On Vox: Huntress by Christine Warren, Marjorie M. Liu, Caitlin Kittredge, Jenna Maclaine

Aug 07, 2010 10:41






Huntress
Christine Warren
This was an anthology I picked up at the friend of the library bookstore a while ago and am finally getting off the TBR. It has an author who writes in a way I like (Marjorie Liu), and another who I've meant to try (Caitlin Kittredge). The other two authors are new names to me so this was a good way to find out about them.

  • Devils Bargain by Christine Warren - Half-demon, half-human bounty hunter, Lillith Corbin has just one more task to do for the devil Samael - bring him the book the Praedicti Arcanum, which someone stole from him, in three days. Then their deal will be done and her soul will be saved. What she thinks is a simple job becomes complicated when she encounters Aaron Bullard in the middle of stealing back the book, and he tries to stop her. 

This was a very straightforward paranormal romance and overall I'd give it an average grade. There was a lot about the story that felt predictable and the focus seemed to be about the hero and heroine getting together with their role in saving the world from apocalypse a means to do so. The part I liked best was the world building - demons and magic are accepted in everyday life, and the way magic and the demonworld worked interested me. What I disliked was the hero and heroine falling in lust at first sight. There was thin reasoning behind having sex and telling instead of showing.
  • Robber Bride by Marjorie M. Liu - Maggie Greene is her community's tinkerer and fixer. She owns a junk yard in a world that was ravaged by a virus that killed 70% of the population 20 years ago. One day a strange pale man in a motorcycle arrives, and because Maggie has an odd gift she manages to bargain for her life. But that's not the end of it. The man comes back with friends and steals people from her community, and she thinks they have Trace, an old woman and friend. With a mysterious raven that followed Trace and now follows Maggie, Maggie sets off to follow the band on motorcycles.

This story had a more urban fantasy feel although there is a definite romantic subplot. The writing was excellent, there's a gorgeous sense of place and lyrical but uncomplicated writing, and I really enjoyed the fairy tale hints - a necklace of teeth, a journey, people who are not as they seem. I finished this one feeling satisfied and happy. Just this story is worth keeping the book. I'm beginning to feel like I would really like if there was a collection of Liu's short stories, because I tend to enjoy them.
 
  • Down in the Ground Where the Dead Men Go (a tale of Black London) by Caitlin Kittredge - Jack Winter is a mage who does odd jobs for people in between gigs with his band. While he was in Scotland with his band he's approached by a femme fatale with a job - to help her get to the Black so she can kill a demon. Jack is immediately leery, but is not really given a choice in the matter.

The main characters in this urban fantasy story are both very hard and jaded by their past. Jack is a brash and kind of skeevy, and Ava was a bombshell who exploits her sexuality to entrap him. This made them rather unlikeable so I found myself unattached to what was happening to them. I also I haven't read the Black London books, of which Jack is a character. I think this story is probably easier to understand if you've read those books; although I could figure out Jack's backstory, there are some places where I felt lost by the conversation. The language here was liberally peppered by Britishisms, but I wondered if they were overdone (does anyone use that much slang?). I would say this is a very gritty one with dark characters, dark places, and monsters that are reminiscent of Pan's Labyrinth, but perhaps too gritty for my tastes.
 
  • Sin Slayer by Jenna Maclaine - Cin Craven and The Righteous, a group of vampire warriors, are tasked to take down Jack the Ripper, a demon who is terrorizing vampires in London. When they get there, Cin's husband Michael is possessed by the demon and Cin must figure out a way to save him.

The author does a good job in getting the reader up to speed on Cin's backstory and what The Righteous are, which I appreciated because I haven't read any Cin Craven novels. There are a two already established relationships in the 4 members of The Righteous, and the sexuality between both couples at the beginning felt gratuitous, but perhaps not to those familiar with the books. After the story was moving along, the focus is on capturing Jack the Ripper, and the twist is that he takes over Michael, which Cin is very concerned about. I thought the relationship between Cin and Michael was illustrated well during his possession and Cin's pained response to it. Overall a decent story.
 Overall: There's a mixture of urban fantasy and paranormal romance in the selection of stories presented in Huntress, and this is a combination that I think is a mixed bag that may work only for fans of both genres. I'm more of an UF reader than a PR one, so with the exception of Robber Bride, the stories in this anthology didn't really resonate with me. I think this is worth picking up for those who are fans of the authors and related series in the anthology, but outside of that, the stories ranged from "meh" to "very good" and I would only call Robber Bride required reading.

Buy: Amazon | Powell's | The Book Depository

Other reviews:
Couldn't find any - send me a link if I missed yours

Originally posted on janicu.vox.com

caitlin kittredge, post-apocalyptic, marjorie m. liu, romance, christine warren, paranormal romance, urban fantasy, jenna maclaine, anthology, butt shot cover, urban fantasy romance

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