These clubs recently read this book...
Community Reviews
Originally reviewed on Cyn's Workshop

I expected to like Black Candle Women more than I did. Unfortunately, the characters drove me away from the novel, Victoria especially, rather than drawing me in.
Unlikable Characters
Victoria was everything I hate in a character, to put it bluntly. Victoria has a career as a therapist, setting up shop in her house with her sister working the front desk. Before her daughter was born, the man she loved was involved in a car crash. It turns out Augusta incurred her mother-in-law’s wrath by running off with her son and stealing her “grimoire,” so to speak.
She cursed Augusta and her blood, saying that any man they loved would die. Augusta’s husband died, and so did Victoria’s partner.
Since then, Victoria has become adamant that the curse is real. Her solution? She locks herself away from society and keeps her daughter away, too.
Victoria is the worst. She is a helicopter mom who doesn’t let her daughter spread her wings. She wants her to go from home to school and ignore her dreams. She wants her to take over her practice, never mind that it’s not what Nicki wants; she doesn’t care; she thinks the best way to keep her safe is by not letting her live.
I hated Victoria; unfortunately, she took up the bulk of Black Candle Women because she was my least favorite character. Not only does she want to keep her daughter isolated, she wants to keep her sister isolated as well.
Victoria is self-righteous and just downright awful.
Poor Characterization
As for Nicki, this was a character that needed more…well, everything.
Nicki’s POV lacked passion, a voice, and a personality. Everything about her point of view is hollow. It makes sense, given that her mother does not let her build up an identity, but we, readers, should feel some connection to her other than pity. But considering she lacks personality and sounds very monotonous, it is hard to connect to her.
Augusta and Willow were the two best characters. Flawed but relatable and rich with personality. However, it felt like each of their storylines was overshadowed by Victoria’s domineering presence. Augusta doesn’t even have much dialogue, considering she suffered a stroke before the events of Black Candle Women. But her narrative, how she views the world and recounts her past, gives the reader something worthwhile to read.
Final Thoughts
Black Candle Women does offer up an exciting story. However, the episodic structure and poor characterization made the book feel more like a daytime soap opera than anything worthwhile.
See more reviews at Cyn's Workshop and follow me on Facebook | Instagram | TikTok | Twitter | Tumblr | Spotify Podcast | YouTube | BookBub | Goodreads+ | LinkedIn
Black Candle Women offers a soap opera of a novel, focusing on three generations of women and a curse that binds them.

I expected to like Black Candle Women more than I did. Unfortunately, the characters drove me away from the novel, Victoria especially, rather than drawing me in.
Unlikable Characters
Victoria was everything I hate in a character, to put it bluntly. Victoria has a career as a therapist, setting up shop in her house with her sister working the front desk. Before her daughter was born, the man she loved was involved in a car crash. It turns out Augusta incurred her mother-in-law’s wrath by running off with her son and stealing her “grimoire,” so to speak.
She cursed Augusta and her blood, saying that any man they loved would die. Augusta’s husband died, and so did Victoria’s partner.
Since then, Victoria has become adamant that the curse is real. Her solution? She locks herself away from society and keeps her daughter away, too.
Victoria is the worst. She is a helicopter mom who doesn’t let her daughter spread her wings. She wants her to go from home to school and ignore her dreams. She wants her to take over her practice, never mind that it’s not what Nicki wants; she doesn’t care; she thinks the best way to keep her safe is by not letting her live.
I hated Victoria; unfortunately, she took up the bulk of Black Candle Women because she was my least favorite character. Not only does she want to keep her daughter isolated, she wants to keep her sister isolated as well.
Victoria is self-righteous and just downright awful.
Poor Characterization
As for Nicki, this was a character that needed more…well, everything.
Nicki’s POV lacked passion, a voice, and a personality. Everything about her point of view is hollow. It makes sense, given that her mother does not let her build up an identity, but we, readers, should feel some connection to her other than pity. But considering she lacks personality and sounds very monotonous, it is hard to connect to her.
Augusta and Willow were the two best characters. Flawed but relatable and rich with personality. However, it felt like each of their storylines was overshadowed by Victoria’s domineering presence. Augusta doesn’t even have much dialogue, considering she suffered a stroke before the events of Black Candle Women. But her narrative, how she views the world and recounts her past, gives the reader something worthwhile to read.
Final Thoughts
Black Candle Women does offer up an exciting story. However, the episodic structure and poor characterization made the book feel more like a daytime soap opera than anything worthwhile.
See more reviews at Cyn's Workshop and follow me on Facebook | Instagram | TikTok | Twitter | Tumblr | Spotify Podcast | YouTube | BookBub | Goodreads+ | LinkedIn
I couldn't get into this read but I'm going to try again based on reviews.
3.5 ⭐️ I’m still on the fence about this story mainly because it was not at all what I expected. I was hoping for something like a mix of Eve’s Bayou and Charmed, but I was sadly mistaken. This story is a beautiful tale following the generational pain and love of the Montrose women and a curse that has caused them great strife, and how they ultimately find a solution to it after the youngest Montrose woman, Nikki brings home a new friend.
I got bored plenty of times because there wasn’t really anything going on that excited me about this story, but I wanted to see it through. This is really about healing, forgiveness and learning to be honest with yourself. How black women communicate and hold on to pain. How desire can cause you to do things you’d never expect yourself to do. I just wanted more excitement from this book but overall it was okay
I got bored plenty of times because there wasn’t really anything going on that excited me about this story, but I wanted to see it through. This is really about healing, forgiveness and learning to be honest with yourself. How black women communicate and hold on to pain. How desire can cause you to do things you’d never expect yourself to do. I just wanted more excitement from this book but overall it was okay
Predictable and stereotypical.
I loved the various points of views, however I wish the ending was a little more eventful. I want a second book!!
See why thousands of readers are using Bookclubs to stay connected.