Two teen girls must uncover the dark, occult secrets lurking in their Cape Cod town to solve a series of murders—and save themselves from the same fate—in this twisty, witchy thriller.
When Mazzy and her best friend Nora sneak down to the beach one moonlit night to cast a spell, they don’t expect to find a dead body. But as the tide rolls in, it carries the remains of a woman who is missing her hands and teeth.
The girls know they should leave the investigation to the police, but they can’t shake the weird, supernatural connection they feel with the dead woman. Using spellwork and divination, they set out to find answers of their own. But after they uncover a rash of local disappearances stretching back years—and both girls start having occult visions and hearing ghostly, whispering voices—Mazzy worries that she and Nora are in danger.
Then, Nora finds a second body. And a whispering voice is telling her where to find more. With everything spiraling, Mazzy needs to figure out who to trust and how to sever this supernatural connection—or she and Nora might be the next bodies to wash up on the beach.
Nicole grew up on Cape Cod and graduated from Wesleyan University. She spent a few years in London and now lives near Boston with her family and two rambunctious black cats. She writes young adult and middle grade books.
🌙A Spell to Wake the Dead by Nicole Lesperance is a dark and spooky supernatural tale with just the right mix of mystery and an eerie atmosphere. I’ll happily read witchy stories any time of the year, but this one is definitely begging to be added to an October TBR.
I really enjoyed the characters, especially Mazzy and Nora, and the dynamics between them. Their friendship, along with Ethan, who was so well written, gave the story a heart that balanced all the suspense and supernatural tension.
The writing style, the twists, and the rich occult elements kept me completely engaged. The witchy parts in particular were fascinating and thoughtfully detailed. I am no expert in witchcraft, but it felt like the author put careful attention into making this element of the story feel authentic and immersive. The balance of creepy, thrilling, and lightly romantic moments made this a perfect YA magic and horror read.
✨ Key thoughts: 🔮 Perfect blend of mystery and spooky atmosphere. 🌊 Magical and eerie vibes throughout. 💀 Supernatural elements that keep you turning pages. 🤍 Friendship and loyalty anchoring the story. 📚 A wonderfully witchy read for October or any time of year.
Haunting, immersive, and full of richly witchy details, this is one I will definitely be recommending for spooky season.
Expected publication: August 26, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Young Readers Group | G.P. Putnam’s Sons for the digital ARC.
🕯️ Witchy, twisty, and eerily fun, this one cast a 3.5 star spell on me.
this is literally a perfect fall book, i beg you all to read this when it comes out!!! a perfect mix of mystery and spooky with an eerie atmosphere, and writing that will keep you hooked and bingeing the entire 300+ pages. like seriously, when you start pulling out gilmore girls and pumpkin spice drinks this year, pick this book up too.
thank you to netgalley & penguin group for the arc! all opinions are my own <3
Thanks to NetGalley and PENGUIN GROUP Penguin Young Readers Group | G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers for access to this title. All opinions expressed are my own.
A solid read that will delight your autumnal reading selection. I thought I would just check out the first chapter at breakfast this morning. Instead, this title held me captive for several hours.
What It's About: When Mazzy and her best friend Nora sneak down to the beach one moonlit night to cast a spell, they don’t expect to find a dead body. But as the tide rolls in, it carries the remains of a woman who is missing her hands and teeth.
The girls know they should leave the investigation to the police, but they can’t shake the weird, supernatural connection they feel with the dead woman. Using spellwork and divination, they set out to find answers of their own. But after they uncover a rash of local disappearances stretching back years—and both girls start having occult visions and hearing ghostly, whispering voices—Mazzy worries that she and Nora are in danger.
Then, Nora finds a second body. And the whispering voice is telling her where to find more. With everything spiraling, Mazzy needs to figure out who to trust and how to sever this supernatural connection—or she and Nora might be the next bodies to wash up on the beach.
Nora, Mazzy and Eliot( not mentioned in the description, but he helps too) were all great teenage characters. I can see my students who like a good witchy/paranormal tale eating this one up. One area of curiosity was how these girls became so gifted with spells and all that. How long had they been at it for to be able to do what they did in the story? Then again, perhaps it was just my quibble. Whatever the case, it kept me hooked.
Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher, and the author for providing a free e-arc in exchange for an honest review.
This was a good witchy time with a murder mystery, spellcraft, friendships woven in magic, and suspense! Mazzy and Nora are two friends who find themselves in a conundrum when they find a body while on the beach and through their determination through spellcraft and divination help to solve the mystery.
It is a quick read that keeps you engaged from the beginning. I feel that it definitely shines more for its intended audience, which is YA, but anyone can read this and enjoy it, especially during the fall season. The twists were good, though slightly predictable. Definitely give it a try if it intrigues you!
such an interesting and eerie book where a murder investigation meets witchy spooky vibes. i will say it was such a unique twist to a sometimes overdone trope and it was done so well! i was actually hooked reading this and finished the whole thing in pretty much one sitting. i could not put it down and there was nothing that could pry my eyes away from it.
thank you netgalley and penguin group for this arc in exchange for my honest review!!
I really enjoyed the eerie atmosphere, this book had me hooked since the beginning.
I loved reading about Mazzy and Nora and the dangerous path they found themselves on after discovering a body on the beach and trying to solve her murder, using divination and spellwork and a whispering voice guiding them to more. I loved their friendship and Ethan.
I enjoyed the writing and the twists as well as all the occult elements this story had.
*Thank you to Netgalley and to Penguin Young Readers Group for providing me with an ARC.*
Mazzy and Norah like to practice witchcraft, often performing simple spells that have a variety of success. When the girls sneak out to the beach to perform a spell, they find a woman's body that is missing their hands and teeth. There seems to be something supernatural about the woman's death and when the girls start to investigate, they find a pattern of local disappearances linked to a secret society. Both of the girls start to have visions and when a whispering voice leads Norah to a second body, the girls realize they might be next.
If you love a combination of murder mysteries and supernatural, I will highly recommend this book. I was hooked from the first chapter, and I loved the creepy atmosphere of the occult and secret society. I would have enjoyed a little more focus on the background of the Hand of Nephthys and the secondary characters that were involved in the mystery, but still really enjoyed this book overall.
A Spell to Wake the Dead is out August 26th.
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Group Young Readers for the opportunity to review A Spell to Wake the Dead. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
A dark tale, yet full of heart, A SPELL TO WAKE THE DEAD combines cult horror and teenage witches to create a truly fresh story. Initially introducing themes of friendship and a budding young romance in a contemporary setting, Lesperance lulls you into a false sense of security before driving an unshakeable chill down your back. Bodies will be unearthed, rituals will have horrifying consequences, and what quite literally haunts the narrative will haunt readers too.
A deliciously spooky read perfect for the autumn season! If small town horror is your thing, you will love this creepy, atmospheric read about teenage witches.
As grateful as I am for this arc and getting to read this in March, the actual release date of this book is set perfectly because reading this book would hit different during the fall. This book is peak romanticism of the fall season. It even romanticizes the feeling of comfortable loneliness you get when the clocks roll back and life gets darker sooner. This feeling that you get from a book…this is what reading is all about. It was able to transport me to my favorite time of year.
This book still has the YA feel but with all the excitement you’d expect from a supernatural murder mystery. The girls stumble upon a dead body of a woman who is missing her hands and heart (yikes) and suspect that the culprit is a secret magical society called hand of nephthys, an evil cult who perform ritual murders. The book then dives into a magical murder mystery essentially, filled with teenagers communing with ghosts, researching evil magic societies, mixed with a murder mystery. It deals with everything from an evil cult obsessed with Egyptian mythology to a spirits of the dead communicating with the girls in their heads. It’s very much a murder mystery rather than a horror novel, but with plenty of magical and supernatural elements. There’s even a creepy song that’s a clue to part of the mystery. It’s spooky, atmospheric, and so autumnal.
Aside from that, this book is just plain well written. You know how some authors tell but don’t show? Literally from page 2 I clocked that Nicole Lesperance is not one of those authors because I instantly felt transported into this sleepy town. From the first page I could tell that she’s a gifted writer. She transports you into a place of lonely, empty roads surrounded by sleepy woods and Victorian homes, the evening soft and silvery from the moonlight. Everything is written so visually and easy to picture. This book isn’t anything groundbreaking of a massive standout necessarily, but it’s exactly what you’d expect going into it. And absolutely perfect for spooky season.
Thank you to Netgalley and GP Putnam for sending me an advanced copy in return for my honest review.
Initially when picking this up I was pretty impressed with the writing. I didn't have to "get over" clunky writing in order to feel immersed in the story.
It really gave a moody vibe for a seaside New England setting, and definitely gave off creepiness.
I initially felt weird about this being a occult spell gone wrong story. Obviously if you mess with occult magic someone is going to wind up in a bad way - haunted, possessed, etc. - you infuriating teenagers! But I got over it because obviously...this is the point.
The parts that were a little annoying where the repeated name dropping of different locations on The Cape. As a New Englander I don't need you to tell me all the places I've been to. But then I remembered that hey, some people like maps and maybe they want to get an idea of a place they don't come from. Maybe not for me, but it could work for someone else.
My primary struggle was with the cute little teen romance that was trying to happen all the while very problematic things are happening to their friend! I just couldn't buy it in the stress of the events occuring all around them.
Overall it was good YA. Great spooky story. Good writing. Good pacing. Not super great romance.
Thank you to Penguin for the complimentary copy through Netgalley. All the opinions expressed are my own.
Thank you Penguin Teen for providing me with the eARC via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
A Spell to Wake the Dead makes for a really nice and compelling read for the spooky season. We follow best friends Mazzy and Nora - albeit the whole book is told from Mazzy's point of view - along with their friend Elliott. Both girls are into witch craft and like dabbling in magic, be it little spells or tarot cards. Elliott largely just seems to humour them but all three are shocked when a little finding spell of theirs actually uncovers a dead body at the beach. From that point on, strange things beginn to happen and Nora insists that the ghost of the dead body is talking to and instructing her.
The writing and plot were very atmospheric and well done. It wasn't downright horror but it most certainly was eerie and unsettling. Although I wish it had been made clear in the beginning that this is set in our world and Mazzy and Nora are strictly speaking considered a bit odd for their interest in witch craft - the way the story starts I was under the impression that witchcraft was common place. But as the story went on I realised it truly is just in our contemporary times and that the wider population, including Elliott and the girls' parents, believe in magic.
With this in mind, I think once the wider take on magic is clear, I thought it was pretty well done how the girls had to hide what they were up to or got confronted with people who don't believe. In addition, as we only get Mazzy's point of view, I think there's a certain sense of unreliable narration here. Neither Mazzy nor the reader knows for sure how trustworthy Nora and the ghost only she can hear are, we also can't know for sure how reliable Mazzy or truly most of the cast are or whether there's anything supernatural at work at all.
Besides ghosts and spells, there's a murder mystery which added another engrossing element. The book also touched on a few topics around friendship and jealousy as well as family dynamics. The romance was largely just fine - it's cute but not really what brings this book to life.
The mystery was altogether well done - it had me guessing who the main culprit is until the very final chapters. The reveals were good and it wrapped up well, although I almost wish it had just a wee bit more of a bang. Nonetheless, I think this is a super solid witchy standalone that I would definitely recommend people add to their spooky reading list.
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an arc of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
4,5☆
This was sooo good. The book does a fantastic job of mixing mystery with magical elements. I loved the main characters so much and felt that they were very multidimensionally written.
The plot progressed in a way that felt fitting and exciting. This kept me hooked and I constantly wanted to know what happens next. The ending was perfect in every way.
I really recommend this to both mystery lovers and those who love books about witches!
From its first scene, this book totally had me. Two teens who dabble in witchy stuff make a gruesome discovery on the beach, and their curiosity about what happened puts them on a dangerous path. Occult supernatural tales aren't uncommon these days, but it's rare to find one as thoroughly creepy as this, with its atmospheric off-season Cape Cod setting. I guarantee it will get under your skin.
Me, a 30-something year-old woman: it's YA, it can't be that freaky. Also me at 10pm: Oooookay maybe we put that down for now (To clarify though, I am a pretty big scaredy cat).
4.75 stars, rounded up to 5 stars for me! This was just the right amount of creepy and thriling for YA magic/horror with the tiniest pinch of romance. I will definitely be recommending this for October reads!
A Spell to Wake the Dead follows Mazzy and Nora, two teenage girls who just lightly dabble in witchcraft. And they've had some success with minor spells, so why NOT do a spell on the beach that uncovers hidden things? You never know what you'll end up finding....even if it's a dead body :) With this one spell, the girls and their friend Elliot are thrust into the world of the occult, based on Egyptian mythology.
•Definite witchy magic happening - things that can't be explained •Strong female friendships •Family ties
Man, this freaked me out and had me jumping at every noise when I was home alone. I LOVED that it wasn't just like a Mythbusters type situation and there actually WERE creepy things happening. Mazzy and Nora's curiosity is so on point as teenagers - would I have been scared to death if I were in their situation? Yes, but I probably would have done the same thing too. Their unwavering belief in each other was perfect for the story. I am no expert in witchcraft, but it also seems like the author took care to research it as a focal point in the story, which I appreciated.
Nora was reaaaaaally frustrating to me as a character a lot of the time. In the end, I understood why she was acting that way, but I really didn't like her at points.
I received this as an eARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Thank you to PENGUIN GROUP Penguin Young Readers Group | G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
This books starts out creepy, witchy and downright spooky and I love it! Look, this is firmly in the YA category. (Not the borderline adult-level explicit fantasy/romance that sometimes hides in YA either. I would feel 100% comfortable if my 13 year old kiddo wanted to read this.) The two main characters are 17-year old girls and they act like it. They take risks, dabble in things with not enough knowledge of the consequences, and think moving away from each other is the worst thing ever. It’s authentic behavior for that age group. This was a refreshing escapist read. I loved the mystery, the use of the witchcraft and occult elements, and the overall friendship between Mazzy and Nora. Even the romance with Elliot was very PG adorable and sweet.
I really loved this! Is it outlandish? Absolutely. But I don’t think anyone is going to confuse reality here when there’s people using spells to light candles and paralyze enemies. That’s why it’s fantasy. I will definitely be buying a copy of this book! I highly recommend picking this up when it comes out at the end of August 2025. It would make the perfect start to spooky season!
I got this arc through netgalley, and the book seemed interesting, but due to some lgbt content, I am not going to finish it. The writing style was great, and the story seemed interesting, but I had to dnf it.
A witchy thriller, A Spell to Wake the Dead definitely had spooky fall vibes and was VERY atmospheric. I really enjoyed the ominous vibes and the growing tension as Mazzy, Nora and Elliot realize something truly dark is happening around them. I was very intrigued by the mystery and excited to see where it would go. I also really loved the subplot of Mazzy’s feelings for Elliot. I thought that added a nice little happy break from all the spookiness. I had a very hard time with Nora however. For most of the book, she was whiny, selfish and incredibly petulant. She did get much better at the end, but whew, I wanted to shake her most of the story. I also felt like the final confrontation when all is revealed was a little confusing to me. I think there was a lot happening in those scenes that it all felt a bit jumbled. However, I still liked the way the ending went and the overall vibes of the book! CW: death, violence, alcoholism
Thank you to Penguin Teen for the digital reader’s copy!
4.5 rounded up. This was overall an enjoyable, witchy, YA read. The mystery was intriguing and kept me turning each page! I liked Mazzy as the main POV, and her and her friendship with Nora and Elliot made each of the three main characters well fleshed out. The blend with the occult and witchcraft added to the enjoyable vibes. A huge thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for an eARC in exchange for my thoughts as well as Colleen for buddy reading this with me!
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for the arc!
Honestly, i requested this on a whim, liked the cover and hit request. And oh my god was it good! A found family trope, witches, secret societies and such good writing. It’s one of those books that you can’t put down once you pick it up Nora and Mazzy really gave me a dynamic I love in thrillery books, and thank GOD i read this mostly during the day cause oooh boy was it creepy. I recommend to save it for a gloomy rainy nights!
After reading The Depths by this author a couple of years ago and really enjoying the eerie and creepy vibe of it, I was excited to read her newest release.
This book follows Mazzy, who finds a dead body with her best friend Nora when the two of them go to the beach to practice a magic spell. They feel a connection to the body and become determined to find out what happened to the dead woman.
Horror and thriller go together really well and this book did an excellent job with the atmosphere. A lot of very creepy things happened and those horror elements made this different from other mysteries and thrillers out there.
I liked Mazzy as a character but I didn’t like Nora much and she really wasn’t much of a friend to Mazzy either. I liked Mazzy’s crush much better. The romance was a little odd since all these weird and creepy things are happening around them, but the romance did add a little levity and kept the story from getting too dark.
The reason I’m not giving this a full 4 stars is because I thought the end reveal got a bit convoluted in terms of the explanation and I wanted a bit more from it overall. But I’m rounding up because this was overall really great!
Overall I liked this one. If you read a lot of mysteries and thrillers and want to broaden your horizons a bit by adding in just a sprinkling of horror, I’d recommend this one. This author is also becoming a go-to for me when it comes to spooky reads. I can’t wait to see what she’ll write next!
A dark, chilling, creep-fest of a book, A Spell to Wake the Dead follows besties Mazzy and Nora as they stumble into much more than they bargained for in a moonlit spell.
This book was wonderfully crafted. The ambiance perfectly eerie, the Tarot and magical elements accurate and on point. The relationships between the girls, and their friend Elliot are sincere and believable. The plot thrilling and sinister. This was a deeply atmospheric ride into the darkness of humanity and magic.
Thanks to NetGalley and Putnam for the opportunity to read and review this book.
This is YA, but it can totally draw in an adult audience. I related with these characters in so many ways, especially from my own teen years. I was captivated by the mystery of dead bodies washing ashore and a possible occult cult. Some of it was predictable, but that didn't take away from the story. The witch stuff was what intrigued and held me to this story. Fascinating, and surprisingly, quite well researched. I absolutely loved it.
Wow! This book was GOOD. I was definitely not expecting this book to be as dark as it was. Starting out with the two mcs finding a body washed up, it had me on the edge of my seat the entire time. Absolutely obsessed with this story and it left me needing more. It was incredibly written and fun.
A good majority of this book could have been avoided if the main characters A) listened to warnings and B) did not attempt to communicate with the dead.
After a spell to find lost things goes awry, best friends Nora and Mazzy find themselves being the unfortunate two people who stumble upon a corpse. They found something lost- and Nora starts to hear the ghost of the woman they found.
Mazzy wants nothing to do with any of this- she wants to move on and confess her feelings to Elliot, their other best friend, but as Nora drags them both deeper into the rabbit hole, they find that they may have bitten off more than they can chew. A dangerous cult lurks around the corner, and their ghost is more sinister than she appears.
Nora drove me absolutely bonkers from the 30% marker of this book to the end. Each decision she made had me groaning and hoping she’d let it go, much like our protagonist, Mazzy, often wished. I did love that each of the characters had individual hobbies (besides accidentally using a spell that summons a ghost.) Nora is a goth who is in color guard (my sport of choice,) Mazzy plays the cello, and Elliott is a soft hearted artist and just a good guy all around.
A Spell to Wake the Dead releases on August 26, but this is definitely an October read! Finishing this in the dark late at night was probably not my best idea. Thank you to G.P Putnam’s Sons and Netgalley for the e-arc!
A Spell to Wake the Dead does not involve zombies. I feel like I need to make that distinction because I definitely thought otherwise. So to be extra clear: No Zombies. At all.
It is a YA horror with teen witches. There's death, murder, random teeth in the sand... It's dark.
My favorite part? The setting. I read a book last month set in Boston that could have been set in any city it was so detached from anything Boston. This book is set in off season Cape Cod, and let me tell you this author LIVED it: the dark, the shuttered summer businesses that seem to prove the year-rounders don't matter, the vacant streets, the cold beaches. It was haunting and so real. I loved it.
The one reason this book is getting knocked a star is the teen trope of no helpful adults. The majority of this novel has three teenagers in dangerous situations without adult supervision. I just wanted one to be a little transparent with them for a hot minute.
Recommending for ages 12+ for spooky situations and witchy cults.
Thanks to NetGalley and GM Putnam and Sons for Young Readers for this ARC!
This is an awesome, atmospheric, witchy YA thriller! Set in coastal Cape Cod, where Nicole Lesperance serves all the coastal atmospheric vibes, best friends Mazzy and Nora dabble in witchcraft. Their dabbling leads them to discover a washed up corpse with missing hands and teeth. This discovery pulls them into a mystery involving corpses, visions, rituals and secrets lurking under the tide. It’s spooky, witchy and tense all throughout, with the greatest strength (in my opinion) being the atmosphere itself! The foggy, magical Cape Cod depiction is to die for. The girls with their friendship dynamics and crushes, will also serve as relatable to YA readers. The story keeps its grip with sharp prose, genuine tension, and the reminder that friendship can be its own kind of spell. You know I love a good YA thriller! Add the witchy element and I knew it would be a winner for me!
(It’s important to remember, as an adult when reading YA, that it is, in fact, YA and you are not the intended audience.)
I don't read much YA anymore but made an exception for witches in Cape Cod, one of my favorite places. Best friends Mazzy and Nora are dabbling in minor spells. One night they are casting a spell at the beach when they stumble on a dead body. That's weird and alarming enough, as things like that don't happen in their small town. But soon they are investigating a possibly dangerous occult group, the members of which could be anyone, even people they've known all their lives.
This book has an irresistible blend of high school best friendship plus some spooky fall occult themes and murder. Loved Mazzy and Nora and thoroughly enjoyed the story. A Spell to Wake the Dead has perfect fall vibes and fans of shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed, and Wednesday will love it!
Thanks to the publisher for providing an advance copy for review!
Macabre, witchy, dark magic. Some of the most alluring themes for me & they were all in this story as one.
This was so good! It was so easy to read, kept my attention and had me binge reading the last 75% in a day.
Loved the characters: Mazzy, Nora, Elliot. They had such a strong bonded friendship that made me feel included.
As mentioned, the magic was dark, in a sacrificial murdery kind of way. The trio find a body & the girls have an immediate connection to it. They have a strong urge to find the person/people responsible. And almost die in the process.
It was a fun, witchy murder mystery and I found myself simply entranced!✨🖤✨
**NetGalley ARC** I loved this cover and the synopsis seemed good to give a try. I am not a person who likes tarot/occult stuff at all so I was hesitant going into it. But Lesperance is a good writer and it was a good story that kept me interested. Both Mazzy and Nora were teens who had difficult issues they were struggling with and they're not perfect people. But the dead body they find makes things way more complicated. The author did a great job at the atmosphere of the book and building the mystery and you're almost not sure if there's an unreliable character. A couple parts didn't go how I expected. It does tie a little too neatly at the end but this a great fall/Halloween book to read that's not on the super scary scale. I look forward to reading more of this author's other books.
The Craft meets Murder Mystery. For those of you mystery and spooky readers looking for your next fall read that doesn't involve an heiress leaving New York to go work on her family's apple farm/pumpkin farm/failing bookstore-cafe, and wants to still sleep with the lights off tonight, this is your next autumnal read. Witchy creepy vibes abound in this one as two teenage girls steal away to the beach for some witchcraft to find a dead body waiting for them. This is a refreshing take on an often overdone trope, and grabs you right away from the first page! (Oh, how I love books like that!) You cannot help but get caught up in the mystery and mysticism.