The Thickety by J. A. White

The Thickety (Thickety, #2)

by J. A. White

The Thickety: A Path Begins is a spellbinding tale about a girl, the Thickety, and the power of magic. Fans of Neil Gaiman will love this thrilling new world. When Kara Westfall was five years old, her mother was convicted of the worst of all crimes: witchcraft. Years later, Kara and her little brother, Taff, are still shunned by the people of their village, who believe that nothing is more evil than magic...except, perhaps, the mysterious forest that covers nearly the entire island. It has many names, this place. Sometimes it is called the Dark Wood, or Sordyr's Realm. But mostly it's called the Thickety. The villagers live in fear of the Thickety and the terrible creatures that live there. But when an unusual bird lures Kara into the forbidden forest, she discovers a strange book with unspeakable powers. A book that might have belonged to her mother. And that is just the beginning of the story. Supports the Common Core State Standards Publishers Weekly Best Book IndieBound Indie Next List Publishers Weekly Flying Start Amazon's Big Spring Books Washington Post Summer Book Club

Reviewed by bookperson on

3 of 5 stars

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Dnf

I started reading this because of Goodreads 'Readers also enjoyed this' feature. I was looking for something similar to Jessica Townsend's Nevermoor and this one popped up.
I liked the premise and it felt like darker version of Nevermoor by the description on the site, but when I started listening to the audiobook I quickly learned that these two books not even close.
A Path Begins is set in a world similar to our medieval times, when witches were worst of the people. And the opening sequence is burning one of them and up to 13 percent it's bullying main character.
It's too dark for my liking and I thought it would be more whimsical and dark in other senses. My mistake.

Btw, narrator doing an amazing job! If you like audiobooks I feel like you could really enjoy her performance!

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 23 February, 2019: Finished reading
  • 23 February, 2019: Reviewed