Quinn Brody, a talented alienist, she submits Beatrice to a series of tests to see if she truly can talk to spirits. Has she been touched by magic or is she simply losing her mind?Įleanor wants to tread lightly and respect the magic manifest in the girl, but Adelaide sees a business opportunity. Objects appear out of thin air, as if gifts from the dead. Beatrice soon becomes indispensable as Eleanor's apprentice, but her new life with the witches is marred by strange occurrences. Together they cater to Manhattan's high society ladies, specializing in cures, palmistry and potions-and in guarding the secrets of their clients.Īll is well until one bright September afternoon, when an enchanting young woman named Beatrice Dunn arrives at their door seeking employment. Two hundred years after the trials in Salem, Adelaide Thom ('Moth' from The Virgin Cure) has left her life in the sideshow to open a tea shop with another young woman who feels it's finally safe enough to describe herself as a witch: a former medical student and "gardien de sorts" (keeper of spells), Eleanor St. The beloved, bestselling author of The Birth House and The Virgin Cure is back with her most beguiling novel yet, luring us deep inside the lives of a trio of remarkable young women navigating the glitz and grotesqueries of Gilded-Age New York by any means possible, including witchcraft.
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