Tag Archives: Kim Harrison

Try Your Luck with two new Urban Fantasy Novels: Three Kinds of Lucky and Aftermarket AfterLife

6 Mar

Three Kinds of Lucky
by Kim Harrison

If you are searching for the first in a brand new series than you’ve gotten lucky with Three Kinds of Lucky by Kim Harrison, the first in the new Shadow Age Series. Harrison previously authored the long running Hollows series about a post apocalyptic society where vampires, witches, pixies and other magical creatures revealed themselves when humanity is almost wiped out. Three Kinds of Lucky also merges the magical with the mundane, but in this case not everyone is aware; in this world a certain percentage of people are able to work magic of different kinds, but keep their magic hidden from those that cannot. The story centers on Petra Grady who though she cannot do magic herself is skilled with dealing with dross, the byproduct created when magic is done and can cause damage to the world in the form of materials breakdown and cause unlucky accidents for those that encounter it. The story starts off quickly with Petra cleaning up a dross spill that doesn’t quite goes as plan and then continues at a brisk pace as we meet a cast of interesting and compelling characters and learn more about the world and its secrets. The ending brought in some elements of horror and I was surprised by one particular death, which I have a feeling may not be popular with some readers, but I could see how it worked well in the weave of the story as a whole. Comparisons to our own world’s environmental issues and racism, which although at times felt slightly heavy handed, give the book a feeling of timeliness and relevancy beyond its supernatural premises.

Aftermarket Afterlife
by Seanan McGuire

For those looking for a long running fantasy series to binge, than you will want to pick up Seanan McGuire’s excellent Incryptid series about an extended biological and found family of cryptozoologist that study and protect everything from boogeymen to dragons. The series has followed various members of the extended Price clan which includes a ballroom dancer/parkour enthusiast, a circus performer/fire sorcerer, a wasplike human mimic who can travel through time and dimensions using the power of math, and more quirky and yet endearing characters. Thanks to some supernatural blood being mixed into their lineage the family is known for their quirky luck in previous novels. Aftermarket Afterlife is the story of Mary, a ghost who once worked for the Crossroads brokering losing deals with desperate people, but now has made babysitting for the Price family her sole focus. Readers of previous novel will enjoy seeing the Price family from Mary’s unique perspective of both perpetual teen and caregiver to the generations. This installment is an action packed, climactic one focusing on the battle between the Price family and the Covenant of St. George who believe that all cryptids, even the peaceful ones, should be exterminated. Like previous volumes it includes a short story at the end, that gives another perspective to events taking place in the main novel. This novel had some tough losses that showed even those who can manipulate luck may not always win every fight.

Make sure to read next Wednesday’s posts for another great Urban Fantasy Series Recommendation, Crescent City: House of Earth & Blood.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

Two Ever Afters: Charlaine Harris’s Dead Ever After and Kim Harrison’s Ever After

8 Jun

dead ever afterI began reading the Sookie Stackhouse novels a few years before the HBO series started.  Since I enjoy urban fantasy and had fallen in love with Louisiana on a visit to New Orleans I found a lot to like about the series with its Cajun setting populated with vampires, fairies, and werewolves.  I quickly read through the first few novels and the continued along as the years passed.  I was pleased with the HBO adaptation, True Blood, which blends in many of the details and the mood of the original work with enough changes that it adds some novelty; keeping one particular beloved character alive especially endeared it to me.  Unfortunately over the last few novels I have felt slightly less interested in the story.  The characters have seemed less likeable and as the level of gloom over the storylines increased, my enjoyment decreased.  I wasn’t ready to bail on them yet the way I had with Anne Rice’s Vampire series around the time that Pandora came out, but I was pleased when I learned that Dead Ever After would be the last book in the series.  I had hopes that this novel as a planned conclusion might bring back some of the magic from the earlier books in the series.

The book itself playfully pokes at the readers’ expectations with the cover and end pages decorated with images of Sookie’s romantic interests a werewolf, weretigger, shapeshifter, and a vampire.  This of course leads to the problem that any series with a love triangle or in this case a love hexagon has that it will never satisfy all the readers with its ending.  I didn’t find the end result surprising or unexpected, although I had been rooting for the redemption of her first love, the vampire Bill, who barely was featured in the book.  The book does feature appearances of many of the friends and foe that have surrounded Sookie throughout the series, but I would have liked more satisfying conclusions and growth for many of the characters.  Although in life people often do not get a happy ending, it is a shame in a series populated with fairies that so many characters instead seem to be settling in the end.

For those disappointed in the ending there is always True Blood, which could choose an entirely different love for Sookie in the finale.  Also coming out around Halloween will be After Dead: What Came Next in the World of Sookie Stackhouse, an encyclopedic epilogue where Harris discusses the lives of the Bontemps residents following the last novel, which may deliver some surprises.  I would say for readers who have not yet sampled the series to check out the first few novels, which are a well written pleasure for a nice summer beach read, but if you too begin at some point to feel disenfranchised just borrow After Dead from the library when it comes out and skip ahead to the end.

Kim Harrison’s Ever After & The Hollow Series

EVER-AFTER-by-Kim-Harrison

Fans of the Sookie Stackhouse novels should enjoy Kim Harrison’s Hollow series.  The Sookie novels are set in present day America (though it was not meant to take place at a set time until post Katrina when Harris incorporated the hurricane into the work and gave it a more fixed timeline).  The Hollow novels also take place in modern America, but several decades after vampires and other supernatural creatures came out of the coffin to borrow a True Blood phrase.  In their case it was not due to a blood substitute becoming available, but instead due to human society being thrown into turmoil due to a mass pandemic brought on by genetically modified tomato plants, which caused the unaffected witches, vampires, and pixies to step forward to save civilization (throughout the series there are jokes about humans now being terrified of ketchup and pizza sauce).  Rachel Morgan is a young witch who uses her magic in trying to solve and prevent crimes.  Her partners are a pixie and a living vampire.  One of my favorite characters in the novels is Al, a wisecracking demon who becomes a foil for Rachel throughout the series.  The setting in Cincinnati gives the books more of a gritty urban feel.

Ever After is the most recent in Kim Harrison’s Hollow series.  Although the title may lead you to believe that this is the last in the series, there are actually two more books planned for 2014 and 2015 before Harrison gives her characters their final “ever after”.  Although at first the novel started off a bit slowly and could have been edited down about a hundred pages, on the whole it was filled with action, which propelled it on to what could have been a satisfying ending to the series, but left enough room for further character exploration that I’m looking forward to the next two novels.  In this series the dark places that the characters are taken to emotionally works well.  I like that several characters that had been painted as villains early on have gradually been redeemed.  I was reminded of how much the characters have grown and developed when reading recently a graphic novel prequel Blood Work that Harrison wrote about the early partnership between Ivy, a vampire, and Rachel. The novels are best read in order so though Ever After is definitely among my favorites in the series; I would recommend starting at the beginning.  If the early Sookie novels are a great beach read, this series is best read with a flashlight on a stormy summer night when the power has gone out.  So think about stopping in to the library for one on the next rainy day.

– Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference