![]() Season 3 makes this even clearer, as Diana takes centre stage, showing us just how much she has grown – not only as a witch but also as a person, as a wife, and as a mother – and turns into the fierce, powerful weaver she was destined to become. If there’s one thing we’ve learned from the first two seasons of the show is that Diana doesn’t need to be rescued, and that she’s perfectly able to make her own decisions, even if they go against her stubborn vampire husband’s will, and to find her own place in the narrative even in the most unfamiliar of worlds (and times). If Deborah Harkness’ trilogy stands out from other young adult novels, it’s because it’s grounded in reality: instead of just focusing on the supernatural elements of this tale, the author and series creator presented us with a heroine who might be a witch but who is first and foremost a historian, and a clever, resourceful young woman who is and remains her own person, no matter how many unlikely, worrying scenarios she has to face. ![]() With Season 3, Diana Bishop (Teresa Palmer, of The Place of No Words) and Matthew de Clairmont’s (Matthew Goode, of The Good Wife) story comes full circle, with plenty of life-defining choices, familiar returns, clever resolutions, and moments of growth for old and new characters in the series. ![]() This review contains mild spoilers for episodes 1 & 2 of Season 3 of A Discovery of Witches.Ī Discovery of Witches is back for its third and final season, and it brings us plenty of magical vibes and fascinating quests that are bound to satisfy fans of Deborah Harkness’s All Souls trilogy, upon which the series is based. In A Discovery of Witches‘ Season 3, Diana and Matthew return to their own time and deal with blood rage, congregation schemes, and the consequences of their own time travelling.
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