The Sea Witch by Eva Leigh

The Sea Witch (Salt & Sorcery, #1)The Sea Witch by Eva Leigh

Tracy’s Rating: 3.5/4 of 5 stars

Series: Salt & Sorcery, #1

Release Date: August 26, 2025

In a small coastal Massachusetts village, men with magical powers are revered and trained in the magical arts as mages, but female witches are hunted and hanged. Widow Alys Tanner is a witch and has been careful not to be caught as her sister was hanged as a witch, but after her husband dies, she too is hunted. She manages to escape along with a handful of women, some witches and some not, from her village. They steal a ship and the witches among them use their powers to call the wind and escape. A year later, she is a pirate and is still captain of the ship which they renamed the Sea Witch, and she has amassed a large crew of women, both magical and not and they sail the Caribbean. When she attends the funeral of the pirate Little George Partridge, she learns that Little George had been working with the Navy and their mages to control mystical sea creatures, which the Navy has been using to fight pirates. But in true pirate fashion, Little George was double-crossing the Navy and created a way to break the spell the Navy is using to enslave the sea creatures, and he left a clue to the location of his “fail-safe”. But as she is reading the clue, the Navy attacks and she is chased by a sailor, narrowly escaping his clutches – or so she thinks. Once on board her ship, she discovers the man followed her and is now on her ship, but the tide has turned and now he is her prisoner.

Benjamin “Ben” Priestley, Sailing Master for the HMS Jupiter, the navy’s flagship, is on a quest to find the pirates that killed his father. When he sees Alys and realizes she has found the clue to the fail-safe, he pursues her. But when he boards her ship, he is taken prisoner. It isn’t long before he realizes that there is no way Alys could have been responsible for his father’s death, but she could lead him to the fail-safe, which he plans to destroy to prevent them from using it. But the more time spent with Alys, the more he likes her. When they form a bond through “dream walking”, Ben discovers things about himself and soon he will do whatever he can to help Alys find and destroy the fail-safe.

I was super excited for this book, I have read and loved Eva Leigh’s historical romances, so I had high expectations for her debut into Romantasy. For the most part I enjoyed the book, it had very strong “Pirates of Caribbean” vibe, with wonderful characters and a lot more magic. But I felt that the “world building” was not quite as thorough as I expected, the fact that this book is set in the early 1700s, barely 25 years after the Salem Witch trials, makes it hard to believe that magic of any sort would be accepted, so the whole “mage” thing was a big pill to swallow, then there is the magic itself, honestly, I am still not sure I understand it. The first half of the book dragged a bit and during that time, I wasn’t loving Alys’ character, I had a hard time believing that in ONE year, she not only masters sailing a large ship, but becomes a pirate that can hold her own with the brethren of the coast and has taught herself enough magic to battle with trained mages. Then there is her treatment of Ben, I understood her anger for the way she had been treated, but she came off as a bit of a hypocrite and a misandrist. Thankfully, her character does evolve and by the end of the book, I loved her. And speaking of endings, I was not expecting a cliffhanger, but there it was and now I am counting the days until the next book comes out! Overall, it was a well written, action-packed story with a bit of spice, lots of magic and pirates galore, and well worth the read!

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher/author. All opinions in this review are my own. *

Waiting For A Scot Like You By Eva Leigh

Waiting for a Scot Like You (Union of the Rakes, #3)Waiting for a Scot Like You by Eva Leigh
Barbara’s rating: 2.5 of 5 stars

Series: Union of Rakes #3
Publication Date: 2/23/21
Number of Pages: 368
** 2.5 Stars Rounded Up **

I loved our male lead, thirty-four-year-old Major Duncan McCameron. He is one of those strong, fearless, stoic men who are really marshmallows inside. After being raised by an uptight family and then spending twenty years in the military, Duncan is a rule follower. That is one of the reasons he did so well in the military. Yet, since he’s home from the wars, he feels restless and unsettled. What he had wanted – and still wanted really – was a wife and family, yet it seems beyond him to make that happen.

Beatrice Sloane, forty-six-year-old dowager countess of Farris, is finally free from her oppressive marriage and she fully intends to revel in absolutely every aspect of life from this point forward – and – she will absolutely never, under any circumstances, marry again. Frankly, I didn’t care for Beatrice – I really tried to like her, but I just couldn’t get there. Evidently, she didn’t care how much pain she caused Duncan – nor did she give the stigma her activities would cause her family any consideration at all. She didn’t seem to care – if she wanted to do it, she did it.

Beatrice intends to travel to Nottinghamshire to attend a week-long orgy at the home of Lord Gibbs. After having an inattentive husband, she was looking forward to a week of pleasure. Neither she nor Duncan was pleased when their mutual friend, the Duke of Rotherby, asked Duncan to escort Beatrice to assure she arrived safely. Rotherby convinces them and their adventure begins.

Along the way they have a lot of adventures – they stop to help deliver lambs, they have a coach accident, they encounter thieves – and they have lots and lots and lots and lots of intimate times together. I actually felt the ‘story’ part was just a way to stitch all of the intimate scenes together.

In all of the years I have been reading books and writing reviews, I have only given a 2.5-star rating a handful of times. I’m sad to say this is one of those times. I didn’t even get what I consider – for the period – to be a Happily Ever After. What we got would fit in today’s world perhaps, but would have caused so very many problems for other people in that time period. While the story was a well-written nod to – I believe – Ferris Bueler’s Day Off – I just couldn’t get myself to love it. For me, it wasn’t just a contemporary story in period dress, it was a story written in a completely alternate universe. It was filled with twenty-first-century “woke” characters who were totally accepting and approving of anything and everything.

An alternate universe where in the early 1800s …

• Gay men could live together openly and affectionately with no threat of the death penalty or social ostracizing. Where they could continue with public careers as barristers, etc. without any censure or loss of standing or income.

• A man and woman could live together without matrimony and the woman still be totally accepted within society. Where their families and friends would totally accept the relationship and not give them the cut direct. Where that relationship wouldn’t directly affect the social standing and social acceptance of her children – even the titled children.

This was a new-to-me author and I was looking forward to reading my first book written by her. However, I can’t say that I would read another. I know there are many readers out there who will read and love the book because they don’t mind that nothing about it represents any sort of historical reality. For me personally, I don’t understand why the author wouldn’t just write a contemporary story rather than trying to dress it in period clothing.

One more thought. If the roles were reversed and Duncan was the one who wouldn’t marry and he asked Beatrice to become his mistress instead, we’d all be incensed. How dare he, in that time period, do that to a respectable woman. Yet, we’re supposed to cheer them on when the reverse happens.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.