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Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil

On sale

19th June 2025

Price: £20

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Selected: Hardcover / ISBN-13: 9781399743839

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‘Witty and wry’ Caitlin Rozakis, New York Times bestselling author of Dreadful
‘A bubbling cauldron overflowing with imagination and charm’ Chris Sugden, Sunday Times bestselling co-author of High Vaultage

Books can change lives. Magic books can change everything.


In a tiny, miserable farm on the edge of the tiny, miserable village of East Grasby, Isabella Nagg is trying to get on with her equally tiny and miserable existence. Dividing her time between enduring her feckless husband, inadequately caring for the farm’s strange collection of animals, cooking up ‘scrunge’, and crooning over her treasured pot of basil, Isabella can’t help but think that there might be something more to life. So, while she’s initially aghast when Mr. Nagg comes home with a spell book purloined from the local wizard, she soon starts to think: what harm could a little magic do?

As Isabella embarks on a journey of self-discovery with a grouchy cat-like companion, Darkshire’s imagination runs wild, plunging readers into a delightfully deranged world full of enchantment, folklore, and an entrepreneurial villain running a magical Ponzi scheme.

Cosy, full of wit and Pratchett-ian footnotes, Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil is a book for those who can’t help but find magic even in the oddest and most baffling circumstances; a story about claiming a new life and finding oneself – and also goblins, capitalism, and sorcery.

NetGalley readers love Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil:

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
‘Had me completely enthralled from start to finish’

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
‘A really hilarious cozy fantasy’

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
‘A delightful read . . . I found myself legitimately laughing aloud’

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
‘I described this book to a friend today as “clever funny” . . . I will likely read this again in the future as I enjoyed it that much…which is pretty much the highest praise I can offer’

Reviews

PRAISE FOR ONCE UPON A TOME
Tom Holland, bestselling author of Dominion
Utterly charming
William Gibson
Peculiarly hilarious and/or hilariously peculiar!
Caitlin Doughty, author of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Darkshire is an exciting new voice brimming with self-effacing charm
Times Literary Supplement
With its mixture of exaggerated misanthropy and eloquent surrealism, Once Upon a Tome calls to mind the cult television sitcom Black Books
Garth Nix, award-winning author of The Left-Handed Booksellers of London
Laugh-out-loud
Neil Gaiman
Extremely entertaining
Fine Books Magazine
A mischievous Terry Pratchett tone ... Uproariously funny
Wall Street Journal
Mr. Darkshire is a witty observer ... charming
Book of the Week, Daily Mail
An utter treat
Jenny Lawson, New York Times bestselling author of Broken (In the Best Possible Way)
Witty. Whimsical. Smart. A cozy gem
Publishers Weekly
Witty and heartwarming
Lindsey Fitzharris, bestselling author of The Facemaker
Enchanting ... every page is a pleasure
Katy Nyquist, author of A Holy Maiden's Guide to Getting Kidnapped
I have been longing for fantasy stories with middle-aged heroines, so I was delighted to discover the pragmatic and intelligent Isabella. Oliver Darkshire weaves a vivid story with a humorous, fantastical voice and complicated world-building
Chris Sugden, Sunday Times bestselling co-author of High Vaultage
With more humour than you can shake a homemade apple-tree wand at, and a folkloric world of magic tomes, snarky almost-cats and the twin menaces of goblins and capitalism, Darkshire's story is a bubbling cauldron overflowing with imagination and charm
Alice Bell, author of Displeasure Island and Grave Expectations
This book is a delightful modern fairytale full of strangeness and wonder, and no small amount of humour. Oliver Darkshire has done a wonderful job bringing us into his fresh, fantastical world, and it's somewhere you want to stay.
Caitlin Rozakis, author of Dreadful
Witty and wry*, a book filled with untrustworthy herbs, far too much porridge, and the most unusual and compelling explanation for goblins you will ever see. *and punctuated by an egregious number of delightful footnotes
Washington Post
Darkshire's humorous and clever fantasy borrows from poets and folklorists alike
Reactor Magazine
Delightfully deranged . . . a new and original kind of enchantment