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Sorcery and Cecelia or the Enchanted Chocolate Pot: Being the Correspondence of Two Young Ladies of Quality Regarding Various Magical Scandals in London and the Country Hardcover – May 1, 2003


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A great deal is happening in London this season. For starters, there's the witch who tried to poison Kate at Sir Hilary's induction into the Royal College of Wizards. (Since when does hot chocolate burn a hole straight through one's dress?!) Then there's Dorothea. Is it a spell that's made her the toast of the town--or could it possibly have something to do with the charm-bag under Oliver's bed? And speaking of Oliver, just how long can Cecelia and Kate make excuses for him? Ever since he was turned into a tree, he hasn't bothered to tell anyone where he is! The girls might think it all a magical nightmare . . . if only they weren't having so much fun.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

PATRICIA C. WREDE has written many novels, including Sorcery and Cecelia or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot and The Grand Tour coauthored with Caroline Stevermer, as well as the four books in her own series, the Enchanted Forest Chronicles. She lives near Minneapolis, Minnesota.

CAROLINE STEVERMER has written several books for adults and one other fantasy novel for young readers, River Rats. Ms. Stevermer also lives in Minneapolis.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

8 April 1817
Rushton Manor, Essex

Dearest Kate,

It is dreadfully flat here since you have been gone, and it only makes it worse to imagine all the things I shall be missing. I wish Aunt Elizabeth were not so set against my having a Season this year. She is still annoyed about the incident with the goat, and says that to let the pair of us loose on London would ruin us both for good, and spoil Georgy's chances into the bargain. I think this is quite unjust, but there is no persuading her. (I believe the fact that she would have been obliged to share a house with Aunt Charlotte, should she and I have come to London this year, may have contributed to her decision.) So I rely on you, dearest cousin, to write and tell me everything! If I am not to be allowed to enjoy a Season of my own, I can at least take a vicarious delight in your and Georgina's triumph! I am quite convinced you will take London by storm.

Not that we are without amusement in Essex; quite the contrary! Aunt Elizabeth and I called at the vicarage yesterday and spent a stimulating afternoon listening to the Reverend Fitzwilliam discoursing on the Vanities of Society and the Emptiness of Worldly Pleasures. Aunt Elizabeth hung on every word, and we are to return and take tea on Thursday. I am determined to have the headache Thursday, if I have to hit myself with a rock to do it.

There is, however, a ray of hope. Lady Tarleton is to have a party for her niece next week. The invitation arrived this morning, and Papa says we are to go! And Aunt Elizabeth approves! She thinks it is to be an informal hop, as Lady Tarleton's niece is not yet out, but Patience Everslee told me in the greatest confidence that there is to be waltzing! I only hope Oliver will stay long enough to accompany us. He has been moping around the house like a sick sheep ever since you and Georgy left, and yesterday he asked Papa, very casually, whether Papa did not think it would be a good idea for him to go to Town this year for a week or two. He thinks he is being very sly, but if he puts off making his arrangements for another day or so Papa will have accepted Lady Tarleton's invitation and Oliver will be obliged to stay here until after the party. I have not, of course, pointed this out to him. Oliver has stated many times his dislike of hearing advice from his younger sister, so it is his own fault if he has not got sense enough to see which way the wind is blowing.

Aunt Elizabeth intends for the two of us to pay a call on Lady Tarleton and her niece on Monday, by way of improving our acquaintance before the ball (which is to say, she wants to have a look at the niece). I shall be on my best behavior, even if the niece turns out to be quite odious. There is no point in looking for difficulties the day before a party.

And there may be more excitement to come. Sir Hilary Bedrick has just been named to the Royal College of Wizards; the whole village is buzzing with the news. I suspect he was chosen because of that enormous library of musty old spellbooks at Bedrick Hall. He left yesterday for London, where he will be installed, but all of us expect great things when he returns. Except, of course, for Aunt Elizabeth, who looks at me sideways and says darkly that magic is for heathens and cannibals, not for decent folk. Perhaps that is why she holds Sir Hilary in such dislike. I would wager my best kid gloves that if it were not for Papa's interest in the historical portions of Sir Hilary's library, Aunt Elizabeth would have cut the connection ages ago.

Do, please, try to find me those silks I asked you about before you left, and if you should happen to see a pair of long gloves that would match my green crape, please, please send them at once! I should so like to look well at Lady Tarleton's party.

Give my love to Georgy and Aunt Charlotte, and do try not to let Aunt Charlotte bully you too much. And do, do write and tell me everything you are doing!

Your loving cousin,
Cecy



10 April 1817
11 Berkeley Square, London

Dear Cecy,

If you've been forced to listen to Reverend Fitzwilliam on the subject of the emptiness of worldly pleasures for hours together, I feel I ought to write something bracing to cheer you up. But after three days of a London Season I find it hard to come to the defense of frivolity with any spirit. Perhaps it will make Rushton seem more amusing to you if I complain vigorously. (Don't worry, I haven't said a word to anyone else, not even Georgina.)

First, there was our arrival in Berkeley Square, a very welcome event after a day spent in the coach with Aunt Charlotte complaining of her migraine and Georgina exclaiming, "Only look, a sedan chair!" at every opportunity. It was very late and we were very tired and soiled with our travels, too weary to feel the proper emotions on entering such a grand house for the first time. (Horace Walpole is by no means Aunt Charlotte's favorite author, but the opportunity to hire the genuine Mayfair town house he genuinely died in for the Season has given her a new appreciation of him and his works.)

Make no mistake, it is very grand. On the outside it is a high, narrow, polite-looking house built of brick. On the inside there is a high-ceilinged entrance hall with a marble staircase winding up two flights. On either side of the hall are reception rooms. The one on the right is called the blue saloon. It is very comfortable with a bow window overlooking the Square. On the left side of the hall is the drawing room, much grander than the blue saloon, furnished with lyre-back chairs, delicate sofas, and a spinet. There are velvet curtains in the windows and a highly polished marble floor, upon which I slipped and sat down hard as we were being shown about the house. This was my first piece of clumsiness in London, but I suspect it will not be my last. The general effect of the marble floor and ivory curtains is almost arctic. Only touches of primrose and black relieve the whiteness. At the top of the two flights of stairs are the bedrooms. Georgina's looks out over the Square and mine faces back into the lane behind the house. If I crane my neck I can see down into the kitchen garden-but there is nothing much to look at. Nothing to compare with the gardens at Rushton.

It seemed like a dream to me, following Georgina up and up the stairs-she like a kind of angel climbing to her proper place, her golden hair bright in the light from the lamps-me like a ramshackle shadow lurking after her, shedding hairpins and stumbling over the hem of my skirts.

The bedrooms are lovely, but that night they seemed grand and cold and I was a little dismayed to find myself in my own room all alone-can you credit it, after I schemed for years to get a room to myself? So I slipped in to Georgina to say good night and get my top buttons undone. Georgina was sitting at her window, trying to guess from the darkened glass what direction she was facing so she could say her prayers toward home. I turned her around and didn't tease her, even when I saw the lock of hair she had clenched in her moist little palm-Oliver's, tied up in a bit of pink ribbon. Can you believe it?

Well, as I say, I got her pointed in the right direction and she got me unbuttoned and told me that I had a smut rubbed clear across my forehead and a spot coming on my chin. (As if I hadn't been driven half-mad feeling it coming out all day long in the coach...) So we parted, she to her prayers and I to my bed, the highest, hardest, narrowest, dampest bed on four lion's paws (London would be grander still if they knew how to air their sheets).

Our first day in London was spent shopping, which means I kicked my heels while Aunt Charlotte and the modiste went into raptures over Georgina. The second day, we were taken to see the Elgin Marbles, which was interesting, and to listen to other people see the Elgin Marbles, which would make the eyes roll right back in your head with boredom. The third day, we went back to shopping and I was able to get gloves. Please find enclosed a pair that I think will suit your pomona green crape to perfection. I bought a pair for myself and have spilt coffee on them already. So you see London hasn't changed me yet.

I feel quite envious about Lady Tarleton's dance. Aunt Charlotte has spoken of Almack's but never yet without looking at me and giving a little shudder of apprehension. She intends to call on Lady Jersey tomorrow. If their acquaintance has been exaggerated (and you know that sometimes people do not care quite as much for Aunt Charlotte as she thinks they do), I don't know how we will obtain vouchers. It is plain, however, that without vouchers for Almack's Assembly, Georgy will never truly shine in Society, no matter how lovely she is. For my own sake, I hope I get to go, too. It would be a shame to have trodden Robert Penwood's feet black and blue learning to dance and then never to get a chance to put it to the test.

Do you think a wizard's installation would be a ladylike thing to attend? We passed the Royal College on the way to the Museum and I'm sure I could find my way.

Do tell me all about the dance and mention Oliver a little so Georgina doesn't sigh herself away entirely.

Love, Kate

Copyright © 2003 by Patricia C. Wrede and Caroline Stevermer

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced
or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work
should be mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HMH Books for Young Readers; First Edition (May 1, 2003)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0152046151
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0152046156
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 12 years and up
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 720L
  • Grade level ‏ : ‎ 7 - 9
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.02 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 1 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
834 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book entertaining and enjoyable. They describe the story as interesting and tantalizing. Readers praise the writing style as well-written and clever. They also appreciate the delightful characters and different personalities. Additionally, they describe the romance as sweet and charming. Opinions are mixed on the pacing, with some finding it light and fast, while others say it makes it harder to appreciate the magic.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

92 customers mention "Enjoyment"92 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very entertaining, enjoyable, and delightful. They say the writers are having fun, and it shows in the fun language, magic, and impulsiveness. Readers also mention the storyline is enjoyable, and the setting is wonderful.

"...Kate and Cecy were both charming heroines and it was very amusing to watch them run circles around Thomas and James and get everything figured out..." Read more

"...Actually, I'm positively delighted that this book exists. It's witty and erudite while also being a pure romp...it's innovative and not at all full..." Read more

"...The adventures are sweet, the characters delightful, and the interactions humorous, and some of the inner thoughts of the girls very thought-..." Read more

"...Essex about current events (post Napoleonic war). It was really entertaining, though it helps if you have a little foreknowledge of the..." Read more

55 customers mention "Story quality"55 positive0 negative

Customers find the story interesting, tantalizing, and enjoyable. They like the premise and adventures. Readers also say the magic aspect is a bonus.

"...This was a very interesting approach and I enjoyed the very different personalities of the heroines, so ably portrayed by two different authors...." Read more

"...It's witty and erudite while also being a pure romp...it's innovative and not at all full of itself...." Read more

"...The adventures are sweet, the characters delightful, and the interactions humorous, and some of the inner thoughts of the girls very thought-..." Read more

"...The writing was good and I liked the premise; however, I didn't care for the format of the book—two women writing letters back and forth...." Read more

39 customers mention "Writing style"33 positive6 negative

Customers find the writing style very well-written and clever. They appreciate the excellent English and setting in 1817 England. Readers also say the letters strike just the right balance between exchanging information and questions.

"...The girls are easy to identify with and the book is written in a style that somehow manages to make a boring tea party and a magical battle more or..." Read more

"...The writing is so poetic in old-style language that is not tiresome or affected...." Read more

"The English is excellent and the setting is impeccable, being in 1817 England, but the main reason the book didn't work for me is the letter-..." Read more

"...The letters strike just the right balance between exchanging information/questions (as real letters between cousins would) and narrating/commenting..." Read more

29 customers mention "Character development"23 positive6 negative

Customers find the characters delightful and appreciate the very different personalities of the heroines.

"...This was a very interesting approach and I enjoyed the very different personalities of the heroines, so ably portrayed by two different authors...." Read more

"...I felt the characters and their personalities were consistent, which I think would have been challenging, given how this book was written in chunks..." Read more

"...I adore the characters and I laughed frequently at many of the gossipy bits. I am greatly looking forward to reading the rest of the trilogy!" Read more

"...well written Regency or fantasy (or both) with a happy ending, engaging characters and a lot of fun along the way." Read more

17 customers mention "Romance"12 positive5 negative

Customers find the romance in the book fun, light, and sweet. They describe it as a charming Regency fantasy.

"...Their letters contain a well-balanced blend of humor, romance, and adventure, that, if you're anything like me, will keep you very much engaged..." Read more

"...The style is of regency, with humor, mystery, magic and chaste romance thrown in...." Read more

"...was probably because of the "tell not show" and maybe due to lack of plot planning. See next paragraph...." Read more

"...I liked that the romance was downplayed and way less mushy than usual, but sometimes it makes the more obviously romantic gestures and moments to..." Read more

8 customers mention "Plot"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the world incredibly well-built, strong enough, and cohesive. They also say the heroines are fiercely loyal and the plot itself is fun, well-thought-out, and nicely handled. Readers mention there are plenty of natural breaks to stop for a while.

"...Great pacing, too. I felt it had a strong enough plot for what it is, but wasn't heavy or weighted down with it...." Read more

"...you very much engaged throughout the story. The world was incredibly well built...." Read more

"The plot itself is fun and well thought out...." Read more

"...The magic was clever and nicely handled. Well worth the read." Read more

5 customers mention "Lightness"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book quick and light.

"...Regency purists may flinch at the mix. Though this book is light, it's not Marion Chesney's style...." Read more

"...Overall, Sorcery was entertaining. It was light and engaging with quick humor. However, my overall sense after closing the book was lacking...." Read more

"...If you like fantasy, Regency romance and a light, fun read, you should enjoy this book." Read more

"This is a light, whimsical read with a little "enchantment" , mystery, and romance thrown in...." Read more

29 customers mention "Pacing"16 positive13 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's light, fun, and fast, while others say it makes it harder to appreciate the magic in the story. They also say it's confusing and slow getting started.

"...This is a fast paced, fun fantasy to read, especially if you are familiar with Regency England...." Read more

"...It's a bit jumbled, and the characters could use more development; but it also hearkens back to a whole venerable tradition of novel writing..." Read more

"...Great pacing, too. I felt it had a strong enough plot for what it is, but wasn't heavy or weighted down with it...." Read more

"...The fantasy angle is handled delicately and never overwhelms the situation or setting...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2003
Sorcery & Cecilia centers around two friends, Kate & Cecy, in Regency England. Kate was lucky enough to be sent off with her Aunt Charlotte and cousin Georgina for her first London Season. Well, her best friend Cecy thought she was lucky. Cecy was stuck in the country with her domineering Aunt Elizabeth and her brother Oliver. But Kate would like nothing more than to be at home rather than have to endure her London season as a wallflower. But when Kate accidentally triggers a trap set for the mysterious Marquis of Schofield, she becomes quite popular. Unfortunately the odious Marquis refuses to answer Kate's questions about who the witch was who tried to poison her and why she hates the Marquis so intensely.
Meanwhile, back in the country, Cecy is hot on the trail of the intolerable James Tarleton, who seems determined to spy out her beautiful new neighbor & friend at every opportunity. She is sure that James is up to no good and also suspects him of planting the magical herb bag under her brother Oliver's bed. James fobbs her off with some haphazard excuse and keeps on following her neighbor. But Cecy is not one to give up so easily and sneaks into Sir Hilary Bedrick's estate and "borrows" a book on magical bags. Surprisingly enough, Cecy turns out to have a marked talent for creating the bags and quickly makes bags of protection for Kate and Oliver. But what the two girls don't realize is that their innocent actions have brought them to the attention of both Sir Hilary and Miranda Thomas, the witch who tried to trap Kate. Neither one of them knows what is going on, but they recognize villains when they see them. Despite James & Thomas' best efforts, they cannot keep Cecy and Kate from rushing headlong into danger and solving their problems, even if they didn't ask for their assistance!
This is a fast paced, fun fantasy to read, especially if you are familiar with Regency England. I have always enjoyed alternate history books and this was an intriguing look at what England would be like if magic was commonplace. They even have a Royal College of Wizards in London! Kate and Cecy were both charming heroines and it was very amusing to watch them run circles around Thomas and James and get everything figured out and solved almost before the men knew what was happening. The authors chose a very interesting format for the book - it is all written in letter form. Kate writes to Cecy and tells her everything that is going on in London and vice versa. This was a very interesting approach and I enjoyed the very different personalities of the heroines, so ably portrayed by two different authors. If you enjoy fantasy or Regency books, you should love this one!
11 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2006
I was delighted to discover when I finished "Sorcery and Cecilia" that the book had started its life as a game between the two authors, who developed two fictional personae and worked out the whole novel writing letters to one another. I think that the novel benefits and suffers from its source; there is a a spark and liveliness to it that I think (I hope?) comes from the excitement and fun of its making; but it also ultimately lacks the tender flesh and heart of a novel with only one author. It's a bit jumbled, and the characters could use more development; but it also hearkens back to a whole venerable tradition of novel writing (the epistolary novel) and revives it in a new and contemporary form.

Actually, I'm positively delighted that this book exists. It's witty and erudite while also being a pure romp...it's innovative and not at all full of itself. It was a great - and very fast - read.

Cecilia and Kate are the letter writers; each girl has her own villain, her own beau, her own magical gifts...and they unite to unravel one big mystery. This air of us-against-the-world, sensible girls who can accomplish anything if they just have enough pluck, friendship founded in honesty and loyalty and plain good fun makes for a satisfying read.

The girls are easy to identify with and the book is written in a style that somehow manages to make a boring tea party and a magical battle more or less equally matter of fact.
10 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2011
A coworker recommended this series to me, and I'm so glad she did! I devoured the first one very quickly, and then read the next two. It was like reading a "Dear Dairy"/mystery-type thing, except better.

The writing is so poetic in old-style language that is not tiresome or affected. The adventures are sweet, the characters delightful, and the interactions humorous, and some of the inner thoughts of the girls very thought-provoking! Great pacing, too. I felt it had a strong enough plot for what it is, but wasn't heavy or weighted down with it. I felt the characters and their personalities were consistent, which I think would have been challenging, given how this book was written in chunks back and forth over years. It was obvious the ladies who wrote them were having fun, which made the books fun, too. I like a book, especially a series, that doesn't take itself super seriously or try to be more than it is.

Everything about this series is wonderful. It's hard to write a review without just saying: "It's perfect! You won't be disappointed!" Whatever faults it might have (none come readily to mind) didn't have any affect on my enjoyment of the series.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2024
This book is basically a two person narrative written in first person. Cousins, and best friends, Kate and Cecy, are writing letters between London and Essex about current events (post Napoleonic war).
It was really entertaining, though it helps if you have a little foreknowledge of the customs and speech of this time period. It also helps if you are able to infer things from contextual content.
I am going to go read the second book right now.
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2023
This book succeeded in capturing the feel of Regency era writing, while the magical realism aspects made it more compelling than a simple love story.

The writing was good and I liked the premise; however, I didn't care for the format of the book—two women writing letters back and forth. It felt choppy and distracting. And since the characters were very similar, almost interchangeable, it became confusing at times.

I love Wrede, but this book just didn't do it for me.
2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Client Kindle
5.0 out of 5 stars Original et fun
Reviewed in France on December 11, 2019
Un échange de lettres plein de fantaisie, rafraichissant et inattendu. Divertissant.
Elaine Morton
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on November 21, 2016
Refreshing way of telling the story and a good take off on the Jane Austen style.
Andrew J. Codling
5.0 out of 5 stars A charming enjoyable book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 11, 2014
I love this book.

Originally this was written by two authors each writing letters on behalf of one of the characters, one in London doing her season and the other back home in the country, it was then 'tidied up' so that it made a better book.

Magic, evil, heroism, despair, goats in bedrooms this book has it all and maybe because it was written a few years ago no elves, no vampires and no sex (I'm not anti sex, but reading about it in YA books where it seems the author has never even been french kissed really annoys me).

The story is light and fluffy but the characterisations are wonderful.

Now if only the further books in the series weren't so dashed expensive
2 people found this helpful
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Mrs J A Denning
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2017
Very good
Ludo
3.0 out of 5 stars (3,5) Georgette Heyer + Magia in stile YA
Reviewed in Italy on April 7, 2012
Inghilterra, 1817

Cecelia e Kate sono due giovani cugine che si trovano separate proprio nel periodo della Season londinese: la prima in campagna e la seconda a Londra, si tengono informate sulle rispettive avventure attraverso una fitta corrispondenza. Ben presto nella narrazione, ognuna di loro si trova ad affrontare una serie di peripezie, tanto eccitanti quanto sinistre, che hanno tutte a che fare con la magia nera, una strega cattiva, uno stregone malvagio, un misterioso marchese e una spia inesperta, senza contare delle zie eccentriche, un fratello che svanisce nel nulla e chi più ne ha più ne metta!

Il titolo che ho dato a questa recensione dice molto su Sorcery and Cecelia. Trattasi di un romanzo epistolare ambientato nell'Inghilterra della reggenza, tra la Londra della Stagione, dove non mancavano mai signorine di buona famiglia in cerca di marito e la campagna, dove ci si dedicava alle visite ai vicini, ai pic-nic e ai the con il vicario. Ma tra i balli da Almack's, le uscite nel parco e le escursioni in riva al lago, due ragazze argute e piene di spirito non possono che trovarsi invischiate anche nei vari magical scandals che vedono opporsi un giovane e potente stregone e il mago cattivo che gli vuole risucchiare ogni potere.

È una lettura piacevole e velocissima, scritta per ragazzi, ma che strizza l'occhio anche a un pubblico adulto in cerca di intrattenimento attraverso una narrazione d'atmosfera dal ritmo particolarmente incalzante.