ladygrey
Written on Sep 4, 2012
The problem is that the prosaic voice and the simplicity of the way Emmeline is written reminded me of [b:The Poison Diaries|7022166|The Poison Diaries (Poison Diaries, #1)|Maryrose Wood|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1271880229s/7022166.jpg|7268820]. So, when everything started to go wrong, as things inevitably do, the wrongness felt like The Poison Diaries which I didn't like much at all. It left a bad taste that I just couldn't escape however much I recognized that The Sweetest Spell didn't have any of the same ugliness.
Then, once things oddly started to improve (admittedly in a sideways direction) I was able to read The Sweetest Spell as its own story. And I (forgive my phrasing) it was perfectly sweet and a good book for a teenage girl.