House of frost and feathers A novel

Lauren E. Wiesebron

Book - 2025

"Marisha's time is running out. She's already lost her family to the sleeping plague, and she fears she'll be next. Penniless and desperate for protection, Marisha is forced to accept a job as apprentice to the notorious koldunya, the sorceress Baba Zima. But Baba Zimais renowned for being both clever and cruel. And most difficult of all is her current apprentice Olena, who wants nothing to do with Marisha. Despite her fears and Olena's cold demeanor, Marisha finds herself drawn into the magical world of koldunry and delves further into Olena's research--a cure for the sleeping plague"--

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SCIENCE FICTION/Wiesebro Lauren
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1st Floor New Shelf SCIENCE FICTION/Wiesebro Lauren (NEW SHELF) Due Aug 31, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York, NY : Harper Voyager, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Lauren E. Wiesebron (author)
Edition
First Harper Voyager paperback [edition]
Physical Description
502 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780063371491
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Wiesebron debuts with a remarkable high fantasy as thoroughly Slavic and delightfully alive as the building that lends it its name, an orange-shingled house on chicken legs. When orphaned Marisha comes upon the house in the Severny city square, it can only mean the koldun, or witch, Baba Zima is in town. What's more, Zima is hiring an assistant for her apprentice, Olena. Though Marisha is fearful of koldunry, she's desperate for work, so she applies. It's not an easy job: Zima is full of tricks, as is her house, and Olena is cold and difficult. Still, Marisha is determined to stay, especially after learning that Olena is working on a cure for the strange sleeping plague that returns every 10 years, killing thousands, including Marisha's parents. But the longer she stays in the house, surrounded by koldunry, digging into old rivalries between Zima and Olena, and touching the spirit world, the more she fears that she has caught the attention of something much more dangerous than plague: a strange, beaked man who haunts her dreams. Wiesebron weaves together multiple Slavic folk stories to power a plot full of intricate interpersonal drama and fantastically earthy magic, led by a cast of clever, thorny women who never back down. It's an impressive feat. (June)

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