
"Jamie has never known what to say to her mother. And now--when it matters most of all, when she's on a rescue mission--she knows even less."
At the start of Charlie Jane Anders's Lessons in Magic and Disaster, Jamie's mother, Serena, is struggling. Since the death of her wife, Mae, six years ago, simultaneous with Serena's career imploding, Serena has been holed up with her grief in a one-room schoolhouse in the woods. Now Jamie, wrestling with her dissertation on 18th-century literature, has decided enough is enough. In the interest of pulling Serena out of her black hole, Jamie's finally going to tell her mom her big secret: Jamie is a witch.
But her attempt to teach Serena some nice, wholesome, positivity-based magic misfires, because Serena is prickly, powerful, and pissed at the world. Learning magic proves hazardous, to her and to Jamie. There are also ill effects on Jamie's partner, Ro, an endlessly patient and lovely person whom Jamie values above all--although she's yet to tell Ro about her magic. Meanwhile, the college where Jamie studies and teaches is once more threatening to cut her already pitiful stipend, she's at a sticking point on her dissertation, and her undergraduate students can be terrifying. But she's just discovered a previously unknown document that might decide the authorship of a novel at the heart of her research. And with Serena's frighteningly intense powers, it is both scary and tempting to consider what Jamie might do.
As the younger witch attempts to teach her mother the rules of magic (which self-taught Jamie has defined for herself), both women must confront relationships past and present, with each other and with their partners. In flashback sections, Serena's early years with Mae offer heartbreakingly sweet and thought-provoking reflections on love and childrearing. Jamie's present life with Ro, a Ph.D. candidate in economics, is nerdy and deeply loving, strongly rooted in intentional reinvention of traditional roles. Serena and Jamie are a prickly and troubled mother/daughter duo, but both are earnestly trying to come together. They will face challenges to their love as well as to their personal safety, as the stakes rise in a world of bigotry and social injustice, but they will also form stronger bonds with each other and other strong women.
Anders (Never Say You Can't Survive; All the Birds in the Sky) excels at dialogue and the portrayal of relationships both loving and thorny. Her characters face profoundly serious dangers, but there are frequent notes of levity, joy, fun, and intimacy throughout. Lessons in Magic and Disaster features the magic of spells and charms but also that of human connection, and readers will be richer for the experience. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia
Shelf Talker: Adult daughter and mother, both struggling and bickering, work to come together with magic spells, an impossible dissertation, and lots of love.