NEW! AI-Created Visual Supports for Special Ed Classrooms Check out our Etsy shop or download our FREE Visual starter pack

Book Cover

Cho returns to the magical alternate Regency England of Sorcerer
to the Crown
(2015).

A storm at sea leaves sisters Sakti and Muna washed up on the
beach at Janda Baik without their memories and suffering from a curse. The
powerful witch Mak Genggang grants the two young women her protection, but
their effort to determine who cursed them takes them to England—or at least, it
takes Muna; Sakti is lost during the perilous journey through Fairy. Muna takes
refuge with Prunella Wythe, Britain’s controversial Sorceress Royal, who has
opened up an Academy to teach young women to become magiciennes. Meanwhile,
someone has stolen a powerful magical talisman from the Fairy Queen, and she
blames England magicians in general and Prunella in particular, threatening to
put them all to death if the item is not returned. Muna must find some way back
into Fairy to find Sakti and dodge the wrathful Fairy Queen while concealing
from Prunella and her fellow instructor, Miss Henrietta Stapleton, that she
cannot do magic. It’s not entirely clear why Muna feels she must hide the truth
about her magic and her predicament in general other than her (somewhat
reasonable, given the societal context) mistrust of the English or the author’s
need to inject additional tension into the plot. The title offers perhaps too
strong a clue as to the real source of the Queen’s anger as well as the nature
of Sakti and Muna’s predicament, but watching the strands of the plot converge
and the details play out still offers some surprises and wonderful set pieces.
There’s even a sweet dash of romance at the end. As in her previous novel, Cho
offers plenty of sharp commentary on the misogyny and colonialism of this
magical version of Regency England, in which spells are thrilling and exotic
when performed by a witch from the Far East but scandalous when cast by an
Englishwoman.

Perhaps not as groundbreaking as the debut but a solid
follow-up, nonetheless.

kirkusreviews.com

Add comment