• About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Bios
  • Books & Resources
  • Books We Love
  • Contact Us
  • Disclosure
  • Glossary
  • How We Select Titles
  • Our Story
  • Resources
  • Suggest Your Book
  • Where to Find Heart.Wants.Book
  • Where to Find Heart.Wants.Books

Heart Wants Books The heart wants what the heart wants, and our hearts want books.

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Bios
    • How We Select Titles
  • Books & Resources
    • Books We Love
    • Resources
      • Glossary
  • Contact Us
    • Advertise with Us
    • Suggest Your Book
Book Review•Witchy Reads

The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe

October 15, 2020

The following post includes affiliate links. More details here.

Now that we’re officially half way into October and the leaves are falling off the trees, are you ready to talk about scary things, like horror books?  Yeah, me either, but I’ll be ready by 7:30 p.m. CST on Friday, October 30 to talk about The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix.  Whether you’d like to read this with us or just join in the conversation about vampires, southern book clubs, and a book wherein they meet, we’d love to have you at Virtual Book Club, but only if you register here.  

In an alternate reality very similar to our own, this blog doesn’t exist. I don’t mean to frighten you, dear readers, but if we travel back in time to the summer of 2001 you will find me on a family trip to Boston and the surrounding areas. This might not seem out of the ordinary to you, but the primary purpose of this trip was to tour the Boston University campus – with a side trip to Harvard for a tee-shirt! BU was my first choice school until late 2002 when I realized I could probably go to school for free if I stayed in state. Imagine then had I not attended UTC with Nikki, both of our lives would have been so changed. Bonus tidbit: this trip is where I collected my first Presidential Library, the JFK Presidential Library and Museum, thanks mom! Back in the days of 2002, I wanted to study medieval history… thank the lord I got over that…

However, my point here is that maybe I didn’t really get over it and in 2009 when The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane was published I found myself doing mental gymnastics over applying for graduate school – specifically in museum studies or historic preservation as I had been wanting to do since I did an internship in undergrad with the Chattanooga Regional History Museum – which is now defunct. I found out at the time that Middle Tennessee State University has one of the premier Historic Preservation programs in the country, so the possibility is still on the table for the future. I have digressed long enough from my possible past in academia to bring you the story of Connie, and ABD (all but dissertation) American History PhD candidate at Harvard who is tasked by her mother to clean out her grandmother’s cottage near Salem – with no electricity or telephone! – during the summer of 1991. She finds a key hidden in the family bible with the name of Deliverance Dane scrawled on a piece of paper and in her search for the person attached to the name, meets Sam in the local church. He’s a preservationist with his masters from BU and he helps her search the church archives. These two characters bring together things I have always wanted to do – preserve the stories and buildings of the past for the future. Obviously at the time of my first read these trappings of academia and preservation and symbology and romance drew me into the book more than the possibilities of witches – even though witches is what has predicated this re-read. Sitting here in my mid-thirties instead of the mid-twenties of my first read, my feelings are much the same: a solid 4 stars and I would read it again. I might just wait until my mid-forties to see what differences another decade makes. 😉

Katherine Howe from Goodreads

Author Katherine Howe says many thanks in her author’s notes, but my absolute favorite is to Bostonian author Matthew Pearl, her “sensei, without whose guidance, cheerleading, and mentorship this book would never have come into being.” And, TBH, his praise on the cover of the book is probably what drew me to the title in the first place. I read his The Dante Club the summer before college and loved it. Being reminded of his works makes me want to visit his backlist in the near future, but how can I decide between his and the rest of Howe’s work? Including The Daughters of Temperance Hobbs ($2.99 on kindle as of publication of this post!) that continues Connie’s story in the year 2000! Difficult decisions abound! Physick debuted at #2 on the New York Times bestseller list in 2009 and Howe has both other adult and young adult fiction on her backlist. Most notably for our discussion here she was the editor of The Penguin Book of Witches for Penguin Classics, a primary source reader on the history of witchcraft in England and North America – a title this armchair academic must needs read!

~Ashley

Dear readers, sometimes knowing nothing but your reading buddy adores a title enough to reread it is the best thing!  I knew that and WITCHES going into The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe, and I REGRET NOTHING.  (You know that’s not true, and you may have already predicted there wasn’t enough epilogue for me.  But Ashley found more epilogue and I’m so excited!)  I want to tell you all about this book, but then I don’t, so instead I’m going to tell you a story. 

Last weekend, I took my little people on their regular trip to the library and had a delightful conversation with the librarians while I was there (as usual).  The librarian who checked out our books for us shared that she’s reading spooky tales this month, so we chatted about which titles she was reading and I mentioned that Ashley and I were reading witchy books this month.  Naturally, like any good lover of books she was interested in what titles and what we were enjoying (*hint* we adore them all).  I mentioned the list of titles we’re bringing to you this month and she started taking notes.  She inquired as to Practical Magic (“I didn’t know it was a book.” “Oh yes, and there are two additional books as well, one brand new last week”) and The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane as well.  I mentioned it was set in the 1990s and focused on a Harvard graduate student who’s asked by her mom to clean out her grandmother’s house just outside of Salem.  I also added that Howe’s ancestor was killed during the Salem witch trials (y’all, don’t sleep on the author’s notes!), which made it even more interesting to me.  This particular librarian was born in the late 1990s, so I did share with her that I adored how there were no cell phones and even computers were limited.  The other librarian on duty (who probably remembers the 1990s better than I do) was also listening to our conversation, had looked up the book, and was also interested in it.  She mentioned she likes reading about the days before technology because she started working as a librarian back when card catalogues were a piece of furniture rather than a web application.  Oh how I too miss those days!  There’s something about paper that draws me in, even though I do most of my reading on kindle.  

The younger than me librarian also shared that she’s been debating if she’s too old for YA titles.  Since she and I chatted in August about all the fun titles coming out on September 1, I knew we had some shared reading interests and promptly told her that I am over a decade older than her (per her age she shared, I assumed nothing) and was very excited to start Blood and Honey by Shelby Mahurin on Monday, with my reading buddy, who is about my age (we’re both over half way through and SO excited to bring you more on this title soon!).  I also shared that I enjoy a good middle grade book now and again.  Sometimes because I’m previewing it for, or buddy reading it with, my 8 year old.  Sometimes because I feel like it.  Here’s the thing, you do you darling readers.  Life is too short to read books that aren’t for you or aren’t for you right now, so don’t do it.  Also, don’t skip a title just because it’s in the “wrong section” of your library or bookstore.  

What did I think of The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe?  Great question and thank you for bringing me back around.  I give this title 4 enthusiastic stars and will reread it, and will be adding Howe’s backlist to my TBR (and The Daughters of Temperance Hobbs is already awaiting me on my kindle thanks to Ashley).  The descriptions were thorough, but not over done, and the writing was beautiful.  Also, I loved the story.  Even with a bit of mystery in the story, this title is a quieter, calm tale that feels realistic, assuming one is inclined to believe in witches. (Am I the only one who once spent a summer cleaning out a deceased relative’s house that was stuck in decades past?  Yes, well, perhaps that is a part of it then, but at least my mother and grandparents were along for the adventure.  There was electricity, but no A/C, and the windows were painted shut, in the South, in the summer.)  The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane also includes real struggles of power, gender, and family included in the delightful glimpse of New England architecture, which is something this Southern girl hasn’t gotten to experience in real life, much (I too got to spend a glorious weekend in Boston, but it was spring 2002).  I also wanted to go down two rabbit holes that I have, as of yet, refrained from exploring – steeplejacks and the University of Virginia’s Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project.  

What rabbit holes has a book inspired you to go down adventuring lately?

~Nikki

PLEASE SUPPORT US WHEN YOU SHOP BY FIRST CLICKING ON THE IMAGES BELOW:

0

Related Posts

Wings of Ebony by J. Elle

Maggie Moves On by Lucy Score

Women are Some Kind of Magic by Amanda Lovelace

Dominicana by Angie Cruz

Primary Sidebar

GET POSTS BY EMAIL

Name

Email


Archives

  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • August 2019

Categories

  • Book Review
  • Bookish Life
  • Books on Screen
  • First Monday
  • Jane in January
  • Mythology
  • Reading Life Review
  • Resources
  • Uncategorized
  • Virtual Book Club
  • Witchy Reads
  • Women's History

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
@nikkiringenberg got herself out of a #RegencyRom @nikkiringenberg  got herself out of a #RegencyRomance ‘slump’ this month and read non-romance books that were also not for the blog. @ashleysellsmiddletn finally surpassed her sister, @mrs.lindseyandry  in the total books read this year category! 17 to @ashleysellsmiddletn and the race is on to hit 100 for the year - she’s behind… and other interesting topics abound in the #March2024 #ReadingLifeReview #WomensHistoryMonth #WeKnowItsAprilNow

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
Another #AdvancedReviewCopy from another #SeasonPa Another #AdvancedReviewCopy from another #SeasonPassAuthor and another #DoubleFiveStarReview title from @chanelcleeton 📚 #TheHouseOnBiscayneBay, which releases Tuesday 2 April 2024, is a gothic novel taking place over two timelines with separate yet connected mysteries that our heroines must unravel while also braving all the dangers that #Florida can bring. As Anna says in the first line: “I cannot for the life of me imagine why anyone would want to live in Florida.” Read along with our final title of #WomensHistoryMonth #March2024 to find out why. #ThisIsNotAnAprilFoolsPost - Special thanks to #BerkleyPublishingGroup, #NetGalley, and the #BlogBlitzAlert for the pre-release copies!

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
It’s a Bird! No, It’s a Plane! Specifically, a It’s a Bird! No, It’s a Plane! Specifically, a  #PanAm jet traveling the world with the most glamorous women as your personal concierge to the skies!  Check out #HeartWantsBooks #Double4StarReview of #ComeFlyTheWorld by #JuliaCooke and learn about a few of the real life women who were the face of America’s most well known international-only airline …  plus some of the less glamorous activities of the jet-set we didn’t learn about in history class. #WomensHistoryMonth #March2024

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm #DontForgetAbout #VirtualBookClub #HWBVBC
#HeartWantsBooks is thrilled and delighted to brin #HeartWantsBooks is thrilled and delighted to bring you the #ThirdInstallment of the #DefyingTheCrownTrilogy by @kerrywrites  this #WomensHistoryMonth  #DaughterOfSnowAndSecrets finds our heroine saving her Huguenot people from religious persecution by the Sun King. Will Isabelle and her family return unscathed from Versailles and return to the peace of Geneva? You’ll have to pick up this #DoubleFourStarReview title to find out! Don’t forget to start with #DaughterOfTheKing and #DaughterOfShadows which, along with Daughter of Snow and Secrets we received an #AdvanceReviewCopy from @blackrosewriting , but all opinions are our own. #WomensHistoryMonth2024 #March2024

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
It’s #March2024 and we’re focusing on the madn It’s #March2024 and we’re focusing on the madness that can be a woman’s life this #WomensHistoryMonth - traversing centuries, countries, and cultures, and genres in three different titles. Two of which are #AdvancedReviewCopies 📚 We’re finishing up a trilogy with one and reading a title from a #SeasonPassAuthor with another. The third book…a #NonFictionTitle #gasp

For the list check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
#February2024 and our #BlackHistoryMonth #ReadingL #February2024 and our #BlackHistoryMonth #ReadingLifeReview is filled with much of the usual, excepting that @nikkiringenberg is on track to meet her reading goal and @ashleysellsmiddletn is not. We’re taking this moment to remind you to not ‘should’ on your reading life and to enjoy your hobbies at the pace in which they happen. #HobbiesAreForJoy #TheReadingLifeIsNotACompetition 

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
February is #BlackHistoryMonth and #HeartWantsBook February is #BlackHistoryMonth and #HeartWantsBooks is committed to reading and celebrating #BlackAuthors 📚#February2024 has a mixture of #Fiction and #Nonfiction and every week has a title that can be found on #KindleUnlimited so we hope you choose to #ReadAlongWithUs the blog post has the list!

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
Copyright © 2025 Heart Wants Books
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Books & Resources
  • Contact Us
Theme by SheShoppes

Copyright © 2025 · Pompidou for Genesis on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in