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Fantasy/SF/Horror Book Reviews
Forbidden Magic
by Cheyenne McCray
St. Martin's Press, December, 2005
Paperback, 440 pages
ISBN: 031293761X
Ordering information:
Amazon.com
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Amazon.co.uk
White witch Silver Ashcroft belongs to the traditional, conservative
D'Anu Coven which doesn't allow its members to practice gray -- much less
black magic. Originally descended from the ancient Druids, the local D'Anu
coven has grown fearful of their powers and somewhat passive.
Silver, who has an independent streak a mile wide, is not one to abide by
a bunch of rules that she considers antiquated. When she's not working at the
local bakery and store that provides a roof over her head, she assists the local
Paranormal Special Forces from time to time (a division of the SFPD). And sometimes
in order to catch the baddies, a little bit more firepower than simple healing
herbs is in order. During a SWAT raid to recover a kidnapped girl from demons,
Silver encounters a Tuatha D'Danann warrior named Hawk. Hawk has
come from a parallel dimension to warn the witches about a pending
invasion of the very dangerous, banished demons who are ready for revenge
and to take over San Francisco. Silver agrees to work with the D'Danann,
but her coven is outraged, as working with the Fae is prohibited.
Silver, Hawk and a few loyal friends go up against the warlock Darkwolf,
who works for Balor, the God of Death, and a frightful lot of shapeshifting demons
who take over a human bodies, murder the human inside, then impersonate the
hosts as they wreak havoc in the city.
Cheyenne McCray combines the magic and demon-slaying of Charmed
with hard-edged police procedural elements and an erotic edge to create
this first entry in a hot new paranormal series fantasy that will
appeal to fans of Kim Harrison and Laurel K. Hamilton.
Kitty and the Midnight Hour
by Carrie Vaughn
Warner Books, November, 2005
Paperback, 272 pages
ISBN: 0446616419
Ages 9-11
Ordering information:
Amazon.com
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Amazon.co.uk
Kitty Norville is a radio show host. She's also a werewolf, although
no one knew that until a bounty hunter called into her show one
evening and told her he was on the way to the studio to kill her.
Apparently the local vampire boss took a contract out on her. But if
there's one thing that Kitty knows how to do, it's talk her way out
of a tight situation. She reveals to her listeners that she is a werewolf,
makes a deal with the assassin and lands herself a job consulting with
the police on a serial killer case.
Kitty's world is much like ours except for the fact that most humans try
hard to ignore the fact that there are werewolves and vampires among us.
Kitty, her sound engineer Matt and the assassin Cormac are all intriguing
characters, but her wolf pack's alpha, Carl, is absolutely vile. Fast action and
a spunky heroine make this an engaging debut of a promising new series.
Moon Called
by Patricia Briggs
Ace, January, 2006
Paperback: 304 pages
ISBN: 0441013813
Ordering information:
Amazon.com
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Amazon.co.uk
Mercedes Thompson is one of the Otherworld: a group of shapeshifters, shamans
and vampires who exist side by side with the normal world, but who
try to avoid detection. As modern technology advances, it's becoming
harder and harder for these paranormal citizens to hide. Mercedes (Mercy to her
friends) is a shaman and coyote shapeshifter who makes her living as a car mechanic.
She gets along with the local werewolf pack and she works on
the ailing VW bush of Stefan, a local vampire. When the alpha of the
local werewolf is attacked and nearly killed, Mercy becomes involved in
a inter-pack and inter-species struggle over whether to "come out" as paranormals
to the rest of normal society. It's a question fraught with danger for
the paranormals who would rather live in the shadows than end up in a government
lab being experimented on. Intrigue, magic, fast action and a likeable
heroine make this a compulsively readable new entry in the growing urban fantasy
genre.
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