Wednesday Night Witches (Red Dress Ink)

 
3.0 based on 14 reviews.

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Paperback Book, 304 pages

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Product Description

They don't believe in magic, but the Wednesday Night Witches cast a mighty spell!

On the outs with her live-in boyfriend, Eve Crenshaw flees Manhattan for a different kind of island life off the coast of Maine. With the help of her college roommate, Natasha, and her friend Kim, she rents a seaside cottage and waits for her boyfriend to beg her to return.

Instead, he gets a new girlfriend.

Now Eve's stuck on an island with no cable TV, no Starbucks and no eligible men. Desperate for diversion, the women meet every week for drinks, dubbing themselves the Wednesday Night Witches.

One stormy evening, the Witches raid Kim's cellar and find a strange bottle of liqueur. Getting into the spirit, they each make a wish, lift their glasses and . . . well, no one can quite recall what happens next. But suddenly their wishes start coming true!

Only, as life gets better and better for the Wednesday Night Witches, everything else on the island goes to hell . . .

Product Details

  • Media: Paperback Book, 304 pages
  • Publisher: Red Dress Ink (August 01, 2007)
  • ISBN-10: 0373895542
  • ISBN-13: 9780373895540
  • Dimensions: 5.1 x 7.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.6 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating Entertaining and Full of Bewitching Excitement....  Aug 16, 2007 (6 of 7 found this helpful)

    Pour yourself a pink cosmopolitan, and curl up with this fun combination of chick lit with a supernatural twist!

    Follow 3 friends as they each experience some crazy times. Eve is a Kindergarten teacher who has just moved to Broome Island, just off the coast of Maine, after an embarrassing break-up with her Lawyer boyfriend. Natasha is a struggling artist, searching for appreciation and acceptance of her art. Kim is a cook with a witchy heritage, and a troubled past. These three friends come together to share their misery, and toast to their friendship -- eventually becoming a tightly bonded group, they dubbed themselves the "Wednesday Night Witches" after they decide to meet for drinks every Wednesday night. However, trouble gets stirred up after these three "witches" find a mysterious bottle of liquour in the basment, and use it to toast each other and make a wish. When the wishes start coming true, the real fun begins...

    This book is just a lot of fun. I love all the magical and witchy aspects of it. It takes a traditional chick lit story, and turns it into something new and exciting. More and more we are seeing supernatural chick lit novels introduced into this particular genre, and most of them are really entertaining. "Wednesday Night Witches" is no exception.

    The characters are each unique and fun, and I think most people will be able to find something relatable about each of them, whether it's relating to Eve's romantic pursuits, and her desire to prove herself through her career -- or maybe relating to Natasha's frustration with her art, and her desire to be appreciated for her talents (in addition to finally attracting a man). Or, perhaps you will relate more to Kim, and her lonliness, and desire to overcome her past difficulties, and have a child of her very own. One of the things I liked about this book was that although (as usual with chick lit) a large emphasis is given to these women's romantic lives (all three want to find the man of their dreams, of course), they are also more indepth characters, and have other dreams, pursuits, and wishes that have nothing to do with snagging a man!

    Bottom line, this is an easy read, and a great book for a lazy afternoon.

  • Rating Cute, but ultimately lame  Oct 24, 2007 (7 of 9 found this helpful)

    I picked this up with no grand ideas that this book would be anything more than a charming, light read that would entertain me. I wasn't expecting Jane Austen, Neil Gaiman, or even Dan Brown. I wanted fluffy romance and predictability. Sometimes, we really need some candy like these books. However, I found the narrative so distracting with the constant switch from first to third-person narrative to be a poorly formed creation. How could any editor worth her salt allow a writer to trip so badly? Why not just make the entire story third-person, allow the characters to grow through the lense of an outside narrator?
    Poorly written.

  • Rating Not one of RDI's best  Aug 6, 2007 (4 of 6 found this helpful)

    After a fight with her rich, live in boyfried, eve crenshaw hops on a plane to stay in maine with her college room mate Natasha. Eve assumes her BF will come to his senses and beg her to come home, but instead he calls her to ask where to send her things. So eve is stuck in Maine and has only Natasha and a new fried Kim to lean on. The 3 dub themselves "The wendesday night witches" and of couse end up unleashing an evil spirit (by accident, oops!). Their wishes start coming true, but on the island they live things start going wrong.
    The main problem I had with this book is that it was too predictable. There were no suprises in this book. Also the ending is very rushed, they wrap it up in only a few pages. The story itself is a light, easy read, but there isn't much substance.

  • Rating Cute, Original  Mar 24, 2008 (2 of 3 found this helpful)

    Predominantly chick lit with a tiny bit of witchery thrown in, this story starts off following Eve, a Manhattan kindergarten teacher with a boyfriend so overwhelmingly obnoxious that you can't wait for her to shake him off and head to the backwoods of Maine to cry on the paint-spattered shoulder of her best friend, starving artist Natasha. Add to this Natasha's ex sister-in-law, Kim, who is still in love with her ex-husband and regretful that they allowed themselves to be torn apart over Kim's miscarriage, and you have a nice trinity of young, seemingly luckless gals who just need a little shove in the right direction, and maybe a little magic to boot. On a proverbial dark and stormy night, the girls gather at one of their homes to drown their sorrows and make tipsy wishes via a mysterious bottle of liquor from Kim's ancestral stores - those ancestors, of course, being witches. None of them remember a thing the next morning, but just put that down to it being one hell of a bottle of wine. Soon, however, their wishes begin to come true in ways they never imagined possible, yet naturally there's another side to the coin in that something malicious is growing and gaining strength deep in the roots of the island.

    It was narrated in a way I've seldom seen before, in that Eve's narration was all in the "I" first person and the others were traditional third person. I thought it was interesting the way these two styles were put together, being more accustomed to an author picking one method and sticking to it. It melded fairly seamlessly, I thought.

    This is very much a chick lit book and the occult aspect - which is what I got it for - is just a sidebar. Truthfully, had that element not been present I probably wouldn't have enjoyed the story at all because I don't care for chick lit as a general rule. There were also times I thought the author was trying a bit too hard to be clever and cute with her dialogue, and it's true that dialogue is the strong point here. It just glared at me here and there as a little too obvious.

    These are very minor flaws, though. It's a cute, well-written and well-paced book, a fast read, and very nicely and originally done. Recommended.

  • Rating Her other books are great but not this one  Dec 4, 2007 (2 of 3 found this helpful)

    I loved all of Lee Nicols' other books but this one was just not entertaining or funny. I read the entire book and just could not get into the story. I do not mind fantasy stories either but this book just missed the truly funny and entertaining stories that were in Hand-Me-Down, Drama Queen and True Lies of A Drama Queen. I did not think the characters were all that well developed. I am waiting for her next book and hope that Lee Nicols writes another book like True Lies of A Drama Queen.

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