Member Reviews

In Homegrown Magic, Yael Clauneck is escaping oppressive life under their rich capitalist parents, while Margot Greenwillow tries to keep a small business in a small town afloat. The two met many years ago, and their paths cross again as Yael comes to Margot's town and offers to help in exchange for room and board. Over the course of this story, they reconnect and deal with rekindled emotions while uncovering the connection Yael's family has to Margot's town and how, really, to make the potion Margot's grandmother had been working on.

This was peak cozy fantasy - it read like sharing headcanons with my own D&D friends, especially with the nods Pacton and Podos make to tropes and roles from fantasy roleplaying games. The plot is relatively straightforward and relies more on how revelations affect the characters' relationship with one another, which I prefer from this genre. However, sometimes the D&D elements felt too on the nose - as much as I love a warlock, Yael's patron sometimes felt intrusive, particularly after Yael and Margot's fight. For the amount of time that passes during the book, things feel quick-paced, with weeks and months between chapters. The timeline could have been compacted or else filled out more, but as it was (and with a sequel coming), it made for a very enjoyable and easy comfort read.

Was this review helpful?

I really enjoyed Yael and Margot’s story. The alternating POV chapters kept me engaged all the way through to the end. Even though I knew somehow things would work out in this cozy story, I still worried for Margot and Bloomfield. I rooted for Yael to realize they didn’t have to follow the family path. Overall, it was a sweet, romantic story and I’ll happily read another book from this world.

Was this review helpful?

A cozy sapphic romantasy! Plant magic has to be one of my favorite types of magic just based on the entire concept of it. Margot is just a woman with a rough life, trying to help preserve the memory of her grandmother while finding her way in the world. Yael has to be one of the least self-aware characters ever, but with the heart of a golden retriever. Overall, this gave farming simulation vibes and I'm not mad about it. Thank you Netgalley and Del Rey for the opportunity to arc read this.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an arc in exchange for an honest review.

The romance was so sweet. I love how this book is inclusive and queer. It's a charming, cozy fantasy with unique characters that I'm sure fans of romance will enjoy.

Was this review helpful?

Homegrown Magic is a cozy, queer adventure that’s as charming as a cottage garden. Yael, a nonbinary character escaping their stuffy family, reconnects with childhood friend Margot, a plant witch who's being blackmailed by Yael’s parents. Together, they brew potions, dodge drama, and communicate like actual adults (a refreshing change).

It’s a sweet, low-stakes story where the romance is heartwarming, the magic is fun, and the representation is effortless. The writing is a tad wordy, but if you like lush descriptions and easygoing vibes, you’ll love it. It’s like the Sims 4 Cottagecore expansion, but in book form.

Was this review helpful?

What a beautiful cozy fantasy! The world was rich and magical, and the romance sparkled. The plot had just enough suspense, and a happy ending of course.

Was this review helpful?

Margot is a plant witch living keeping her grandmother’s memory alive in a cozy close-knit community she loves, but she’s hiding a huge secret. Yael is the heir to one of the most powerful families in the realm, but they aren’t satisfied with their life and feel like something is missing. When they happen to stumble across their childhood friend Margot, their life changes for the better, but they will have to work together to save the town they both love and reconnect in the process.

Cute and definitely hits the cozy mark, but ultimately this is just a decent witchy romance in my opinion. I thought the transition between the two authors’ writing was pretty seamless and the writing overall is good without much of the cringey dialogue you sometimes get in this genre. I wish the magic felt more immersive rather than a sprinkle on top of the story, and I wish the theme of what you have to give up for magical power was explored a little further. If you like cozy, cute romantasy and want a queer-normative story with a non-binary love interest, then this book is a great pick.

Thanks to the authors and Netgalley for this ARC! All opinions are my own and given voluntarily.

Was this review helpful?

I received this as an eARC and it was a highly anticipated read for me. I’m still debating on whether it should be 4. The reason to my hesitation is mostly due to the characters financial background and my own.

Having grown up struggling with money etc I felt like Yael could rub me the wrong way or I’d feel kinda bothered and annoyed. I do love the queer rep, huge reason I wanted this book and I’ll still buy it lol but I can say the money dynamic def changed some of the cozy factor for me at least

Was this review helpful?

Give me all your queer, cozy, fantasy stories now! A delight to read that I am giving a 4 out of 5 stars. Thank you NetGalley for the ARC.

This story is the cottagecore queer story of your dreams. Give me jams and "there's only one bed" and childhood crush to lovers tropes galore.

There are frequent time skips in the story that feel a bit jarring (ha pun!) at times which makes the overall pacing of the story feel rushed at times but also dragging on. I think maybe there could have been some gentler transitions, where there was a word montage or little side story to fill in those gaps. Additionally, despite the fact that at the start of the story Margot establishes that she has 6 months to make a particular potion to save the day, she doesn't actually really seem to do any work on it until the last 6 weeks of the story when Yael conveniently is out of the picture.

Despite this, I still absolutely enjoyed reading this story and watching Margot grow into the Fancy Business Lady of your dreams with Yael being her forever cheerleader and breaking free of their family's chains.

Was this review helpful?

Tea, cottage, food, gardening, romance- could it get more cozy? No- and I’m thankful for it! Loved this story, these characters, the nonbinary representation! Thank you NetGalley for allowing me an arc in exchange for an honest opinion/ review, all thoughts are my own!

Was this review helpful?

3.25 stars

Yael runs away from their rich person life and ends up at their childhood friend Margot's greenhouse. Margot has to create a specific potion before Yael's family takes away the rest of her grandmother's legacy.

I adore cozy fantasies, and this had all the makings of being a favorite. Unfortunately, it didn't quite hit the mark. Which sucks, because I've previously enjoyed both authors' work - separately and together.

The pacing is weird in this one. It starts off interesting and then there's a two-month time skip over all where all tension and getting to know each other again, developing the feelings part would have been. Where the found family aspect could have come in as Yael is shown to be adopted by the town, but instead all of that is skipped over. But where the time jump picks up, it just feels like it's still missing all of that development. And it stayed slow from there. Though Yael and Margot are supposed to be adults, they read like teenagers. Which made it weird to get to the spice. If this had been a YA and maybe shortened a bit, I'd probably have enjoyed it more.

I loved the atmosphere of the town. I really enjoyed the side characters and would have preferred to see more of them in the found family sense. I loved the queernormative world.

Thank you to NetGalley and publisher for the opportunity to read and review.

Was this review helpful?

A delightful queer romantic fantasy full of friends-to-lovers chemistry, found family, rival family drama, and cozy garden magic from two acclaimed YA authors making their debut in the adult space.

Was this review helpful?

DNF'd at 10%. I just couldn't buy into the universe the authors were crafting. It was too fantastical for me - I like a little more realism in my magic, apparently. I trust that someone looking for a cozy read would love this - I may even give it another go once it's published.

Was this review helpful?

What a wonderful cozy, queer romantasy! I read this one sitting and was left with just the warmest feeling after - I absolutely adored the relationship between Yael and Margot and thought there was the perfect amount of plot/ stakes to balance the coziness and cottagecore vibes. I enjoyed the conversation around family expectations and how to manage your own path around that, especially in Yael’s storyline, and especially with a touch of anti capitalism themes as well. Overall, I’d highly recommend this to anyone who enjoyed Legends & Lattes, The Spellshop, or just readers who are looking for queer romantasy with a touch of spice, an easy to sink into world and characters you can really root for.

Was this review helpful?

It's a fun fluffy book, similar vibes to house in the cerulean sea. I love both the protagonists and their relationship is adorable. Would definitely recommend!

Was this review helpful?

This book delivered *exactly* what I wanted from it. Cozy fantasy with stakes, queer-normative world, plant magic, yearning, kissing, anti-capitalist themes, and a celebration of the power of community. I really needed something warm and wholesome to read and this was the right book to pick up.

Margot is a soft yet strong FMC, which I really enjoyed in contrast to the many stabby/sarcastic FMCs we get these days (which are also great! but variety is nice). And as someone who is of the softer personality myself, I really related to Margot and the pressure she put on herself to solve everything on her own.

Yael truly stole my heart. I found their character arc immensely satisfying and loved the way they grew from a sheltered, self-centered, privileged warlock into a hard-working, attentive partner. I wish we could've seen a little more of their early time working in the greenhouse but that's just a minor note, mostly rooted in how much I like Yael and want to dig into their story.

I think readers might enjoy this more if they go into it knowing it's cozy fantasy with more of a romance plot structure. The fantasy and challenges are there, but there's also a heavy focus on Margot and Yael's relationship - and some of my favorite story beats where the romance-focused ones!

I teared up at the end, so it's safe to say I got quite attached to the characters. I'm so happy there was a teaser for a second book at the end of this ARC - I'll definitely be picking up book 2 as soon as it's out! Thank you to NetGalley and Del Ray for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you NetGalley & Random House Publishing Group for the ARC.

What I liked: the inclusivity with regards to gender and queerness. Yael is non-binary and even with such an elitist, controlling & unethical family, their gender has never been disparaged or weaponized against them. There is a gender-neutral honorific ("sir'ram") that is used by default if the gender of the person is unknown or undetermined. Both they and co-protag Margot also have had past dalliances involving other genders, and marriages between same genders (and multiple partners) is acknowledged. And that's another thing: the sex positivity! Not only from the main characters but societal attitudes in general. I also found the two protagonists sufficiently charming and likeable to follow.

Yael had the most intriguing journey, being the Rich Kid breaking free from their parents' plan for them ... yet I do wish they were given the chance to properly confront their terrible parents and tell them to Fuck Off.

What didn't work for me: That pesky timeskip of about two months where Yael starts to work with Margot in the greenhouse. Yes they already had a romantic foundation by being each other's childhood crushes, but they haven't seen each in other in many years! This is a romance book and I wanted to see the ROMANCING: the hijinks at the start that come with proximity, the prolonged yearning. I didn't think it helps to have all this fast-forwarded to when their attraction is reaching its peak, till they're getting smutty chapter after chapter. It's a shame because I do enjoy their chemistry and how they play off each other. And then there's yet ANOTHER timeskip leading into the epilogue that didn't really address how Margot's parents woke up from their magically induced coma. I'm used to cozy fantasies being Too Convenient but there should at least be some explanation, however simplistic it could be.

Margot's magic as a plant witch is also disappointingly VERY underutilized. We're given snippets of her growing things, but a main conflict of hers is that she feels she would never live up to her grandmother's magical legacy. It would've been more satisfying if she was given an opportunity for her MAGIC to shine.

With all things considered, this is just rather okay. It has all the ingredients that appeal to me in theory but the execution for a romance wasn't anything too impressive. A decent palette cleanser after a previous heavy/dense read (as it served for me).

Was this review helpful?

I try to go into books as blind as possible so when I first picked this one up I assumed “witches” from the title and I was expecting a contemporary fantasy, but I was pleasantly surprised to see this is a full blown fantasy world. The world building wasn’t difficult to follow and the primary focus is on the characters.

I really like Yael (they/them) and Margot (she/her). They are childhood friends who haven’t seen in each other in years, but they have this easy chemistry I liked. I also enjoyed the way they built a strong foundation for their friendship as adults (and yes I still think it’s strong even if Margot is keeping one big, important secret).

After the first intimate scene, I thought this romance was going to be closed door. But the door cracked wider open as the story progressed. And I really liked these moments between them and seeing Yael’s confidence in the bedroom. Poor Yael has been led to believe such poor things about themself that it was nice to see them recognize and be proud of themself for something.

And while I did struggle with pacing in some parts, I overall really enjoyed this book and would recommend it to my light fantasy lovers!

Was this review helpful?

Cute sapphic romance! Believable stakes with a little bit of mystery? Definitely not a bad read. Writing wasn’t my favorite though.

Was this review helpful?

ok so I'm trying to be kind to myself and dnf when i want to dnf instead of reading on. This has all the normal aspects that I would want in a book. But when I saw that line about libraries being boring it made me kinda hurt inside. so. yea.

Was this review helpful?