

By signing up you agree to our terms of use Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox. But it is to say I’m far more attached to Hermione than Harry. That’s also not to say I can’t enjoy boy or man witch fiction. That’s not to say men are stricken from the definition of witch. I’m obsessed with books about witches and witchcraft not only because I secretly want to fly a broomstick, but because I most enjoy reading books about women in possession of power (whether or not they wield it expertly) and society’s response to them. You can learn a lot about how women are viewed across time and place by way of these witch stories. As interesting are the differences in the story of the witch. In reading works on a topic as ubiquitous as “the witch,” where she’s represented in a multitude of cultures, sometimes under a different moniker, often not, the commonalities one witch shares with her sisters of lore and reality across the sea never fail to surprise me.

In my insatiable search for books about witches, I’ve become fascinated by the many shapes the witch takes in fiction, and the intersections of thought about what it means to be a witch. We read about the wicked witch of fairy tale, and then perhaps the teen witch who bumbles with newfound power, and then the mysterious but alluring adult witch. There’s a reason there are so many books about witches, many more than the 100 in this list. She is the healer, the medicine woman, the bruja, the Mother, the crafty Instagrammer. To some, the witch is a figure to fear to others, she’s one of empowerment.

A witch is a woman in possession of power.
