this was a great read!
Profile Image for Mara.
1,915 reviews4,285 followers
August 10, 2025
3.5 stars - I think this will please folks who really enjoy interesting magic systems in their fantasy. For me, the plot was a little hurky jerky for my tastes as it explored that magic, but I really loved Anja, Snow, & Javier as characters. I'm a sucker for T Kingfisher's brand of comfy fantasy, though this one definitely also had the element of sadness that some of her work includes. Bonus... talking egotistical cat!

All around, this was another winner from one of my all time favorite authors, even if it wasn't a personal favorite from her.
Profile Image for Esmay Rosalyne.
1,418 reviews
August 19, 2025
This review was originally published on Grimdark Magazine

4.5 stars

T. Kingfisher has long proved herself to be the queen of the twisty, dark, satirical, genre-blendy fairytale retellings, but I think she truly outdid herself in Hemlock & Silver. Is it a fairytale fantasy? A portal fantasy? A horror fantasy? A cozy fantasy? A romance fantasy? Honestly, who even cares. It’s just a damned brilliant book steeped in Kingfisher’s trademark dark humour and wit that had me intoxicated from start to finish.

“The cat sighed the sigh of the much put-upon. “I didn’t plan to educate a human today,” he said.”

I mean, just read the first line of Hemlock & Silver and tell me you don’t immediately want to keep reading: “I had just taken poison when the king arrived to inform me he had murdered his wife.”. THAT is what I call a strong opening; the hook is planted, the tone is set, and the intrigue is already just oozing off the page. Then add to all that some strangely haunting mirror worlds, a mysteriously ill princess, addictive toxic apples, a narcissistic cat with a big ass personality, and an introverted bodyguard who is really distractingly attractive (how unfair of him!).

Needless to say, T. Kingfisher has taken the tired, old Snow White fairytale and spun something uniquely refreshing and exciting out of it. But the real magic that makes this loose retelling stand out from the crowd for me is the fact that it’s told from such a refreshing perspective: a blunt, headstrong, plus-size (and autistic-coded?) 35-year-old healer and poison expert who is both (deservedly) confident and embarrassingly awkward all at the same time. In other words, Anja is the woman of my dreams.

“Tact is overrated anyway. And if I started being tactful now, he’d probably die of shock.”

Now, I can see how some people might find the pacing of Hemlock & Silver a bit rocky in places with its slow set-up and very hectic ending, but I personally didn’t care at all as there was truly not a single second where I was not entertained. Anja is just so charming and funny without even trying to be, and processing all the increasingly weird events of this mystery investigation through her pragmatic and deadpan perspective made it all the more fun.

Moreover, Anja is extremely competent and clever without being cocky about it, and I loved how her incredible knowledge of all things poison, herbology, and faith (which she passionately spouts out at the most (in)opportune moments) just made the entire world come to life. Kingfisher’s boundless imagination is truly on full display, and it’s honestly astounding to me how much rich and unique worldbuilding is packed into such a tight standalone novel. Sure, it might have taken me quite a while to wrap my head around the intricacies of the eerie mirror realm magic, but Anja seemed to understand how the logic was logicking, so I was just along for the wild ride and I eventually caught up (I think?).

“After a moment I swallowed hard and said, “I’ve gone mad.”
“That,” said the cat, “is also none of my business.”


Anja’s strong (and dare I say, intoxicating) first person narration just had me completely immersed and engrossed the entire way through, and the unconventional way that she interacted with the world and the people around her was honestly beyond amusing to me. Especially her deep despair over having to work with a volatile 12-year-old princess (help, how do you deal with CHILDREN?!), her sharp banter with her unexpected, sassy animal companion, and her undeniable attraction to her wonderful bodyguard who accidentally gets roped into her crazy rollercoaster of an investigation just had me constantly smiling and feeling all the feels (please tell me where I can find myself my own Javier, thank you very much).

In a way, the dynamic between Anja and Javier reminded me a lot of the romances in Kingfisher’s Saint of Steel series, except in Hemlock & Silver the romance is just simmering in the background and never becomes quite as explicit. The tender, slow-burn yearning was just sooo delicious, and I loved how that subplot balanced out the diabolical darkness that is packed within these pages. I mean, talk about some horrifying visuals, sickening sensations, pulse-pounding action and heart-wrenching twists and turns. Also, don’t expect Hemlock & Silver to conclude with a perfect fairytalesque ‘and then they lived happily ever after’ ending. Yes, this is a very satisfying standalone, but I would honestly sell my soul to get a sequel someday to follow up on some of the tantalizing threads left dangling.

“That’s humans for you, I suppose. In dreadful danger, with the weight of the world crushing us down, we’ll somehow still find ourselves thinking: I wonder if he likes me?”

At this point I have read almost the entirety of Kingfisher’s catalogue, and Hemlock & Silver is not just one of my top favourites, but I’d dare say it’s also one of her best works yet (which is saying a lot, because she honestly just doesn’t miss). So, whether you love T. Kingfisher mostly for her fantasy works like A Sorceress Comes to Call and Nettle & Bone, for her horror works like The Hollow Places and What Moves the Dead, or her fantasy romance works like Swordheart and Bryony & Roses, I think Hemlock & Silver is a masterful blend of all those styles that will satisfy cravings you never even knew you had.

Thank you to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan for providing me with an eARC in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for P.C. Cast.
Author 171 books28.1k followers
September 3, 2025
I love T Kingfisher. She's an absolute autobuy for me. Her stories are so smart and unique and I adore her perfectly imperfect characters. This book started a little slow to me. Actually, no. What I mean is usually from page one I'm obsessed with a Kingfisher book—like I get a lot of yardwork done so that I can spend a day listening to her book and accomplish something. This one was interesting and well written, and I liked Anja just fine but I didn't make excuses to listen UNTIL the mirrors and the bodyguard got involved and then I couldn't stop listening. There are some seriously creepy cool things in this book, which I won't give away by describing. I'll just say Kingfisher continues to be brilliantly bizarre. Read this book!
Profile Image for AG.
159 reviews16 followers
June 14, 2025
Huge thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan for the arc!

🌟🌟🌟🌟✨️/5

Having enjoyed T. Kingfisher's works previously, I knew I'd like this one...I never expected to be this obsessed with it. Hemlock & Silver has unexpectedly become my favorite T. Kingfisher novel and also one of my favorite fairytale-inspired books. It's adventurous, whimsical, a bit romantic with just the right amount of humor!

This year I've been gravitating away from fantasy and towards litfic more and more because of the trope-heavy books being published recently, so I was delighted by how refreshing almost every single aspect of this felt! I must say that like Anja the protagonist, I too have a morbid interest in poisonous plants (side note: that cover and the iconic poisonous plants on it is just brilliant). I enjoyed reading the discussions surrounding poisons and the medical system of the world. Although fully developed worldbuilding is neither the point nor a requirement for the story, the tidbits Anja provided through her observations lent an authentic tone to the narrative.

Anja is one of those protagonists from whose perspective I enjoyed viewing the world. The first person POV works very well for this one. She knows she isn't perfect and acknowledges and embraces her imperfections. I also liked that she's a plus sized character and older than the female protagonists we often encounter. T. Kingfisher's characteristic humor shines in Hemlock & Silver. I found myself laughing out loud quite often. The side characters were amazing too! Grayling the one-eyed judgmental talking cat was my favorite. The romance was just the right amount of sweet and didn't overshadow the plot. Overall, the book had me HOOKED. I loved how TK fleshed out the magic system. All questions that popped up in my mind were eventually answered, leaving no plot holes. Most fantasy novels I've read recently were careless with the worldbuilding and lore, so it was good to see someone being thoughtful for a change. The lore surrounding the mirror-gelds was a highlight for me.

My only critique is that the pacing dragged juuuust a bit once Anja discovered the mirror magic and tried making sense of it, although it does make sense for her to do so since she's used to experimenting.

Although not quite a 5 star, Hemlock & Silver is one of my favorite books I've read so far this year so I'll be rounding it up to a 5. This would make a fabulous animated film. Highly recommended to fans of fairytales!
Profile Image for Jodie.
59 reviews7 followers
June 3, 2025
Hemlock & Silver is pitched as a dark Snow White retelling, but it’s more of a whimsical reimagining with light fairytale vibes than a creepy or gothic tale.
Think: low-stakes magic, an older, capable protagonist, and a talking one-eyed cat who may or may not be judging your every move. It reminded me a lot of Water Moon or the Emily Wilde Trilogy.

Anja, a 35-year-old healer and poison expert, is sent by the king to investigate his daughter Snow’s mysterious illness.
Anja searches for answers until a magical mirror reveals a hidden world that may hold the key to Snow’s sickness.
But the deeper Anja steps into the mirror-realm, the stranger and more dangerous things become.

The story takes its time getting started. There’s a lot of worldbuilding, medical theory, and setup that can feel slow, but once Anja stumbles into the mirror world (with help from a narcissistic cat), the story picks up. (about 40-50% in from what I remember)
The mirror magic is clever and enchanting, and I loved how it played with the idea of reflection and perception.

Anja herself is a refreshingly pragmatic, witty, and easy to root for protagonist. The kind of heroine who just wants everyone to stop getting poisoned, please.

This isn’t a high stakes fantasy or sweeping romance (though there is a soft, VERY slow-burn romance subplot).
It's not dark, not scary, but instead, Hemlock & Silver is a fun cosy magical tale with characters who feel like people you’d want to sit next to at a small-town inn.

I recommend this one if you're in the mood for a cosy, magical adventure!
Profile Image for jagodasbooks .
1,131 reviews375 followers
August 21, 2025
this was so good, I was so interested in the plot, read with bated breath fr

but the hint of romance ahhhhhh
HE BRAIDED HER HAIR SJSJSJJSJSJS

and the cat and chicken were perfect
Profile Image for °❀⋆.monica ೃ࿔*:・.
336 reviews47 followers
August 10, 2025
I LOVE FAIRYTALE RETELLINGS!!! AND THIS IS WHY!!!

t kingfisher found a way to take an iconic fairy tale (snow white), kept the original vibe, but made it its own unique story! it was haunting, surprisingly gory, and had the perfect amount of humor.

our main character, anja, is a “healer” who drinks poisons not to die, but to find cures. because of her niche specialty, she’s been recruited by the king to help save his dying daughter. but once she’s in the palace she stumbles upon a secret world hidden within a mirror, changing everything that anja thought she knew. with the help of a reluctant guard, a narcissistic TALKING cat, and her insatiable curiosity, anja is determined to uncover this mystery and save snow, the princess.

anja was a breath of fresh air and I loved her as a character! she’s whitty with a self deprecating sense of humor (me-coded) and her determination is admirable. I loved being in her mind, reading her hilarious but also insightful inner monologues and I was rooting for her the whole story!

the romance?? I didn’t even realize there was going to be one but once those crumbs were being fed to me, you best believe I gobbled them up like a greedy lil rat 😫🤲🏼

perfectly paced, satisfying conclusion, and a great cast of characters; I couldn’t ask for a better standalone fairytale retelling!

thank you to netgalley and t kingfisher for the e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
1,829 reviews628 followers
June 16, 2025
Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, who is the coziest author of them all?
The answer is obviously T Kingfisher with her quirky retellings and unique protagonists and sweetly nonconventional romances.

When the King comes to you admitting he killed his wife after finding her with their daughter’s heart cut out and asks you to heal his seemingly poisoned remaining daughter, Snow, you don’t say no.

Even if Anja is 35 years old and a reluctant participant - she putters around her workroom and shoves charcoal down throats and occasionally up asses.

The first 40% is preparation and travel. However, this might have been my favourite part as Anja really got to shine. She is knowledgable, blunt, and stubborn. Funny without meaning to be.

There is a talking cat, a venomous snake, a stupid rooster, an attentive guard…
And much more.

Cats all know they’re smarter than you are, and they’re smug as hell about it. (This is not to say that there aren’t kind and loyal and humble cats out there. There probably are. I’m just saying that even the nicest cat in the world thinks it’s funny when you fall down the stairs.)

Whilst not overtly stated, I would say Anja is autism-coded. She is focused, prefers her own company, can spout lots of facts about poisons at the worst possible (and best) moments.

Arguably, this is T Kingfisher’s most romantic book. Not that I’m saying the romance was the main focus, but there was protectiveness, caring for her whilst she was sick, HAIR-BRAIDING!!!

This was also more fantastical than most of her other books. Confusing, weird, Snow White meets Alice in Wonderland vibes.

Four stars until 60%.
Maybe slightly too long, but enjoyable.

Arc gifted by Tor.

Bookstagram
Tiktok
Profile Image for nika.ex.libris.
222 reviews37 followers
September 3, 2025
4,5
So this is my 4th book by the author, and I finally enjoyed it! The previous ones were short (and I usually don’t get hooked on short books), but this one really grabbed me, I couldn’t put it down!
Profile Image for brewdy_reader.
163 reviews26 followers
August 17, 2025
Thank you @torbooks + @macmillan.audio for the ARC & ALC ♡

🍎 T. kingfisher has become a fave fantasy author.
.
✍🏽 Read if you love: smart, snarky, + eccentric women.
Here’s to the misfits, the ones who won’t hold our tongues; who appreciate a good wit and don’t fit the mold.
.
Anya is a healer, but not of the motherly soothing variety. She’s awkward and outspoken, with a pet venomous snake, and a curiosity for poisonous plants (and their antidotes). Using the scientific process of course. 🙈🐓
.
She’s called upon to cure the King’s daughter who he believes to be slowly succumbing, Belladonna-style, to an unknown poisoning.
.
With a charming slow burning (closed door) love story and an absolutely hysterical talking cat, I rolled with laughter. The banter between Grayling and Anya!

“𝙳𝚘 𝚢𝚘𝚞 𝚑𝚊𝚟𝚎 𝚊 𝚗𝚊𝚖𝚎?”
“𝙸 𝚑𝚊𝚟𝚎 𝚖𝚊𝚗𝚢 𝚗𝚊𝚖𝚎𝚜,” 𝚜𝚊𝚒𝚍 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚌𝚊𝚝. 🐈‍⬛
𝙰 𝚋𝚒𝚝 𝚘𝚏 𝚏𝚞𝚛 𝚌𝚊𝚞𝚐𝚑𝚝 𝚞𝚗𝚍𝚎𝚛 𝚘𝚗𝚎 𝚌𝚕𝚊𝚠 𝚛𝚎𝚚𝚞𝚒𝚛𝚎𝚍 𝚑𝚒𝚜 𝚊𝚝𝚝𝚎𝚗𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗. “𝙷𝚒𝚜 𝙶𝚕𝚘𝚛𝚒𝚘𝚞𝚜𝚗𝚎𝚜𝚜, 𝙶𝚘𝚍-𝙺𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙳𝚎𝚜𝚎𝚛𝚝𝚜, 𝙻𝚘𝚛𝚍 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚁𝚘𝚘𝚏𝚝𝚘𝚙𝚜, 𝙺𝚒𝚗 𝚘𝚏 𝙼𝚒𝚛𝚛𝚘𝚛𝚜, 𝙷𝚎𝚒𝚛 𝚝𝚘 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙼𝚊𝚗𝚝𝚕𝚎 𝚘𝚏 𝙷𝚊𝚛𝚊𝚛, 𝙷𝚎 𝚆𝚑𝚘 𝚃𝚛𝚎𝚊𝚍𝚜 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚂𝚎𝚛𝚙𝚎𝚗𝚝’𝚜 𝚃𝚊𝚒𝚕, 𝚆𝚑𝚘𝚜𝚎 𝙲𝚕𝚊𝚠𝚜 𝙷𝚊𝚟𝚎 𝚂𝚌𝚊𝚛𝚛𝚎𝚍 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙱𝚊𝚛𝚔 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙶𝚛𝚎𝚊𝚝 𝚃𝚛𝚎𝚎.” —the cat who will later be known as Grayling
.
It’s a Snow White retelling 🍎 I actually felt was also Alice in wonderland + Pam’s labyrinth vibes.
.
This was really well done. My fave so far from kingfisher!

▶︎ •၊၊||၊|။||။‌‌‌‌‌|• 🎧 Jennifer Pickens was a great choice for Anya, giving her a certain gravitas while still imbuing humor and charm.
Profile Image for Books_the_Magical_Fruit.
877 reviews133 followers
August 14, 2025
At this point, I’ve read quite a few novels by T. Kingfisher, and she’s one of my favorite authors. Whether it’s fantasy, horror or a combination of both, she is an amazing storyteller, and she’s FUNNY.

This latest book is a 3.75. I liked it, but it did take a long while to get going. It’s a slow burn slow burn (that means it’s a double slow burn). As such, the story didn’t grab my attention until halfway through. It needs some paring down so the action starts sooner, in my opinion. I only kept going because I love T’s books so much, but others might get a little bored.

I did guess a major plot point, and it is very creepy. It will certainly change the way you look at the world. No one writes fantastical horror quite like T. Kingfisher. Why do I read these kind of books at night?? You’d think I’d learn my lesson…

Thank you to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for an eARC in exchange for my honest feedback!
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,421 reviews2,333 followers
July 23, 2025
Thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the audio ARC. It hasn't affected the content of my review.

The dark fairytale vibes of this were just what I needed yesterday when I flew through this audiobook. Especially since the audiobook I had been listening to previously is the epitome of a three-star read. Such a genuine pleasure to read a T. Kingfisher book after that, rich in atmosphere, fun dialogue, and characters that are easy to like and follow. Plus, her fairytale retellings (of which this is one) are always so creative.

Hemlock & Silver takes on the story of Snow White (and Rose Red, her lesser known sister). Our main character is Anja, a healer who has an obsessive knowledge of poisons and does research to find cures for them. This is set in a desert (picture medieval England crossed with Tucson, AZ) and there are thus lots of opportunities for Anja to study venom, not to mention the humans poisoning people left and right (and poisoning themselves; I appreciated the compassion Anja showed to those suffering from addiction).

So of course when the King thinks his last remaining daughter Snow is being poisoned, he finds someone who can help him, and that person is Anja. She reluctantly agrees.

Watching Anja at work was very satisfying. She has a curious mind, and quickly goes to work on the mystery of what is happening to twelve year old Snow. What she finds is definitely not what she expected, though. I think the reason though that this isn't getting five stars is that her relationships with the two main side characters (bodyguard Javier and talking cat Grayling) weren't as deep as I know Kingfisher can go. I think they just needed a bit more time together that the shorter page length (and story time frame) didn't allow.

But that is a minor complaint, as I very much enjoyed this book, and will be buying myself a copy.

The audiobook was great, and if you like audiobooks, you will have a nice time.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,726 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.