The Way By by Holly Walters

Blurb

Fairies are real. Or they ought to be, at least, according to Madame Bel Carmen’s best hypotheses. Her problem, however, is that after searching the world over for the lore to prove it, she hasn’t uncovered anything that someone didn’t already know. Out of options, she knows her only chance to prove the existence of the Fae is to find someone who’s met them, and she’s just heard tell of a reclusive scholar who has reportedly done just that. This folklorist is more than just withdrawn; she’s nowhere, an academic ghost known only by a few obscure writings.

Review

I was intrigued by the blurb, but this book is so much more. I also love this quote, as I have never stopped reading fairy tales. This has folklore, fae, fae deals, riddles in rhyme, ghosts, a fabulous cat called Noseworthy and a group of curious women needing to get to the crux of what is happening in the Way By and stop it being destroyed.

I will admit to struggling a bit with the pace of the first half of the book, but once the ladies involved were in the Way By, the liminal world between our world and the fae, the story took on a much quicker pace and I loved it.

Being from the UK, it was strange getting used to so many place names in Massachusetts being the same as some English towns.

This passage from the book is an excellent description of the lives of the five different women who find themselves working together to save the world they know and love, as well as the Fae world. They have all had different life experiences and were all looking for something, they just did not know what that something was. Their knowledge and understanding of the Way By is wide ranging, from being a Waysmith to never having even heard of it until something brought them into the liminal space, without them knowing they were even there.

Finally navigating their way around, confronting their own demons, as well as the one who wanted to bring chaos and destruction to the world, brings them the understanding they seek, as well as more questions. They all have a reason for being there and they all have knowledge and skills that put together can hopefully resolve the situation.

The scenes at the end, where the women are battling Clarisant, made me think of this sculpture by Damien Hirst.

Myth by Damien Hirst, at Yorkshire Sculpture Park

To its credit, this book gave me a lot to think about and it is still with me, a few weeks after reading it.

Thanks to @The_WriteReads and author for the ARC to read and review for this blog tour.

About the Author

Holly Walters originally hails from a small, rural, town in Minnesota. A life-long storyteller, Holly is also a cultural anthropologist with a PhD from Brandeis University working in the high Himalayas of Nepal. While her ethnographic work focuses on fossil folklores and sacred ammonites in South Asia, her creative work pays homage to the dragons, unicorns, and fairy tales of her youth.

When not writing, she can be found perfecting her Medieval archery skills, theorizing about movie plots, and forgetting where she left her tea cup. Today, she makes her home in Boston, Massachusetts, with a very unruly garden, a few equally cantankerous pets, a clever spouse, and a resident house ghost. And since her creepy sculpture hobby hasn’t panned out thus far, she is looking forward to the publication of her first novel and the writing of many more.

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