The Poisons We Drink
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- $18.99
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
In a country divided between humans and witchers, Venus Stoneheart hustles as a brewer making illegal love potions to support her family.
Love potions is a dangerous business. Brewing has painful, debilitating side effects, and getting caught means death or a prison sentence. But what Venus is most afraid of is the dark, sentient magic within her.
Then an enemy's iron bullet kills her mother, Venus’s life implodes. Keeping her reckless little sister Janus safe is now her responsibility. When the powerful Grand Witcher, the ruthless head of her coven, offers Venus the chance to punish her mother's killer, she has to pay a steep price for revenge. The cost? Brew poisonous potions to enslave D.C.'s most influential politicians.
As Venus crawls deeper into the corrupt underbelly of her city, the line between magic and power blurs, and it's hard to tell who to trust…Herself included.
The Poisons We Drink is a potent YA debut about a world where love potions are weaponized against hate and prejudice, sisterhood is unbreakable, and self-love is life and death.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In Baptiste's fantastical debut, a teen seeking justice for her mother's murder must navigate the crooked politics of Washington, D.C. Venus Stoneheart is a Witcher—a magical offshoot of humans who are discriminated against and marginalized by human-run society—who brews illegal love potions to support her family. Following her mother's death, Venus becomes responsible for her impetuous younger sister, Janus. But Venus is soon embroiled in trouble of her own, forcing her down a path that she's certain will only lead to her destruction. The Grand Witcher is offering Venus the opportunity to take revenge against her mother's killer. The only thing she asks in return is for Venus to brew dangerous potions for a new set of clientele: local politicians. Through Venus's dark yet tenacious perspective and the skillful, understated worldbuilding, Baptiste presents a fresh take on magic systems to deliver a searing critique of power, politics, and injustice. Flawed characters are rendered with nuance and complexity, elements especially evident in the mother-daughter and sister relationships at the core of this thought-provoking story. Major characters cue as Black. Ages 14–up.