![]() ![]() The story focuses on a sullen child that lives in Weetzie’s home. Witch Baby was a little easier to understand, possibly because I read it directly after Weetzie Bat and was already used to the prose. I enjoyed it after I got a handle on the way it was written, but it was difficult at first. There’s a lot of skipping in time in the narrative, almost as if this was a cubist painting. The prose took me awhile to get in to, even having already read Baby Be-Bop. I won’t tell you what happens, but this little book focuses much on love, family, loyalty, parenthood, and trust. Weetzie and Dirk, who live in LA, want very much to find love, so Weetzie wishes for that after discovering a genie in a magic lamp. ![]() Weetzie Bat focuses primarily on Weetzie and her best friend Dirk. The last of these, I read and reviewed in March. There are five books – Weetzie Bat, Witch Baby, Cherokee Bat and the Goat Guys, Missing Angel Juan, and Baby Be-Bop. Rather than add four individual reviews, I want to review this series in a single post. ![]()
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