Archive for the ‘New Urban Fantasy’ Category

First Grave On The Right

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

 First Grave On The Right By Author Darynda JonesBook Title: First Grave On The Right
Charley Davidson # 1

Author: Darynda Jones

Private investigator Charlotte Davidson was born with three things: looks; a healthy respect for the male anatomy; and the rather odd job title of grim reaper. Since the age of five, she has been helping the departed solve the mysteries of their deaths so they can cross. Thus, when three lawyers from the same law firm are murdered, they come to her to find their killer. In the meantime, Charley’s dealing with a being more powerful – and definitely sexier – than any spectre she’s ever come across before. With the help of a pain-in-the-ass skip tracer, a dead pubescent gangbanger named Angel, and a lifetime supply of sarcasm, Charley sets out to solve the highest profile case of the year and discovers that dodging bullets isn’t nearly as dangerous as falling in love.

Format: B-Format paperback, 320 pages
ISBN: 9780749956042
Publisher: Piatkus Fiction
Publication Date: December 01, 2011

READ MORE | BUY NOW | READ EXCERPT

ALI’S THOUGHTS

First grave on the right is a fun debut urban fantasy from shiny new author Darynda Jones. It’s full of sass, sarcasm and enough one liner’s to sink a ship. I fear my writing is simply not witty enough to do the story justice.

Charlotte Davidson (yes, that would be shortened to Charley Davidson…I missed the motorcycle reference at first, but the joke got repeated until I got it, so that’s ok), is a PI who sees dead people, helps them crossover, and ties up any loose ends, like who killed them; which is the main story line here.

Despite the rather unbelievable idea that Charley has been helping the police force to solve crimes since she was five (sorry, her father used her, then her uncle? At five years old? And this helped advance their careers?), the story is actually very cohesive with a great mystery that starts off with so many ends that get tied together incredibly well by the end. Its crime solving Miss Marple would be proud of.

In amongst this great urban fantasy mystery, Ms Jones has thrown in a bit of a love interest in the form of Rhys; mysterious boy Charley met very, very, briefly when she was a teen and hasn’t been able to get out of her mind since. The aspect of Rhys is a bit strange. It does get explained in greater detail as we progress but it just never feels like it fits. More like the author knew how she wanted the idea to end but fudged it in trying to get it started.

This is a very well paced book, with some original story ideas, amusing characters and clever plot twists. The clumsiest part of the writing was really around trying to move all the characters into place, but now that we’ve established all the players and were they fit this looks set to be a must read series.

If you like your urban fantasy a little dark but without the nasty, and a little fun, without too much cheese, this is the book for you. I’m certainly looking forward to the next installments; Darynda Jones may soon earn a place in my top 10 favourite urban fantasy authors (and there’s some stiff competition).

READ MORE | BUY NOW | READ EXCERPT

Review: Eye of the Tempest

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Eye of the Tempest by Nicole PeelerBook Title: Eye of the Tempest
Jane True
# 4

Author: Nicole Peeler

Nothing says ‘home’ like being attacked by humans with very large guns, as supernatural halfling Jane True discovers when she arrives in Rockabill. These are professionals, brought in to kill, and they bring her love interest Anyan down before either of them can react.

Seeing Anyan fall awakens a terrible power within Jane, and she nearly destroys herself taking out their attackers.Jane wakes, weeks later, to discover that she’s not the only thing that’s been stirring. Something underneath Rockabill is coming to life: something ancient, something powerful, and something that just might destroy the world.

Jane and her friends must act, striking out on a quest that only Jane can finish. For whatever lurks beneath the waters of the Old Sow must be stopped . . . and Jane’s just the halfling for the job.

Eye of the Tempest by Nicole Peeler Format: B-format Paperback ,272 pages
ISBN: 9780356500508
Publisher: Orbit
Publication Date: October 11, 2011

Format: A-Format paperback
ISBN: 9780316128087
Publisher: Orbit
Publication Date: July 26, 2011

Rosie’s View

Jane True is one of the most original and endearing characters in Urban fantasy. Her adventures as she embraced her heritage, confronted evil and tried to protect her small town of Rockabilly and its quirky inhabitants has delighted readers everywhere in the first three books of Nicole Peeler’s series.

Until now there has been a wonderful collegiate feel to these books as Jane needed to work with her friends, and especially (yum) Anyan. We’ve loved Jane’s inner monologues, irreverence but also her complexity.

Book Four Eye of the Tempest is quite different. For a start this has a definite feel of a bridging book and as a result a lot of the magic is missing. This book is a step. A process. A way to explain the background of the supernatural world. A device to position Jane as the central figure in the war ahead. It seems clear that from here on the series is going to move more into the global arena and so this book tied up a few of the local issues, especially her father’s health, and planted the seeds of where the series will go next.

With such a focus on setting everything up for the future I feel that some of the ‘present’ in the book was lacking. For most of the book Anyan is missing and when he was there he was reduced to a frustrated lust-interest. The quirky characters in Rockabilly make little more than guest appearances to show that they’re still around but doing quite okay without Jane, and there’s little development on the villains, who are pretty much the same as in the past.  But, most sad, Jane’s inner voices seem reduced to just her libido making comments to remind us that Anyan is still relevant.

Thankfully I really enjoyed the ‘monster from the deep’, I think that Blondie will become quite interesting and the plot set-up indicates that the future for Jane is going to be VERY intriguing! 

What I really wish is that I had waited until next year before reading Eye of the Tempest so that I could read this bridging book and immediately dive into the next adventure.

I fully believe that Jane is in for fascinating times ahead and that she will again be the character we have all fallen in love with.  I guess…we just have to be patient!

3 out of 5 stars

Don’t give me an HEA – just yet!

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

Fantasy, such as Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy, seems to attract the writing of series.  Inevitably in a series, a story arc (which could take a number of books) closes and a new story arc begins.  It’s the choices that authors make at this critical time that will either keep readers loyal to their series, or will disappoint them.

Once an author builds their world with its detail and complexity of culture, mythos, politics, creatures, religions etc the author has a canvas upon which they can develop multiple plots and characters. If readers love the world building and the main characters then they will keep with a series. 

But what happens when a story arc in a series ends?  It could be that the main characters have finally fallen in love, or the main opponent has been vanquished, or a war ended.  When an author has a major theme in the series resolved, they need to find a new theme, or arc, that will continue the main elements but add a different twist that can last over the next number of books.  If an author changes elements too greatly they could damage the magic of the overarching story. If they don’t change enough elements then the backstory will get stale and predictable.  Two paths, and both can lead to readers getting bored or disillusioned and turning away.

I’ve been mulling this problem for the past couple of weeks, particularly as two of my favourite authors, Patricia Briggs and Ilona Andrews, have both started new arcs in their series, with River Marked and Magic Slays.

These two series are both urban fantasies.  

River Marked by Patricia BriggsMercy’s world is our modern world but one where the fae and shifters have come out to the public, while other species remain secret.  There is magic, but the most pervasive danger comes from the different powers of the various creatures. In contrast Ilona Andrews’s Kate Daniels operates in a post magic-apocalyptic Atlanta.  Magic has erupted and waves of it still pulse through the world, destroying technology and bringing the world of magic and magical creatures out into the open.  There’s a definite dystopian feel to her world, with a dark urban edginess that sets the tone perfectly for gritty and dangerous action.

The strongest parallel for both authors is that their two main characters have established their relationships solidly. In their series up to now, Mercy and Adam and Kate and Curran have battled through dangers and dramas, faced some delicious twists in their relationships and have had more than a few wonderfully hot and sexy interludes. At the end both pairs have emerged strongly in love, with Mercy and Adam engaged and Kate and Curran married.  In another strong parallel, both Mercy and Kate are now the mates of the Alphas of shifter packs and have made progress in finding their political position in the packs.

And, at this point, with the relationship question settled, both Patricia Briggs and Ilona Andrews started new arcs in their series.

In River Marked Patricia Briggs decided to take Mercy and Adam on their honeymoon, away from their usual family, friends, colleagues and enemies. Being a honeymoon a great deal of emphasis is placed on their personal relationship as well as a focus on Mercy’s origins, both her Indian roots and in finding out just who her father was. To spice things up she also adds in some deaths, drama a slew of new characters to round out the mystery.  However the main issue is that we have stepped away from the usual environment and characters and taken a more personal look at Mercy’s Walker origins.

With the new arc in the Kate Daniels series, Magic Slays, Magic Slays by Ilona AndrewsIlona Andrews decided to keep the known environment front and centre, but changed Kate’s job so that she is now a private investigator and therefore faced with building her street cred as well as trying to take her place within the pack. The dangers she comes across are both cataclysmic and deeply personal.

But what is missing in both River Marked and in Magic Slays is sexual tension, and it is this lack that takes away a great deal of the suspense of the earlier books in both series. 

I’m left more aware than ever that while we might want Happily Ever Afters for the characters that we have come to love in our books, if a series is continuing then what we need is an almost-HEA that still make us just a little anxious about whether or not they’ll make it. Think about the success of JD Robb – the murders still need to be solved, but the soul of the books remains the problems and successes in the relationship between Eve and Roarke.  They aren’t HEA. They fight. They hurt each other. They face dangers alone and together. They love each other but their HEA is very much a work in progress.

So, when an author embarks on a new arc in a series they can change the environment, the villains, the emotional themes, but what they must preserve at all costs is the mystery of the primary relationship. The tension needs to remain between the main characters, because is this is weakened then the emotional connection with the reader is also weakened.  

To keep a series strong we need to be continually teased with possibilities, especially between the main characters.  Show me the HEA is coming, but don’t deliver it just yet.

Head to Head with the Tooth Fairy

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Book Title: Tooth and Nail
# 1

Author: Jennifer Safrey

Gemma  Fae Cross, a tough-girl amateur boxer whose fiancé is running for congress, has just made a startling discovery about herself. She is half faerie – and not just any faerie, but a tooth faerie!

A hybrid of fae and human, Gemma is destined to defend the Olde Way and protect the fae – who are incapable of committing violence – from threats to their peaceful and idyllic way of life, which must be maintained by distilling innocence collected from children’s baby teeth.

But when a threat to the fae mission emerges, Gemma is called upon to protect her heritage, and become a legendary fae warrior… even if it means sacrificing everything she knows about being human!

Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781597803922
Publisher: Nightshade Book
Publication Date: February 01, 2012

BUY NOW | READ MORE

ALI’S THOUGHTS

Tooth and Nail is a very clever take on the tooth fairy mythology nicely wrapped up in an emotive urban fantasy.

Gemma Fae Cross has just discovered she’s half fae, half tooth-fairy no less, and she’s needed to save fae from a threat. She’s a boxer, who’s been training at the same gym since before her dad left, and these guys are her protectors, her safe place, so although she’s all grown up and respectable now, this gym is like a homage to her anger filed teenage self, and to the violence of her human half.

The story is well paced, and well balanced, with several different elements combining to create a well rounded plot. From the self discovery, to the interaction with politician boyfriend, Avery, we get this added dimension. Not only is Gemma having to deal with this new world, but she’s also in love with someone who’s very much in the spotlight, meaning that she’s often in the spotlight too; but if Bruce Wayne could do it…

There were times in this story where it almost got thrown across the room, not for what had happened, but for what Ms Safrey was implying WOULD happen. So despite an apparently rather straight forward and predictable plot, there were some great twists, and some emotional shots that came right out of the blue.

This is a very easy to read story that delivers a few laughs a few tears and a good ending, bug manages to avoid falling into the darkness that many urban fantasy’s of this style thrive in.

An excellent start to a series that should be interesting to see how it develops.

BUY NOW | READ MORE

Angelology – what a brilliant book!

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

I am in complete awe of Danielle Trussoni’s Angelology.  This book has everything – a wonderfully complex mystery spanning centuries, well drawn characters, lots of suspense as well as being beautifully written.  You can see the full review either at the book page in the shop or on our Book Review page.

Angelology emerged with a great splash about a year ago – first a bidding war between publishers wanting rights to the book, and then between film studios for the film rights, rumoured to be in the six figures. I can completely understand the interest because this is a deeply cinematographic book. Some have said this is Da Vinci Code meets National Treasure, but for me this is more A.S. Byatt’s Possession meets Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose – both beautifully written, complex and remarkable books. But also books that you need to slow down to read so that you can savour the descriptions and chess-like strategies of the players.

Angelology is going to be a great movie with loads of action, suspense and danger.  I can almost imagine it now.  But as a book … you get all of that as well as a lyrical rich prose that is absolute delight to read.  And this cover – how gorgeous!  The books is being released at the end of march as a trade paperback – and believe me with a cover as gorgeous as this, you’ll love that extra size! if you pre-order now you’ll be assured of getting a copy.

Read it! Five Stars!

 You thought angels were the stuff of legend...  but you were wrong. Humanity is under threat and the world's best kept secret is about to be uncovered in Danielle Trussoni's electrifying novel, Angelology.
You thought angels were the stuff of legend… but you were wrong. Humanity is under threat and the world’s best kept secret is about to be uncovered in Danielle Trussoni’s electrifying novel, Angelology.