Then the Witches Multiplied
I was too naive, too sheltered by my family, my friends and the regime. The Communist Party wouldn't acknowledge the existence of anything paranormal, and so for decades the witches were allowed to breed without restriction. Even if our leaders had known that the witch males had been coming out of hiding, they wouldn't have told us. The omnipotent Party honchos treated us like children, keeping us in blissful ignorance and scaring us with the specter of capitalist monsters. But they didn't know that the times were quietly changing.
This book started out so well! I enjoyed the descriptions of life in Communistic Czechoslovakia,and I thought the voice of the first person narrator was very well done. The character development was really good, and the descriptions of the witches enchanted me. Her experience in the graveyard with the witch was enough to hook me! Then she meets a certain someone, and the story goes downhill from there. She ends up in an abusive relationship, and this is when the profanity and "intimacy" start.
I'm not sure what to say about this book. I sat down and read it from start to finish with in a couple of hours, and what I read, I enjoyed. There were a few spelling/grammatical errors, but nothing hideous, or tale-destroying. Throughout the narrative, Edita Birschbach paints an intriguing image of Communist Czechoslovakia that came across as quite pleasant; at least through the eyes of a young, naive, girl. For the characters in the story the backdrop was, as it was and people got on with
Edita Birschbach
Kindle Edition | Pages: 262 pages Rating: 4 | 8 Users | 2 Reviews
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Edition Language: | English |
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I didn't know what heartbreak meant until he decided to make me one of his girlfriends. He introduced me to such agony that I thought I would never laugh again. I never should have gotten close to somebody like him.I was too naive, too sheltered by my family, my friends and the regime. The Communist Party wouldn't acknowledge the existence of anything paranormal, and so for decades the witches were allowed to breed without restriction. Even if our leaders had known that the witch males had been coming out of hiding, they wouldn't have told us. The omnipotent Party honchos treated us like children, keeping us in blissful ignorance and scaring us with the specter of capitalist monsters. But they didn't know that the times were quietly changing.
Present Regarding Books Then the Witches Multiplied
Title | : | Then the Witches Multiplied |
Author | : | Edita Birschbach |
Book Format | : | Kindle Edition |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 262 pages |
Published | : | April 1st 2013 by Edita Birschbach (first published March 19th 2013) |
Categories | : | Fiction |
Rating Regarding Books Then the Witches Multiplied
Ratings: 4 From 8 Users | 2 ReviewsComment On Regarding Books Then the Witches Multiplied
This book started out so well! I enjoyed the descriptions of life in Communistic Czechoslovakia,and I thought the voice of the first person narrator was very well done. The character development was really good, and the descriptions of the witches enchanted me. Her experience in the graveyard with the witch was enough to hook me! Then she meets a certain someone, and the story goes downhill from there. She ends up in an abusive relationship, and this is when the profanity and "intimacy" start.This book started out so well! I enjoyed the descriptions of life in Communistic Czechoslovakia,and I thought the voice of the first person narrator was very well done. The character development was really good, and the descriptions of the witches enchanted me. Her experience in the graveyard with the witch was enough to hook me! Then she meets a certain someone, and the story goes downhill from there. She ends up in an abusive relationship, and this is when the profanity and "intimacy" start.
I'm not sure what to say about this book. I sat down and read it from start to finish with in a couple of hours, and what I read, I enjoyed. There were a few spelling/grammatical errors, but nothing hideous, or tale-destroying. Throughout the narrative, Edita Birschbach paints an intriguing image of Communist Czechoslovakia that came across as quite pleasant; at least through the eyes of a young, naive, girl. For the characters in the story the backdrop was, as it was and people got on with
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