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#kell woods
home-ward · 6 months
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Most recent read
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torpublishinggroup · 7 months
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Release Roundup - 10.3.23
it's tuesday, and that means NEW BOOKS
we're running down everything releasing new from us today, right here 😎
👇title info below👇
Tor Books
Starling House by Alix E. Harrow
Yumi and the Nightmare Painter by Brandon Sanderson
After the Forest by Kell Woods
Princess of Dune by Brian Herbert & Kevin J. Anderson
TorDotCom Publishing
The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport by Samit Basu
Nightfire
The Dead Take the A Train by Cassandra Khaw & Richard Kadrey
Knock Knock, Open Wide by Neil Sharpson
Forge
Valley of Refuge by John Teschner
The Murder of Andrew Johnson by Burt Solomon
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homerjacksons · 1 month
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[instagram]
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oracleofmadness · 8 months
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A very interesting fairytale retelling that focuses on the after story of Hansel and Gretal, now Hans and Greta, Greta begins preparations to bake a special gingerbread that will hopefully sell well. However, many unexpected things begin to happen.
This book is like a rollercoaster. At points, I was enthralled and at others, not so much. But I definitely wound up enjoying this! The creativity and strangeness of this tale won me over.
Out October 3, 2023!
Thank you, Netgalley and Publisher, for this Arc!!
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con-alas-de-angeles · 6 months
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goosegorl723 · 7 days
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after the forest - kell woods
Borders - @animatedglittergraphics-n-more
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berenices-commas · 2 months
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After the Forest - 2023 - Kell Woods
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So this is a retelling of a classic fairytale – words which strike fear into the hearts of the wise. This time it’s Hansel and Gretel! And also Snow White, kind of. But this was, if not actually good, at least not painful. Woods is clearly influenced by The Bear and the Nightingale, which is a great book, and this steers her in something approaching the right direction. This is very definitely historically grounded – we’re in the aftermath of the Thirty Years War, in a backwoods village in the Black Forest, in which there just so happens to be magic going on. And so we get a split between the historical fantasy and the fairytale.
The former doesn’t quite come up to Katherine Arden’s standards, but Woods is trying! The best part of this book is its portrayal of a young peasant woman, without parents or much of an inheritance, trying to make a living for herself and her brother who has never really recovered from their shared childhood trauma. I think to a large degree this succeeds in presenting a world where people’s life choices, and their understanding of those choices, are genuinely different from our own society. For me this is the key to good historical fiction – Woods’ occasional lapses in accuracy don’t really pose a problem. (She joins the hallowed ranks of fantasy authors, going back to Tolkien himself, who don’t quite know what a pike is. But this is fine! Shelley Parker-Chan writes amazing historical fantasy, and I’m still not convinced they’ve ever actually heard of crossbows.)
There are maybe two big stumbling points. First is in the treatment of Christianity – the people of this village all go to church, they swear by Christ, etc., but you don’t get the impression that any of them really believe in God, or have much investment in the religion that structures their whole world. This rather dismissive attitude to religion then exacerbates the second problem, which is how the book places witchcraft in a social context. Because Woods takes pains to emphasise that this society has a constant, bubbling fear of witches that can boil over into murderous panics. And yet she doesn’t really explore why people think like that – for her it’s just foolish superstition. Which is very weird because in the world of this novel witches are actually real. There literally are a bunch of evil witches who live in secret and go around cursing people, and the curses can only be lifted by killing the witches. The book never squares its very reasonable condemnation of witch-burning with the fact that Greta saves the day by burning a witch! It’s odd.
The fairytale side of the book shades into urban fantasy – we get werewolves, witches with different schools of magic, etc. None of it is terribly interesting here, though it should be – a Burgundian noblewoman who becomes immortal and lives dozens of false lives across Europe! A family of werewolves created by a pagan Norse priestess who have now forgotten their ancient purpose and hire themselves out as mercenaries in the wars of religion! (The last one is also a great RPG premise.) But throughout everyone is just a little too matter-of-fact about the magic shaping their lives – it comes across neither as wondrous nor horrifying, and we don’t go nearly deep enough into the characters’ experience of it.
Overall this is not a bad book, and a good debut effort. The characterisation is never really exciting but rarely actually thin. The plotting is fine, and only gets away from the author right at the end. It’s certainly better than most in this subgenre, and manages to tell a much better feminist story for not being conceived as a Feminist Retelling. But I don’t think it ends up making the most of its premise.
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meeghanreads · 2 months
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Top 5 fairy tale retellings
Hello friends!! Welcome to Top 5 Tuesday!! This week’s topic is top 5 fairy tale retellings!! Now, I know this topic is not for everyone. In fact, it’s pretty much designed purely for me. But, as host, that’s my prerogative every so often. And, I’m not sorry. Sorry. But, for not being sorry. Not for the topic. I’ll stop now. Apparently, somewhere in the world 26 February is National Fairy Tale…
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flowercrown-hobbit · 3 months
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I really enjoyed after the forest by Kell Woods. It's based on what happened with Hans and Gretel after the witch was defeated. I loved Greta and the way it has so many right details for the black forest in Germany. There are also different fairytale elements woven in this tale.
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ilikereadingactually · 8 months
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After the Forest
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After the Forest by Kell Woods
this was a really compelling fairy tale retelling, an exciting read in a very wide and sometimes samey field! it does several things that i really love in this genre: puts the fantastical elements in a real-feeling historical setting (think Naomi Novik's Uprooted and Spinning Silver), and combines a number of distinct fairy tales in interesting ways. we've got Hansel and Gretel here, represented in the traumatic past of protagonist Greta and her brother Hans; we've got some elements of Snow White, and Snow-White & Rose-Red, and maybe Tatterhood, and maybe a bit of The Wolf and the Fox? but they fit together in unexpected and convincing ways, which is fantastic to me. there's a history here, a wider scope than just Greta's post-gingerbread-house life.
and baking! there was baking! and some romance, which is not my thing generally but was charming enough in this case for me to appreciate. overall the story was a little more heteronormative and a little more predictable toward the latter half than i prefer, but i was very charmed by Greta even when she was making bad decisions, and i loved the resolution! also i spent most of the book craving fresh gingerbread more than i have ever craved it in my LIFE.
the deets
how i read it: an e-galley through NetGalley! i am still steadily building up some cred there, which is gratifying.
try this if you: dig underestimated women saving the day, like a villain with a backstory, got way too into the vicious and dangerous versions of fairy tales as a kid, or delight in household witchery, forest witchery, and animal witchery.
a line i really liked: this one's for the furries
Closer and closer it came, until Greta felt its warm breath, and smelled its earthy, animal scent. Her heart crashed against her ribs. Her body screamed at her to run, to get down the mountain and behind the safety of her own door. But she remembered tales from the hunt. Wolves, boars...any predator will attack when its prey flees. It is instinct; a command surging in the blood, nameless and ancient. To run is to die. The bear nosed Greta's sticky-sweet hand, licking the honey away. It was gentle as a lamb. And yet, one strike was all it would take. A single blow with one huge paw to kill her where she stood.
pub date: October 3, 2023!
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between-the-pages657 · 6 months
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I knew it! I knew the ribbon would come back into play.
And I had my suspicions about the whole Mathias and the bear thing. If you know, you know. I feel like the foreshadowing was there.
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elliepassmore · 5 months
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After the Forest review
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4/5 stars Recommended if you like: fantasy, retellings, magic, fairytale vibes, grown up fairytale characters
TW animal cruelty (ch 25)
I devoured this book fairly quickly and was pretty entertained by it. It's definitely a book you just read for fun, not one where I'd say there's too much of a plot, but if you go into it expecting that then I think it's enjoyable.
I really liked seeing a reimagining of Hansel and Gretel. I think I've only seen that a couple of times and most don't really focus on the aftermath of what happened (I believe one of the stories in the Grim anthology from 2012 does, but that's also modern YA). Both Greta and Hans are deeply impacted by what happened in the woods when they were children. Hans now has a drinking and gambling problem and seems to distrust most everybody, while Greta feels abandoned and faces the mistrust of the rest of the village for killing an 'old woman.'
That being said, something that I don't get is why Greta and Hans never just said the old woman was a witch? Like, Greta gets so much shit for throwing her into the fire and all of it could've easily been avoided by just saying the woman was a witch, which she was, and Greta saved their lives by burning her alive, which is how they kill witches in this world. Seems like Greta's life would've been far easier if they'd gone that route.
Despite their traumatic experience, Greta throws her heart into making the best gingerbread possible...with the help of the witch's magical book of course. Hans won't touch the stuff after their experience, but Greta doesn't seem bothered by it or the magical book. Honestly, she doesn't seem very bothered by magic at all, though she does largely avoid doing magic even when the book tempts her. Greta is pretty mild-mannered and friendly, and while she's taken aback by some of the things that occur over the course of the book, she tends to recover quickly and take it in stride.
Hans, on the other hand, is actually kind of awful. He reacts to perceived slights against him even when he is the one who is causing trouble, and is the kind of desperate that makes a man dangerous for most of the book. He does finally clean up his act in the second half of the book, but the first half makes me really dislike him and wish Greta would turn him out on his ear.
Mathias is a newcomer in the village, so obviously he and Greta hit it off immediately and are the main couple. Like Greta, Mathias takes most things in stride and isn't bothered by things like witches or strange goings-on. He's a fairly mysterious character and is in and out of the village a lot, so it's clear he has secrets. But he's also not the kind of character whose secrets seem particularly dangerous. I figured out his secret as soon as he was introduced, but then the secret when further than I thought it would and it just got....kind of weird.
Rob, Greta and Hans' 'uncle,' was also a major side character in the book. He was friends with their father and helped to take care of them after their father died. He's a protector at heart and definitely feels the need to do the right thing, though at times that is tempered by doing what will keep the most people he cares about safe.
Like a lot of other reviewers, I had a hard time connecting to the characters in the book. Greta just felt kind of distant to me for some reason that I can't put my finger on. I think part of it is because Greta often just watches things happen and doesn't exhibit agency in a lot of the more tense scenes. Even if she isn't someone big on magic or confrontation or anything like that, a deeper sense into her emotional agency I think would've helped make her easier to connect to.
Obviously there had to be some kind of plot in the book since it wasn't set up as a slice-of-life/cozy fantasy thing, but I didn't really like what was going on with the castle at the end. All the stuff with the castle and Fizcko and Liliane just felt very out of place to me and I wasn't a huge fan of the whole thing. I did like the threads of it that had been dropped throughout the book and think there were interesting alternatives that could've been done with them instead.
Overall I found this book to be pretty entertaining. It definitely has its weak spots though and I had a hard time connecting to some of the characters. I did like the various magics we were introduced to though.
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quirkycatsfatstacks · 3 months
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Review: After the Forest by Kell Woods
Author: Kell WoodsPublisher: Tor BooksReleased: October 3, 2023Received: Own (OwlCrate) Find it on Goodreads | OwlCrate | More Reviews Book Summary: It’s been fifteen years since Greta and Hans were kidnapped by that dreadful witch. Fifteen years of struggling. Of living with the fact that their father abandoned them at the hands of someone who would do them harm. Greta has worked hard to…
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After the Forest by Kell Woods
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Titan Publ (3 Oct. 2023)Language ‏ : ‎ EnglishHardcover ‏ : ‎ 480 pagesISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1803361352ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1803361352 Book Blurb Fifteen years after the witch in the gingerbread house, Greta and Hans are struggling to get by. Their father and stepmother are long dead, Hans is deeply in debt from gambling, and the countryside lies in ruin, its people starving in the aftermath…
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flourmelon · 4 months
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“Good evening,” the book said politely.
Kell Woods ~ After the Forest
12.21.2023
🍎🩸🏔️🍞📖
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rubydolly · 5 months
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Yes I bought two books in one day yesterday After The Forest - a 17th century retelling of Hansel and Gretel with a twist by Kell In The Woods Counting The Cost - A memoir by cult survivor and reality star Jill Dillard
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