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Ivy Wilde was thrown out of the hallowed Order of Witches after being accused of cheating and…um, assault for punching out her then boyfriend who cheated off of her and then blamed her to save himself. But Ivy is much happier driving a cab than putting all that effort into climbing the witch hierarchy at the Order. Putting in that much effort was just too much work and Ivy is allergic to work. In fact, she barely wants to walk across the hall to take care of her neighbor’s familiar while she is out on assignment for the Order.
When Ivy opens her neighbor’s door after feeding her cat, she finds two men in the familiar red robes of the Order. They mistake Ivy for her neighbor and congratulate her on her promotion to second level witch and her new position in Arcane Branch. Before Ivy can let them know there has been a mistake, she is hit with a binding spell which binds Ivy to her new partner, Adeptus Exemptus Raphael Winter. It seems Winter doesn’t play well with others and the Order wanted to make sure he didn’t abandon his young trainee.
Now Ivy and Winter are stuck together (or at least within a few miles of each other) with a binding which will force work together. Ivy has no interest in helping the Order or being involved with Mr. Self-Righteous Adeptus Exemptus Winter but until she can figure out how to break the unbreakable binding, she is quite literally stuck. When someone manages to steal a spell book from the library filled with very dangerous spells, it is up to Ivy and Winter to figure out who got past the wards to steal the book.
I adore Ivy. She tries to put as little effort into things as she can. I think it is the funniest thing that all Ivy’s strongest spells were created because she didn’t want to get off her couch. I am just surprised that unlike The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, she doesn’t do magic to get her apartment cleaned.
But it is Winter who catches on that Ivy’s problem isn’t so much that she is lazy (because she truly is) but that like many geniuses, she is bored. Ivy is so lazy, she creates her own magic runes for things that even someone as top level as Winter had no idea could be done. Ivy couldn’t be bothered digging into her bag for her house keys, and invents a rune to unlock her door. No one knew you could create magic runes with just thumbs until Ivy was sitting in her cab twiddling her thumbs and magic ensued. Ivy even created a rune to make her familiar talk.
As expected, Winter gave her little respect at first. He only saw her as slightly overweight, slovenly and with no ambition. (check, check and check) He does quickly realize that Ivy was falsely accused of cheating and didn’t fight to stay in the Order because Ivy’s magic abilities were naturally stronger than most witches and she was bored with beginner spells. He also is quick to realize that Ivy’s personality made people talk to her, where his standoffish demeanor worked against him. At this point, Winter stopped fighting the bond and starting fighting to keep Ivy as his partner.
This series is light-hearted and fun and I think if I had magic, I would want to be just like Ivy. I quickly jumped on the next two stories and am enjoying them immensely.
Two non-story comments that I have about this series. #1 in digital form, this book needed a better proofreading. For example: the cat Brutus was referred to as Bruno and all the conversations lack quotes (“) and only have an apostrophe (‘). #2 in audiobook form, the character of Ivy Wilde is clearly British. The story takes place in Oxford in England but the narrator uses an American voice. She can do British accents and uses it for some of the other characters but maybe it was too much to do the majority with an accent. The same goes for Raphael Winter. He too is missing the accent. Tantor should have had a British narrator do the audiobook. By the second book, I am used to the voices, but it is still awkward to hear Ivy’s British slang coming from an American voice and every time she does it, I am again reminded that the voice isn’t right. American’s don’t ask for a “cuppa,” live in “flats” or curse “bloody arse.”
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