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Magical Law
Posted by Literary-Titan

Hybrid follows two sisters seeking safety, family, and their place in a magical world as they face the consequences of one sister’s transformation into a vampire. What do you find to be the most rewarding aspect of writing a series?
Continuing a beloved character’s story and giving voice to newer characters. In the first book, the POV focus is on Annamaria. In this second book, Marianna deserved significant POV moments, and the reader gets to be in her head almost as often as they are in Annamaria’s head. In a way, this was my way of exploring two sides of myself: Marianna is who I am, and Annamaria is who I desire to be.
Concordia feels like both a refuge and a judgmental space. What did you want that setting to represent in the larger story?
I wanted it to represent a prison wearing a mask of protection. Thick concrete walls surround the magical city, cutting off the coven from the rest of the world. Only two gates in and out of the city, guarded by vampires and shifters day and night. And once you’re in the city? Rules, rules, and more rules! Definitely a new adult’s worst nightmare.
The novel juggles romance, family conflict, magical law, and personal trauma. How do you balance so many narrative threads without losing focus?
All of those threads are interconnected with the main plot, and thus are needed to tell both Annamaria’s and Marianna’s stories. Family conflict is why Annamaria’s romantic life experiences challenges. Magical law is why Marianna is viewed as a source of conflict for her grandmother. And both girls’ personal trauma influences how they react to the current events they are thrown into. I’ve been told that Annamaria is a very relatable teenager; and real people go through similar issues all at once. They don’t get to focus on only one. I’m pleased to have been successful in weaving so many subplots together.
Looking ahead, how will the events of Hybrid shape the sisters’ paths in future books?
The power dynamic shift at the end of Hybrid is going to continue in that direction for the third book. Both sisters are going to continue to grow in confidence, power, and leadership; and Trinity has also earned a spot as a POV character.
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Marianna Lyons is a big disappointment. Stripped of her magic when she was forcefully turned into a vampire, she is now an outcast, desperate for Libby’s approval. When Marianna is tricked into breaking coven rules, she faces a difficult decision: endure brutal rehabilitation, or leave her new home. As Marianna struggles to rediscover herself, will she accept her new identity, or conform to Libby’s impossible demands?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Bondwitch, Bondwitch: Hybrid, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chelsey M. Ortega, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, magic, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, series, story, vampire, writer, writing
Bondwitch: Hybrid
Posted by Literary Titan

Hybrid, book two in Chelsey M. Ortega’s Bondwitch series, is a paranormal fantasy romance about two sisters, Marianna and Annamaria Lyons, trying to find safety, family, and a place in a magical world that keeps redefining them. The book brings together witches, vampires, shifters, familiars, coven politics, arranged betrothals, old grief, and new romance, all while centering the sisters’ bond as they arrive in Concordia and face the consequences of Marianna’s transformation into a vampire and Annamaria’s role in the Lyons succession.
I liked how Ortega cares about the emotional cost of belonging. Marianna’s story, especially, has that ache of wanting to be accepted while knowing the room has already decided what you are. The early scenes in Concordia make that clear right away. She is welcomed, inspected, pitied, and judged almost in the same breath. I also liked how the book uses its genre elements without letting them sit there as decoration. Vampirism isn’t just cool teeth and night air. Witch politics are not just pretty spells. Shifters are not just muscle and mystery. The supernatural pieces carry real social weight, and that gives the paranormal fantasy side of the novel a stronger pulse.
There is a lot happening: family secrets, romantic tension, coven leadership, vampire ethics, magical law, trauma recovery, and threats still waiting in the shadows. Sometimes that abundance is fun, like opening a drawer full of strange, glittering objects. Still, Ortega’s choices kept me curious. I appreciated that Annamaria is allowed to be angry, messy, and blunt, while Marianna often moves through the story with a softer kind of fear and hope. Their differences make the sister relationship feel lived-in. I also found Libby frustrating in a productive way. She isn’t simply a villain, but she is absolutely someone whose love comes wrapped in control, tradition, and prejudice. That tension gives the book some of its best bite.
Bondwitch: Hybrid will work best for readers who enjoy character-driven paranormal fantasy romance with family drama at its center. I would recommend it to someone who likes witches, vampires, shifters, complicated sister bonds, magical communities, and romance threaded through larger questions about choice and identity. It’s dramatic, emotional, and busy in a way that suits its world. Readers who enjoy supernatural stories with heart, tension, and a strong “found and fought-for belonging” theme will probably have the best time with it.
Pages: 350 | ASIN : B0GP23FLMY
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Bondwitch, Bondwitch: Hybrid, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chelsey M. Ortega, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, magic, nook, novel, paranormal fantasy, paranormal romance, read, reader, reading, romance, romantic fantasy, series, sisters, story, vampires, witches, writer, writing




