How to Hang a Witch by Adriana Mather

How to Hang a Witch

by Adriana Mather

The trials of high school start to feel like a modern-day witch hunt for a teen with all the wrong connections to Salem's past in this thrilling, creepy and romantic New York Times bestseller.

"I am utterly addicted to Adriana Mather’s electric debut. It keeps you on the edge of your seat, twisting and turning with ghosts, witches, an ancient curse, and – sigh – romance." Jennifer Niven

After Sam's father is hospitalised, she has to move from New York to Salem with her stepmother, Vivian. Unfortunately, Sam is related to Cotton Mather, one of the men responsible for the Salem Witch Trials, and to say she feels unwelcome in Salem is an understatement... She is particularly unnerved by The Descendants, a mysterious and tight-knit group of girls related to those persecuted in the Trials. At the same time, she must deal with Elijah, the handsome but angry ghost who has appeared in her house, and her new neighbour Jaxon only complicates things further.

When a centuries-old curse is rekindled, Sam finds herself at the centre of it. Can she stop history repeating itself?

Reviewed by readingwithwrin on

4 of 5 stars

Share
“The air's crisp with the smell of autumn, and the first few leaves have started to change color. The streets have that family-friendly feel. Store windows already have pumpkins and witches' hats in them.”

See reviews first on my blog

Sam's is now having to move to Salem to her old family home with her step-mother because her father is in the hospital. While The step-mother has been around since Sam was little there is still a lot of tension between them. Sam isn't the best at making friends do to a "curse" that she thinks is on her family, but as time goes on we learn that it just might be real and it doesn't just affect her.
Once Sam is at school there is of course mean kids that are the descendants of the people who were hanged at the witch trials, who absolutely hate Sam because of who her grandfather is and they basically try to blame everything bad that's been happening on her.
With the help of someone from the past and the neighbor though Sam might just be able to put a stop to everything bad that's been happening and save the rest of the descendants before they have the same fate as their ancestors.

“It’s not like they exactly agreed. They’re just kinda silent about the whole thing,” I say. “Group silence can be a death sentence. It was in Salem,”

When I started this book I really didn't know much about the witch trials besides the little bit of required reading I did in middle school, so must of this stuff was new to me and I have even started looking for more YA books that are about Salem (If you have any recommendations please tell me!). The author having her own family history in this book made it all the more interesting to me.

Overall I really loved this book. Not only did it have enough mystery and history that kept my interest. I also genuinely liked most of the characters. Sam while having a temper at times it was understandable why she did and you truly felt for her. Sure there was still some teenage angst involved, but who wouldn't at her age in the types of situations she was in. The only thing I could have done without is the romance between Sam and a certain person that kept helping her. I did find the romance between Sam and her next door neighbor nice and I liked how he kept helping her even when she kept pushing him away to "protect him". As for the descendant group most of them were good, and were just suspicious because of everything they had always been taught. I hope that they all can now not hate each other so much and finally let the past stay in the past.

“Almost everything worth believing in cannot be seen. Love, for instance.”

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 30 October, 2016: Finished reading
  • 30 October, 2016: Reviewed