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Teen Fiction - Choices & Transitions, Teen Fiction - School, Teen Fiction - Fantasy
Parties & Potions by Sarah Mlynowski — book cover

Parties & Potions

by Sarah Mlynowski
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Overview

The fourth novel in Sarah Mlynowski's Magic in Manhattan series!

Perfect hair, cute clothes, healthy tans—life’s a breeze when you’re a witch! Even special witchcraft classes Rachel agrees to attend with Miri turn out to be fun. The sisters meet other teen witches just like them—who knew? Everyone’s preparing for a magical party called a Samsorta—a debutante ball for witches. And it wouldn’ t be a ball without warlocks. Cute ones. Like Adam, who wants to slow dance with Rachel, and ski with her in the Rockies—on a school night! Of course, Rachel is madly in love with her boyfriend, Raf. So why can’t she bring herself to tell Adam—funny, charming Adam—that Raf exists?

Rachel knows Raf likes her. Maybe even, gulp, loves her. But Raf doesn’t know her secret. Unlike Adam, Raf doesn’t know who she really is. And she can never tell him. Or can she?

Synopsis

Perfect hair, cute clothes, healthy tans—life’s a breeze when you’re a witch! Even special witchcraft classes Rachel agrees to attend with Miri turn out to be fun. The sisters meet other teen witches just like them—who knew? Everyone’s preparing for a magical party called a Samsorta—a debutante ball for witches. And it wouldn’t be a ball without warlocks. Cute ones. Like Adam, who wants to slow dance with Rachel, and ski with her in the Rockies—on a school night! Of course, Rachel is madly in love with her boyfriend, Raf. So why can’t she bring herself to tell Adam—funny, charming Adam—that Raf exists?

Rachel knows Raf likes her. Maybe even, gulp, loves her. But Raf doesn’t know her secret. Unlike Adam, Raf doesn’t know who she really is. And she can never tell him. Or can she?


KLIATT

In the fourth installment of the Magic in Manhattan series, sisters Rachel and Miri learn about a special coming-of-age ritual for young witches called the Samsorta. Miri wants to participate in the ceremony, and she talks Rachel into participating. Rachel is really more concerned with keeping her magical status a secret, especially from her boyfriend Raf, and with navigating the cliques and status situations of her high school. Complicating the situation is a new friend, Wendeline, another witch who has been home schooled until this year; Rachel tries to convince her to keep her magic under wraps. At first they enjoy the preparatory classes, but soon life becomes more complicated when they have to figure out how to keep their attendance at class a secret from Raf and from their father. Also, they feel torn between their new friends and adventures with them and their old life in New York. Ultimately, Rachel learns an important lesson about being honest with herself. Rachel narrates the story in first person in a breezy chick-lit style, and while the spells and some of the situations seem a little silly, there's a solid story underpinning the fluff. Rachel and Miri and their mother have to learn how to trust each other and the people important to them. For Rachel, the most important insight is what it means to be true to oneself, and that comes through clearly although not too obviously. The characterizations are a bit thin, but Rachel is sympathetic and appealing. The book stands well on its own; the back story is woven into the narrative unobtrusively. Pick it up especially if you have the other titles in the series, but it's also worth giving this a try if readers are looking forteen witch-type stories. Reviewer: Donna Scanlon

About the Author, Sarah Mlynowski

Sarah Mylnowski is the author of numerous novels, including Bras & Broomsticks and Frogs & French Kisses. She spent nine summers at sleep-away camp, where she enjoyed campfires, color wars, and conjuring up excuses to get out of swimming lessons. She now lives and writes in New York City.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Editorials

VOYA - Sarah Sogigian

The adventures of Rachel and Miri Weinstein, teen sisters who live in present-day New York City and who also happen to be witches, continue here. This book is the fifth in the Magic in Manhattan series and focuses on the sisters' Samsorta, a rite of passage for female witches. After being kept in the dark about their powers and their mother's pre-parent life, the girls learn more about their witch lives by taking classes and meeting others in the witch community via Mywitchbook.com. Rachel begins the book as a slightly superficial character, spending much of the first chapter deciding what color her new back-to-school top should be, but she becomes an incredibly likeable character. Rachel is reluctant to become too involved with her new life, especially after seeing how their new witch friend, Wendaline, is treated at school. While Miri is enjoying every minute of her Samsorta preparation, Rachel struggles with explaining herself to her norlock (non-witch) father and boyfriend, Raf. To make matters more complicated is the introduction of Adam, a teen warlock, who makes Rachel wonder if dating (and living) solely within the witch community would make life easier. Beyond offering the obvious plot of fitting in when one is different, this book is especially memorable for the very real depiction of sisters who love and support each other. This book is recommended for libraries where the other series titles have been popular Reviewer: Sarah Sogigian

KLIATT - Donna Scanlon

In the fourth installment of the Magic in Manhattan series, sisters Rachel and Miri learn about a special coming-of-age ritual for young witches called the Samsorta. Miri wants to participate in the ceremony, and she talks Rachel into participating. Rachel is really more concerned with keeping her magical status a secret, especially from her boyfriend Raf, and with navigating the cliques and status situations of her high school. Complicating the situation is a new friend, Wendeline, another witch who has been home schooled until this year; Rachel tries to convince her to keep her magic under wraps. At first they enjoy the preparatory classes, but soon life becomes more complicated when they have to figure out how to keep their attendance at class a secret from Raf and from their father. Also, they feel torn between their new friends and adventures with them and their old life in New York. Ultimately, Rachel learns an important lesson about being honest with herself. Rachel narrates the story in first person in a breezy chick-lit style, and while the spells and some of the situations seem a little silly, there's a solid story underpinning the fluff. Rachel and Miri and their mother have to learn how to trust each other and the people important to them. For Rachel, the most important insight is what it means to be true to oneself, and that comes through clearly although not too obviously. The characterizations are a bit thin, but Rachel is sympathetic and appealing. The book stands well on its own; the back story is woven into the narrative unobtrusively. Pick it up especially if you have the other titles in the series, but it's also worth giving this a try if readers are looking forteen witch-type stories. Reviewer: Donna Scanlon

Children's Literature - Judy DaPolito

What is a girl to do when she discovers that she is not like most of the people around her? Fifteen-year-old Rachel Weinstein has recently found out that, like her mother and her thirteen-year-old sister Miri, she is a witch. Many of her powers, such as being able to move through space without physical transportation, are great fun, though she is not quite proficient yet and sometimes ends up in unintended places. Her real problem, though, is her fear of other people finding out. She does not want the kids at school to know, especially her best friend Tammy and her boyfriend Raf. She is too afraid of losing them to trust them with her secret. And she certainly does not want her father to find out. Her parents' divorce and her father's remarriage have created enough stress; Rachel fears that her father will stop loving her if he knows she is a witch. Her mother will not tell him—she has never let him know about her own powers—but Miri thinks their father ought to know. And when Miri finds out about the witches' coming out party, or Samsorta, she is determined that she and Rachel will attend Charm School so they can participate. At the school, the sisters meet and enjoy other young witches and warlocks, and Miri finds a boyfriend of her own. She is ready to stop hiding who she is, but Rachel is still uncertain. When she and Miri finally tell their father and stepmother, her fears are realized. Her father is horrified and both girls are heartbroken. But by the end of the book, their father comes to the Samsorta and Rachel tells Tammy, who is delighted, and Raf, who still loves her anyway. The story, part of the "Magic in Manhattan" series, is filled with breezy dialogue andslapstick humor as well as credible emotion. Reviewer: Judy DaPolito

Kirkus Reviews

Teen witch Rachel and her sister Miri discover more about their magical roots in this fluffy, style-conscious fourth installment of the Magic in Manhattan series. Newly aware of the magical community that exists parallel to their everyday lives, Rachel and Miri spend much of the book preparing for their Samsorta, a sort of witchy coming-of-age ceremony (perhaps most closely resembling a bat mitzvah). Subplots involving Rachel's confusion over her feelings for two different boys and her fear of being outed as a witch to her father and nonmagical friends provide a bit of depth and will be relevant to teen girls. Details including a witch-specific social-networking site and popular teen text-speak may eventually date this title, but at the moment are right on the mark. Established fans of the series will find this a satisfying expansion of the story line, and it may well appeal to young teens looking for a fun, light read. However, the one-dimensional secondary characters and too-neat ending pull it down toward the mediocre. (Fantasy. 10-15)

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2010
Publisher
Random House Children's Books
Pages
368
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780385736466

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