Field Guide for the Formerly Villainous (Everyday Magic, #1) by Autumn K. England Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: cozy fantasy, queer fantasy
Series: Everyday Magic #1
Pages: 368
Published by Poisoned Pen Press on June 2, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's Website, Publisher's Website, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Bookshop.org, Better World Books
Goodreads
STARDEW VALLEY meets STUDIO GHIBLI in a charming cozy fantasy about healing, redemption, and the subtle magic of simple living. Perfect for fans of Can't Spell Treason Without Tea and The Spellshop. Welcome home, weary traveler.
When Oaklin Nettlewood accidentally joined an evil world-ending cult, mind control magic forced them to do unspeakable things. Years later, the realm's heroes have finally saved the day, defeated the villain, and shattered the last remnants of the spell...leaving destruction in their wake. And so, with a spell-damaged memory and whole bushel of trauma, Oaklin escapes to a small farm on the edge of Mossley's Rest and swears an oath: After all the things they were forced to do with their magic, they will never use it again. Ever.
The no-nonsense ghost granny who lives in Oaklin's house has other ideas. As she coaxes Oaklin out of their shell and back into the world, they find companionship (a grumpy horse and a very good dog), friendship (a local bard and magical baker who should just kiss already), and tentative romance (a paladin-librarian who makes Oaklin's heart come alive for the first time in ages.) Magic even seems possible again―though strictly for foraging magical mushrooms and protecting the farm from bugs.
Healing comes in gentle waves, and Oaklin doesn't have to do it alone. So what does it mean when an inquisitor comes to town to hunt former cultists just as Oaklin begins to think that maybe, just maybe, they deserve a happy ending after all?
My Review:
Oaklin Nettlewood has found themselves on the thorns of a dilemma. I know that phrase is normally HORNS of a dilemma, but not in Oaklin’s case. Not just because of their name, but seriously because they are caught among WAY more than just two dilemmas. They’re working their way through a whole thorny nettlebush of the things, and they’ve just barely gotten started.
Oaklin has just taken possession of their new farm, on the outskirts of the friendly, flourishing village of Mossley’s Rest. They are in dire need of a fresh start, and they’re hoping that the new job and the new location will help them get that start, well, started.
Which is where the first of many, many of those thorny dilemmas crop up.
Oaklin needs a fresh start because their original start, in a farming village in a different part of the country, was wiped out as part of the villainous Enchantrix’s War of bloody destruction. Oaklin survived, while his former village did not, because Oaklin was on the other side. The Enchantrix’s side.
Not willingly, and not even knowingly, for multiple senses of both phrases. The Enchantrix’s troops, one and all, were mind controlled by the Enchantrix’s magic. (Sort of like a powerful, wide-spectrum, widespread Imperius curse only longer lasting and with more magical oomph.)
Oaklin lost six years of their lives to that mind control spell – which was so thorough it made even the years before the spell dim, hazy and covered in shades of darkness. They remember bits and pieces, but nothing coherent or cohesive.
The spell broke along when the Enchantrix was defeated and slain. Leaving Oaklin and the other survivors a guilty, tattered remnant of who and what they used to be. While Oaklin and the remaining mind-whammied former cultists were officially pardoned for the crimes their bodies committed while their minds were controlled, that doesn’t mean that there aren’t a whole lot of people who STILL want to punish them for what happened.
Oaklin has come to Mossley’s Rest to hide – and to hide themself from their own magic which made them vulnerable to the Enchantrix’s control in the first place. Which leads right smack dab to another one of Oaklin’s dilemmas. The farm they’ve just sunk their meager savings into was originally the property of the village’s land witch, and it was protected so that it could only be purchased by someone capable of taking the witch’s magical place.
Something that Oaklin has vowed not to do, ever again, because of just how much and how terrible the evil they committed with their magic was – even if it wasn’t under their control.
But the last one of Oaklin’s dilemmas is also the first part of their healing. The farmhouse is haunted. The ghost of the prior owner, the village’s beloved land witch, is determined to coax, cajole or outright pester Oaklin into becoming the farmer, land witch and protector that the village needs to survive.
Whether Oaklin or any random Inquisitors, want them to or not.
Escape Rating A-: There’s a LOT to love about this Field Guide, but the reason that this is a A- rating instead of higher is that Oaklin Nettlewood begins – and middles – the story not loving themselves AT ALL. While there are plenty of reasons they believe they shouldn’t love or even like themself, they’re wallowing in guilt and self-loathing. It’s not a question of whether they deserve the abuse they are heaping upon themself, because that’s not the point. They don’t deserve any of it but they’re not ready to hear that yet. AND they’re suffering from flashbacks and PTSD and PTSD about the flashbacks, all of which make sense but are hard to read and go on a bit too long or in too much detail from a reader’s perspective.
Oaklin is bogged down in guilt, and the story gets a bit bogged down along with them, even though they deserve none of it (and neither does the reader). It’s also very dark – again, with good reason – but it does make this reader wonder about the actual level of coziness in this supposedly cozy fantasy. The setting itself is plenty cozy, but Oaklin’s journey through it isn’t nearly so cozy along most of its way, although they do achieve a happy ending with a mere, but appropriate, touch of bittersweet.
The setting is a cozy fantasy like Adenashire, but the story is as much sad fluff as it is cozy. The story as a whole is very much Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore, but set in Adenashire with Violet’s levels of angst, regret and reaching for a new start after a villainous first act. Also, like Violet Thistlewaite’s story, there is a romance in this one but the romance is not the center of the story.
So, while this is a story about getting away from yourself, it’s also a story about coming into yourself. Oaklin starts out in a very dark place for some terribly excellent reasons. Along their way, they reach outside themselves – or reach back into themselves for who they might have been if they hadn’t thoroughly disrupted their life.
But as much as this is Oaklin’s story, and it very much is their personal journey, it is also a story about the power of community to support, the way that connection fosters growth and happiness, the joy of being both wanted and needed and the contentment of finding a place of one’s own writ both large and small.
But the heart of the story, the thing that gives it just that perfect note of bittersweetness to make Oaklin’s happiness earned in the fullest measure, is the healing power of forgiveness. Because above all else, Oaklin needs to forgive themselves and they need to feel forgiven by those they have wronged. The story can’t end until they do.
An.ending that gives Oaklin the strength and the closure that they need to move on with the life they finally feel they’ve earned. And if that ending also manages to leave the reader with just a bit of a tear in their eye, well, even thorns need a bit of watering every now and again.
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