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Windale is a proud old American town that embraces its colonial heritage, including the legend of a witches' coven dating back 300 years. No one in Windale actually believes in witches, but three people are experiencing vivid nightmares; and an evil presence is working its way into their lives.

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8 reviews
As the story goes, while browsing online I saw news of an upcoming novel from the author (who has now penned "Wither," "Wither's Rain," and "Wither's Legacy"). In several groups I visit, mention of this novel were made. At this point, I hadn't really heard of the series and of course hadn't read it. After digging in a little further, I found out that this was a trilogy and this the first one.

Thinking this book sounded up my alley, I checked off a mental note in my head to scope out the original ASAP. On the way to work the next morning, lo and behold! On my bed lay a copy of the original "Wither." What can explain this? Well, in all reality, I had made a quick book run at the local goodwill and picked up about two stack fulls. This one show more was in there and had just happened to be one I threw on my bed before hearing news of the new installment of the series.

I had forgotten I had bought it, so of course it was a pleasant surprise when I picked it up and realized the treasure I had held all along. Quickly finishing off a previous book and then burying myself into this one, I soon found myself unable to get out of the hole I had dug myself in. In one descriptive word, "Wither" is "amazing."

Wither is the first novel in a series of three, telling the story of teenage Wendy Ward, a Wiccan working in the small town Occult shop, pregnant professor Karen Glazer, and 8-year old Abby McNeil, all involuntarily involved in an age old story of witchcraft, possession, and legend.

After a series of haunting dreams and bizarre circumstances, it soon becomes clear to Wendy that the history of the small town is coming alive. Determined to save the town and stop her own possible demise, she and some select friends venture out to discover how they can combat powerful witches from the old days, and win.

The atmosphere is well crafted for this type of novel; not overly dipped in dark and dreary undertones, it still does manage to convince that its horror, and well-done horror at that. The strength lies deeper in its characterization, but the atmosphere compliments it.

Wendy is truly likeable. Besides having the classic teenage fears and worries, she's an independent spirit with strong convictions. Besides that, though, she comes across as a genuine person. From her messy room and run-down car, to her obsessions and hobbies, she was a treat to read about. Karen isn't mentioned quite as much as Wendy, but she's brought up plenty. Through her I went through natural relationship problems, pregnancy scenarios, and common hardships. Abby is mentioned less but as a child, her thoughts are precious and Passarella wrote her well. Everyone's penned nearly perfectly and drive the story forward.

The novel, being a large one, doesn't jump right into the boiling pot at the get-go. Instead it takes a bit of its time to get to the potent stuff, but from the beginning the character development is powerful enough to take me under its spell.

Passarellas' writing style is easily digestible and clear. His suspenseful moments are well written and paced, his slower scenes still stay interesting, and the finale plays off as a worthy finish to a great book.

If you are intrigued by the idea of witches, this one's for you. The whole town has a history of the three hanged crones from long ago; the setting is superb for this type of plot and everything adds together to compliment each other.

Do yourself a favor and pick up your own copy of Wither. Whether it 'supernaturally' ends up on your bed screaming to be read, mysteriously falls out of the sky, or else has to be hunted down at a bookstore, ignore how you got it and just read the damn thing.
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Windale, MA, is a quiet little college town in New England- most of the time. Three hundred years before, three witches had been hung. That, Danfield College, and the annual King Frost parade on Halloween night, are its claims to fame. Then odd things start happening; college freshman and white witch Wendy finds one night that the spells she casts have real and sudden results, and she begins having horrific nightmares. Entering the third trimester of what has been a routine pregnancy, college professor Karen discovers that her baby has very severe problems- and she, too, is having nightmares. And eight year old Abby is suddenly ill; when graduate student Art finds her sleeping on one of the hung witch’s graves with a high fever, he show more goes to take her to the hospital and is attacked by her, which causes an accident that gravely injures her. But she is healing remarkably fast… and the scratches she gave Art by his eye are infected with something that won’t yield to antibiotics. And now there are townspeople going missing and signs of violence during the night. Something bad is going on, and it’ll take more than one person to figure it out.

This is a pretty grim book, and it takes the New England witch story in a new direction; the three executed women are not your average witches, especially Elizabeth Wither. The three plot lines braid together nicely, and the characters are pretty good- not really deep, but good. There is a lot of tension because it looks like no one is going to survive! It reminded me of Buffy the Vampire Slayer in a lot of ways, but without the snappy repartee. I’ll be looking for the other books in the series.
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C'era una volta la strega delle favole, bella all'apparenza ma brutta e cattiva nella sostanza, facili da sconfiggere. C'erano una volta le streghe di Salem, povere donne mandate al rogo per motivi sostanzialmente stupidi, divenute simbolo della persecuzione irrazionale e della repressione delle donne. Poi c'è Wither: strega brutta, cattiva e rancorosa, creatura delle tenebre, incubo di generazioni passate, presenti e future. Nella scrittura (narrazione, personaggi, atmosfera) mi ha ricordato molto uno dei miei scrittori preferiti di quand'ero giovane: Christopher Pike, a questa sensazione di piacevole familiarità il merito della 4° stellina.
Annoying characters who it's hard to care about, not very well written, despite winning the Bram Stocker award, (and nothing like as scary or exciting as Dracula!) - but absorbing enough story for me to want to know what happens next and even read the sequels.
½
This novel revolves around the college town of Windale, Massachusetts and the effect that a dark witches' coven has on the town. Now, three people who don't know each other are having the same nightmare of a dark demonic creature intent on breaking into the real world. I really liked this book and give it an A! It's fast-paced and scary.
½
June 9, 1999
Wither
J.G. Passarella

Pretty decent witch story. “Wither” refers to a legendary witch who lived in the 1600’s, known as Widow Wither. You never know her first name. There are flashbacks, where it’s learned that three women – two normal women and Widow Wither, not a normal woman – were executed as witches, and 300+ years later they’re back to seek revenge on the town. Actually, they’ve never been gone; they sort of hibernate in an old, isolated barn, and they have a “guardian” who keeps them fed with human flesh. They’re no longer human, but enormous, black leathery creatures – like mutant bats.
I believe this is Passarella’s first novel. I really enjoyed it.
I enjoyed this book, although at times I found it a little wordy. I have order the sequel book to follow Wendy's adventures in learning her craft and fighting against evil.

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Bram Stoker Award
238 works; 5 members

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Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Wither
Original publication date
1999-02-03
People/Characters
Abby MacNeil; Wendy Ward; Karen Glazer

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3566 .A7735 .W58Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
263
Popularity
122,726
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.31)
Languages
English, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
2