
Sightwitch
Author: Susan Dennard
Series: The Witchlands #2.5
Reviewer: Community
Summary
Before Safi and Iseult battled a Bloodwitch…
Before Merik returned from the dead…
Ryber Fortiza was a Sightwitch Sister at a secluded convent, waiting to be called by her goddess into the depths of the mountain. There she would receive the gift of foretelling. But when that call never comes, Ryber finds herself the only Sister without the Sight.
Years pass and Ryber’s misfit pain becomes a dull ache, until one day, Sisters who already possess the Sight are summoned into the mountain, never to return. Soon enough, Ryber is the only Sister left. Now, it is up to her to save her Sisters, though she does not have the Sight—and though she does not know what might await her inside the mountain.
On her journey underground, she encounters a young captain named Kullen Ikray, who has no memory of who he is or how he got there. Together, the two journey ever deeper in search of answers, their road filled with horrors, and what they find at the end of that road will alter the fate of the Witchlands forever.
Set a year before Truthwitch, Sightwitch is a companion novella that also serves as a set up to Bloodwitch, as well as an expansion of the Witchlands world.
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Review
Renee
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
This book is structured differently than the others. It’s more of a journal but it’s fun to read, especially with the visuals that accompany the text. I loved learning more about Ryber and how the Sightwitches fit into the larger picture of the Witchlands series. I’m also very rule-oriented like Ryber so I felt her struggles. We also learn a lot about Kullen and get a glimpse into the past. All of this helps set up events for future books while also confirming some questions from the earlier books.
Marlou
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Sightwitch was a starry night sky, a surprise dinner with a loved one, a destination you always wanted to go, it proved the extraordinary was possible.
Leslie
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
OMG! I love epistolary novels and this one was a winner. Being given scraps of books, handwritten notes, sketches, and more, I couldn’t stop turning the pages. This book builds the background for things in the series as a whole, takes us into one of the characters’ POVs even deeper, and manages to continue deepening our understanding of where the series is going.
Fox
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
It broke my heart to lower the rating for this book, because it is so, so close to 5 stars, but I found some parts a tad bit confusing because of the switching POVs. I loved the historical aspects, but it took me too long to start to care for that plotline, as I was more interested in its connection to the present timeline of Witchlands. The book has terrific illustrations and sketches, which add a lot to the story. It would have been an amazing graphic novel or even a full novel, for example, but as a novella, it was just too short for me to get fully immersed in.
Some moments in Sightwitch are really intense and dark, which once again proves how good of a storyteller Susan is. Her writing style just gets better with each Witchlands book, and I don’t want the series to ever end. Ever!
Sightwitch is incredibly important for the series as it explains certain things that happen in Windwitch, and it just blew my mind when I got to that part! I couldn’t get over it once I finished the book and my urge was to immediately pick up Truthwitch and start my re-read with a different perspective.
In spite of its timeline preceding Truthwitch, Sightwitch is not a prequel and should be read after Windwitch and before Bloodwitch – and not in any other order.
Inopinion
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
If I could give this a six, I would. This book, though it be short, and though it be mis-labelled as a novella and a “companion” is in itself a remarkable piece of storytelling and an integral part of the series. It cannot be stated enough times how important it is to read this book before Bloodwitch!
Ryber seems such a minor character after Windwitch – the heart-thread of Kullen and member of the crew. And then Susan flips your assumptions on your head and reveals the Sightwitch Sisters and their cloistered community, Ryber, and her thread-sister, Tanzi.
This book includes one of the most epic chases in fiction or video games with all the imagery required to feel like you’re there every step of the way. Filled with riddles, game play, rules to follow, it’s like entering a bonus round only to exit understanding it was the key to completing the entire challenge. The more I linger on this book, the more it places itself in my top five of all time.


