by Barbara Hambly ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2017
The seventh series installment in Hambly’s series (Darkness in His Bones, 2015, etc.) is laden with enough flashbacks,...
Mortals form an uneasy alliance with vampires during World War I.
Dr. Lydia Asher barely has time to sleep as she assists the field surgeons treating the casualties from the front lines at Ypres. But she’s still alert enough to notice mysterious shapes flitting in and out. She knows who they are, after years of fighting vampires alongside her husband, Oxford lecturer Jamie. One of them is Don Simon Ysidro, a former 16th-century courtier now posing as a British officer at the field hospital. Though he and his fellow vampires are dining off the hopelessly wounded and dying, Lydia finds his presence and protection comforting. Back in England, Jamie collaborates with a vampire, the Master of London, to track down one of what the vampires call the Others. The Foreign Office wants to capture this creature—a revenant neither living nor dead, turned mindless and vicious by a corruption of the blood. After spending 17 years with the Secret Service, Jamie knows all too well the ethical issues that can arise, and be ignored, for the supposed common good. But he’s repelled by the government plan to turn German POWs into revenants and use them as cannon fodder. The Germans, it seems, have the same plan, and the race is on. The revenants can spread their condition by a single drop of blood, they eat anything living (including vampires) in their paths, and they have a kind of collective conscience, like bees. Unsurprisingly, then, no one has yet discovered how to manage them. That’s about to change: back on the Continent, Lydia encounters Francesca the White, a renegade vampire who has the power to control the minds of the revenants. But who’s going to control Francesca in the war between the Undead and the Half-Dead?
The seventh series installment in Hambly’s series (Darkness in His Bones, 2015, etc.) is laden with enough flashbacks, unappetizing details, and earnest expository passages to exclude all but series (or vampire) fans.Pub Date: April 1, 2017
ISBN: 978-0-7278-8677-4
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Severn House
Review Posted Online: Feb. 1, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2017
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by TJ Klune ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 17, 2020
A breezy and fun contemporary fantasy.
A tightly wound caseworker is pushed out of his comfort zone when he’s sent to observe a remote orphanage for magical children.
Linus Baker loves rules, which makes him perfectly suited for his job as a midlevel bureaucrat working for the Department in Charge of Magical Youth, where he investigates orphanages for children who can do things like make objects float, who have tails or feathers, and even those who are young witches. Linus clings to the notion that his job is about saving children from cruel or dangerous homes, but really he’s a cog in a government machine that treats magical children as second-class citizens. When Extremely Upper Management sends for Linus, he learns that his next assignment is a mission to an island orphanage for especially dangerous kids. He is to stay on the island for a month and write reports for Extremely Upper Management, which warns him to be especially meticulous in his observations. When he reaches the island, he meets extraordinary kids like Talia the gnome, Theodore the wyvern, and Chauncey, an amorphous blob whose parentage is unknown. The proprietor of the orphanage is a strange but charming man named Arthur, who makes it clear to Linus that he will do anything in his power to give his charges a loving home on the island. As Linus spends more time with Arthur and the kids, he starts to question a world that would shun them for being different, and he even develops romantic feelings for Arthur. Lambda Literary Award–winning author Klune (The Art of Breathing, 2019, etc.) has a knack for creating endearing characters, and readers will grow to love Arthur and the orphans alongside Linus. Linus himself is a lovable protagonist despite his prickliness, and Klune aptly handles his evolving feelings and morals. The prose is a touch wooden in places, but fans of quirky fantasy will eat it up.
A breezy and fun contemporary fantasy.Pub Date: March 17, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-21728-8
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Tor
Review Posted Online: Nov. 10, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2019
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by Kevin Hearne ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 4, 2020
A charming and persuasive entry that will leave readers impatiently awaiting the concluding volume.
Book 2 of Hearne's latest fantasy trilogy, The Seven Kennings (A Plague of Giants, 2017), set in a multiracial world thrust into turmoil by an invasion of peculiar giants.
In this world, most races have their own particular magical endowment, or “kenning,” though there are downsides to trying to gain the magic (an excellent chance of being killed instead) and using it (rapid aging and death). Most recently discovered is the sixth kenning, whose beneficiaries can talk to and command animals. The story canters along, although with multiple first-person narrators, it's confusing at times. Some characters are familiar, others are new, most of them with their own problems to solve, all somehow caught up in the grand design. To escape her overbearing father and the unreasoning violence his kind represents, fire-giant Olet Kanek leads her followers into the far north, hoping to found a new city where the races and kennings can peacefully coexist. Joining Olet are young Abhinava Khose, discoverer of the sixth kenning, and, later, Koesha Gansu (kenning: air), captain of an all-female crew shipwrecked by deep-sea monsters. Elsewhere, Hanima, who commands hive insects, struggles to free her city from the iron grip of wealthy, callous merchant monarchists. Other threads focus on the Bone Giants, relentless invaders seeking the still-unknown seventh kenning, whose confidence that this can defeat the other six is deeply disturbing. Under Hearne's light touch, these elements mesh perfectly, presenting an inventive, eye-filling panorama; satisfying (and, where appropriate, well-resolved) plotlines; and tensions between the races and their kennings to supply much of the drama.
A charming and persuasive entry that will leave readers impatiently awaiting the concluding volume.Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-345-54857-3
Page Count: 592
Publisher: Del Rey/Ballantine
Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2019
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