Skip to main content

Member Reviews

This was very cute! A cozy flower shop, a small town, and an enemies to lovers romance. If you loved Legends and Lattes you will love this as well!

Was this review helpful?

ahhh well wasn’t this just the sweetest and coziest thing i’ve read in a while!!! i loved the writing and i think i read this in like, two solid sitting 💞 i need her next book asap rocky

Was this review helpful?

4.5 stars.

I loved this book a LOT. Violet was raised by a villain, to be a villain. She committed murder and terrorized communities under the auspices of her adopted father, a wicked sorcerer/wizard. We meet her right after the villain has been vanquished by a hero who finds Violet waiting and tells her "go, be good".

So, Violet decides it's time to change. She's remorseful for her villainy and wants to have a cozy and comfortable life. She wants to forget she was ever a villain and just sell flowers.

There are some pretty dark things in this book and yet, it remains so cozy. She settles into a small village and makes friends, grows plants, and learns more about her magic. She fights with her landlord and then, they fall in love. They end up fighting evil together and everything works out in the end.

I'm not sure I totally understood her character arc, going from being able to take lives to wanting to save lives... but there was something really beautiful about it all the same. It was a lesson in redemption and grace but touched on these issues with lightness and humor.

Ugh, I don't feel like I can do this book justice through my review, but I would read more in this world and by this author. It intrigued me and I want to live in this world some more.

Was this review helpful?

“Violet Thistlewaite is Not A Villian Anymore” elevates the Cozy Fantasy genre to new heights. Violet was once the feared right hand of an evil sorcerer, but after he’s killed and she’s given a second chance, she sets out to leave villainy behind her.

Violet moves to the sleepy, small town of Dragon’s Rest and decides to use her powerful plant magic for good and open a flower shop. She initially clashes will her neighbor, a grumpy alchemist named Nathaniel who runs the apothecary shop, but something romantic is growing between the shopowners. However, the two soon end up as allies when a mysterious blight and a figure from Violet’s past threaten to damage the livelihood of the townspeople. Violet also must wrestle with sharing her dark past with her newfound friends and the complexities of redemption.

“Violet Thistlewaite is Not A Villian Anymore” is a fantastic rumination on second chances. This novel plays with the reader's heartstrings like Pru does her violin. The secondary characters and lore of the novel are fantastic and incredibly rich, from a homicidal houseplant to a garden gnome allergic to flowers, and it’s clear they have their own stories to tell.

With lush scenery and incredible descriptions, its easy to be transported to Dragon’s Rest and be trapped in the pages of the book. The rich prose and story arc trap the reader in a trance, and while you may think you may have this book figured out, it changes shape and leaves you shocked in the best of ways.

My only quibble is that I wish this book was longer, but I can be sated knowing this book was acquired in a two-book deal. I can only hope this second book returns us to this magical world and explores it further.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to NetGalley for the advanced reader copy of Violet Thistlewaite is not a villain anymore. This light enemies to lovers romance is a gentle easy read.

Was this review helpful?

I absolutely adored this cozy, magical gem of a book! Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore was the perfect blend of heart, humor, and healing, with just the right dash of romance to make it completely irresistible. From the very first page, I was captivated by Violet’s journey of redemption and self-discovery, and I never wanted to leave the enchanting town of Dragon’s Rest.

Violet is such a compelling, layered character—her determination to reinvent herself, to shed her past and become someone better, felt so honest and relatable. And Nathaniel? The ultimate grump with a gooey center. His reluctant partnership with Violet was pure magic—the tension, the banter, the slow-burn connection that bloomed between them had me grinning and swooning in equal measure.

Was this review helpful?