Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil by Oliver Darkshire

Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil by Oliver Darkshire

A Delightfully Wicked Tale of Magic and Self-Discovery

Genre:
Oliver Darkshire's Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil delights with its unique blend of dark whimsy, folkloric magic, and surprising emotional depth. Though occasionally meandering in its middle sections, this debut novel establishes Darkshire as a fantasy author with a distinctive voice and imaginative vision worth following.
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • First Publication: 2025
  • Language: English

Oliver Darkshire’s debut novel, Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil, is a wickedly enchanting concoction that reimagines the Decameron heroine Isabella in a world where talking plants, sentient donkeys, and malevolent goblins are just part of everyday life. Having previously charmed readers with his memoir Once Upon a Tome about his experiences in a rare bookshop, Darkshire now proves that his storytelling prowess extends beautifully into fiction, crafting a tale that is equal parts hilarious, macabre, and surprisingly moving.

In the miserable village of East Grasby, where every home harbors its own peculiar curse, Isabella Nagg endures a dreary existence cooking “scrunge” (a dish less defined by ingredients than by how long it’s boiled) and tolerating her useless husband, Mr. Nagg. When he steals a volume of the Household Gramarye from the local wizard, Isabella discovers a latent talent for magic that transforms her life—and identity—in ways she never imagined.

The Common Sense and the Gramarye: Exploring Themes of Identity and Autonomy

What immediately stands out about Isabella Nagg is Darkshire’s deft handling of weighty themes within a seemingly whimsical framework. Isabella’s journey from downtrodden housewife to powerful wizard is both a magical adventure and a poignant exploration of self-discovery.

Darkshire introduces the concept of “Common Sense” as a voice inside Isabella that has kept her confined to her marriage and societal expectations. As she delves deeper into the Gramarye (magic), this practical inner voice weakens, allowing her true self to emerge. It’s a clever metaphor for the way societal conditioning often keeps us from pursuing our authentic desires.

The novel shines brightest when it depicts Isabella’s gradual awakening:

“It was like she had been carrying him on her back for so long that she’d forgotten why everything was so heavy. It was time for that part of her which was called Mrs. Nagg to die.”

This transformation culminates in the powerful epilogue where Isabella discards her name entirely, recognizing that who she was has died along with Mr. Nagg. In becoming a wizard, she isn’t just gaining magical powers but reclaiming her autonomy.

A Cast of Unforgettably Peculiar Characters

Darkshire populates his universe with a delightful array of odd beings:

  • The Grimalkin – A cranky, one-eyed, not-quite-cat familiar who reluctantly guides Isabella’s magical education while offering sardonic commentary. Its gradual sacrifice of body parts to the hounds of the tinderbox becomes one of the most unexpectedly touching storylines.
  • Bottom the Donkey – A reluctantly sentient beast struggling with existential dread after being enchanted by Isabella’s first magical experiment.
  • The Pot of Basil – What begins as Isabella’s cherished houseplant is revealed to be something far more sinister—a vessel containing the severed head of her former lover Lorenzo, who has been plotting revenge for twenty years.
  • Gwendolyn Gooch – A gloriously unscrupulous businesswoman with pointed ears who tries to capitalize on goblin fruit distribution. Her “Plan for Better Business” and capitalistic schemes provide some of the book’s sharpest satirical moments.

Each character is wonderfully specific and vividly rendered, with Darkshire giving even minor players memorable quirks and distinctive voices.

The Finely Crafted Magic System and World-Building

One of the novel’s greatest strengths lies in its intricate magical framework. The Household Gramarye, with its annotated margins and contradictory footnotes, feels like a genuine artifact that could exist in our world’s medieval literature. Darkshire’s world-building extends through various folkloric elements:

  1. The Goblin Market – Darkshire’s reimagining of Christina Rossetti’s famous poem presents goblins as a fungal hive mind that spreads through consumption of their irresistible fruit.
  2. The Licce Waece – The community practice of watching over the dead until dawn to prevent them from rising as vengeful corpses adds a genuinely chilling dimension to this otherwise whimsical world.
  3. The Nagg Stone – A cursed monolith that brings terrible luck, emblematic of the burdens we inherit from our families and pasts.

The magic system itself is wonderfully unpredictable—spells change slightly each time they’re used, gaining new properties and quirks that reflect the wizard using them. This creates a sense that magic, like identity, is never fixed but constantly evolving.

Prose That Sparkles with Wit and Wisdom

Darkshire’s prose is a rare delight—dense with clever footnotes, witty asides, and wonderfully specific observations. His writing evokes Terry Pratchett’s comedic timing, Angela Carter’s gothic sensibilities, and Neil Gaiman’s folklore-infused storytelling, while maintaining a voice that is distinctly his own.

Consider his description of Mr. Nagg:

“He occupied that robust yet morally beige space rarely commented on by bards or historians. Mr. Nagg had no interest in right or wrong, just like he had no interest in cleaning up after himself.”

Or this gem about goblins:

“Goblins hoot, honk, and toot. Under observation, they have been recorded to clank, oom-pah, and gobble. They do not, under any circumstances, pew-pew.”

The novel is filled with these delightful observations that often had me laughing out loud, even as the story took increasingly dark turns.

Not Without Its Thorns

For all its charm, Isabella Nagg isn’t flawless. The middle section occasionally meanders, with several plot threads (like the mystery of the headless body) introduced and then seemingly forgotten for long stretches. The Gwendolyn Gooch subplot, while entertaining, sometimes feels disconnected from Isabella’s journey, only to converge somewhat hastily in the climax.

Additionally, some readers might find Darkshire’s footnote-heavy prose and frequent digressions occasionally disruptive to the narrative flow. Those looking for a straightforward fantasy might be frustrated by the novel’s gleeful disregard for conventional pacing.

The resolution of Lorenzo/Basil’s storyline, while satisfying in its karmic justice, could have benefited from more emotional exploration of Isabella’s lingering feelings about her first love turned stalker-plant.

Final Verdict: A Magical Debut Worth Cultivating

Despite these minor quibbles, Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil establishes Oliver Darkshire as a formidable new voice in fantasy fiction. His ability to balance humor, horror, and heart within a richly imagined folkloric world marks him as an author to watch.

This is a novel about reclaiming one’s identity from societal expectations, about the power of knowledge to transform us, and about the courage to burn down what no longer serves us (sometimes literally, as Isabella does with her farm). It’s also a story about how we define ourselves—whether through our relationships, our work, or the names we choose.

For readers who enjoy their fantasy with a dash of the macabre, a healthy portion of wit, and a surprisingly tender core, Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil is a feast worth savoring—even if, unlike goblin fruit, it won’t change you forever. Though in the best ways, perhaps it might.

Recommended for fans of: Terry Pratchett’s Discworld, Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi, T. Kingfisher’s fairy tale retellings, and Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus.

More on this topic

Comments

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • First Publication: 2025
  • Language: English

Readers also enjoyed

Seeing Other People by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka

Seeing Other People by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka blends paranormal romance and emotional healing as two people haunted by ghosts—and grief—learn to move forward. Read this in-depth review covering plot setup, character arcs, themes, strengths, and critiques.

Her Time Traveling Duke by Bryn Donovan

A detailed review of Bryn Donovan’s Her Time Traveling Duke—a witty, magical time-travel romance set in Chicago’s Art Institute. Banter, heists, grief, second chances, and a duke pulled from an 1818 portrait.

Dark Sisters by Kristi DeMeester

A detailed review of Dark Sisters by Kristi DeMeester—an ambitious feminist Gothic horror spanning 1750, 1953, and 2007. Explore its body horror, religious oppression, sapphic longing, generational curses, and the black walnut tree at the center of its dread.

The Hindu Hurt – The Story Of Hindutva by Bharat

Read an in-depth, balanced review of The Hindu Hurt: The Story of Hindutva by Bharat, exploring its historical research, ideological arguments and place in contemporary Indian political discourse.

The Time Hop Coffee Shop by Phaedra Patrick

Read our in-depth review of The Time Hop Coffee Shop by Phaedra Patrick, a magical realism novel about midlife reinvention, fading fame, and the cost of chasing perfection.

Popular stories

Oliver Darkshire's Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil delights with its unique blend of dark whimsy, folkloric magic, and surprising emotional depth. Though occasionally meandering in its middle sections, this debut novel establishes Darkshire as a fantasy author with a distinctive voice and imaginative vision worth following.Isabella Nagg and the Pot of Basil by Oliver Darkshire