Water Spell is one of Lizzy Ford’s paranormal romance and fantasy novels, working in the wider supernatural universe she has built across dozens of books. Ford is one of the more prolific writers in independent paranormal romance and urban fantasy, with a catalogue running to multiple connected series and standalones spanning everything from light contemporary paranormal to darker supernatural thriller territory.
The water spell premise hints at the elemental magic system that Ford uses in some of her fantasy work. Heroines or heroes whose magical abilities are tied to specific natural elements, with the rules of the magic system providing both the source of the protagonists’ power and the limits of what they can do. Ford handles this kind of setup with the practiced confidence of a writer who has been working in fantasy and paranormal territory for many years. The elemental focus gives the romance its mythological flavor, and the slow recognition that the central characters’ powers complement each other in ways neither initially expected drives the book forward.
Ford’s writing is brisk and the books are generally on the shorter end of the genre. Her chapters are short, her plots move, and the supernatural rules of her world get explained as the story needs them rather than dumped in long expository sections. Her audience knows what they are coming for and the consistency of her output keeps them returning. Her heroines tend to be capable women who can take care of themselves, who are not waiting to be rescued, and who attract the attention of dangerous supernatural beings whether they want it or not.
What distinguishes Ford from a lot of her peers in the indie paranormal corner is the willingness to push the mythology toward darker, more morally ambiguous territory. Her heroes often have histories that complicate the easy resolutions a more conventional romance would offer, and the central romance has to grow out of shared danger and slow trust rather than just chemistry.
Readers who enjoy authors like Annie Bellet, Patricia Briggs, Ilona Andrews, or the indie end of paranormal romance from writers like Karen Chance will find Ford operating in the same general neighborhood. Water Spell is a comfortable entry into her wider catalogue and a fair sample of what she does. For new readers, the price point and volume of her work make her a low risk experiment.