My Review
Sorcery and Small Magics was a perfect fall-transition book. It's light and fluffy with plenty of magical hijinks and strange magical creatures. Plus, Leovander Loveage is never boring. His inner thoughts and resulting actions made him a fairly dramatic main character, not that he didn't have adequate reasons for his dramatics, but things did get quite out of hand no matter what decision he made.
Leo is a hot mess 99% of the time, but Sebastian Grimm, his nemesis, is the stoical grump to Leo's sunshine. And when they unintentionally get stuck together, it's honestly a great time. The few chapters that didn't have Leo and Grimm interacting, while still important to the story, were my least favorite. The banter between the two main characters was what I lived for. The academic "rival" tension was just too good. I wanted more. Leo was so good at pestering Grimm.
I will say that the story skewed a bit from what it originally started out as. And while that's in the synopsis, I still wasn't expecting it to take up a large portion of the book. The spell Grimm and Leo unintentionally casts that gets them stuck together means they have to go on a quest of sorts to get it fixed. So we go from a magical academy setting to a magical forest one instead. They go into this forest and all sorts of random antics ensure. There are bandits, musically-obsessed creatures, enchanted towers, and a good-boy wolf monster. Grimm and Leo have to work together to make it through all of this and get their curse undone, and I had a great time following their journey. I also was surprised to find that this book isn't a standalone. It actually ends with quite a few things unresolved. I guess I'll have to (im)patiently wait for book two to get my answers.
All in all, if you like TJ Klune's whimsical stories, Rebecca Ross's musical magic in A River Enchanted, or Freya Marske's The Last Binding series, then Sorcery and Small Magics just might be for you. It's a light-hearted fantasy with two main characters that have zero idea what they're doing, and watching them bumble their way through the problem they created is quite entertaining. I'm excited to see what book two has in store.
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