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Narcissus in Chains (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 10)

Laurell K. Hamilton

Narcissus in Chains (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 10) Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 568 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

You either will like it or hate it from this point on in the series 3 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

I give this book 3.5 stars. There are a lot of opinions out there regarding the Anita Blake Vampire Hunter novels. I can't quite decide whether I want to love the series or hate it.LOL. The series isn't going to win any literary awards, it doesn't have beautiful prose, but that's not what is so addictive about this series. The story, the fictional world, is what keeps me coming back for more. The author has created an incredibly rich and detailed world and I think this is what I love best about the series. You see the world through the eyes of the main character, Anita Blake, and it's all very real and you almost expect to see and meet all the characters once you close the book.

It's been 6 months since Anita put her men on hold to gain control of her powers. The Master of the City vamp, Jean-Claude and the Ulfric, the uber-werewolf king, Richard. She is now the human servant of Jean-Claude and is bonded to him and Richard as a triumvirate. Anita is not your average human servant, she's also a necromancer, able to raise the dead (and undead, that's vampires), so the power of their triumvirate is unknown and they're all grasping in the dark. She comes back to St. Louis ready to face them and acknowledge the vampire marks, but that isn't the only thing she has to worry about. She may become wereleopard Queen, Nimir-Ra, in truth at the next full moon, plus she has to deal with another mysterious shifter that wants her dead.

I view the 10th installment of the AB series as a turning point in the series from the previous books, 1-9. I'd consider the books 1-9 as urban fantasy with more of a mystery/detective angle, but starting with this book it's more urban fantasy erotica (It's the best I can come up with.heh) with more graphic sexual scenes.

Narcissus in Chains introduces Anita to the power of the succubus. Once Anita decides to marry the vampire marks between herself, the Master of the City, Jean-Claude, and his animal to call the werewolf king Richard, it becomes clear that this sexual power she has inherited from Jean-Claude is something she'll have to live with for the immediate future. What this entails is daily "feedings", feeding off the lust of others to satiate this sexual power, called the ardeur. This power pretty much dominates the rest of the series as Anita tries to learn to control this power, with sex being quite prevalent (however I felt the last 2 books did tone it down a lot).

I'll give a few of my thoughts and opinions about the 10th book on. I like both the early and later books, although I'll admit one huge annoyance I've had with the series is how much of a control-freak and angst-ridden Anita is. As the series is written in first person POV, you are privy to all of Anita's thoughts and feelings. Her character isn't the most likable, in fact, sometimes she's downright un-likable most times. Contradictory, stubborn, can't admit she's wrong and gets angry to cover it, etc. But, I like how the character has flaws. I think it makes her character more real despite how her frustrating her character can be.

I also think the author needs to give Anita more control over the ardeur, as Anita has been put in situations where she was unable to control it and pretty much slept with whoever was available. I believe the ardeur has been toned down somewhat, IMO the last 2 books weren't as filled with graphic sex scenes as say Incubus Dreams or Danse Macabre, but I still think it has had enough page time. I liked the early books with Anita going vampire hunting and using her necromancy powers, solving preternatural crimes, but I also like the later books that evolve into an entirely new direction (which IMO, was more supernatural politics and intrigues between the shapeshifters and vampires). I liked learning about the power structure of the supernatural world.

This book could cause uncomfortable "squeamish" feelings in some readers. Laurell K. Hamilton doesn't pull her punches when it comes to describing in intimate detail every thought or action of her characters. Whether it's violence or sex. There is a lot of graphic sex in this book (and the later books afterwards). There are themes, sexual in nature, that may cause discomfort to some readers. One of Anita's main squeezes is a vampire who had a male lover centuries before and this character still holds passion and love for this former male lover. Another broad theme throughout this book and in later books is the mingling of pain and pleasure that inhabit the dark world of the supernatural creatures, shapeshifters and vampires. Which makes sense, the world Anita lives in is very outside the mainstream and never comfortable.

One thing I liked about this book is that Anita is finally (okay, maybe not quite, but almost!) willing to accept that perhaps she isn't all that human. She's been so much a part of the "monster" world, as she was the supernatural expert the police called in on supernatural crimes, but she always viewed herself as wholly human. Now, she's learning that she is more at home with the monsters (the shifters and vamps), and that frightens her. In this book, it's clear she still has this prejudice of the monsters, which like I mentioned earlier is a contradiction in Anita. She's a necromancer and human servant with vamp-like powers (the ardeur), and yet she is loathe to have her vamp boyfriend Jean-Claude "feed" off her and she doesn't want to be a wereleopard shifter in truth. I view it as Anita was always different anyway, having the power of a necromancer so it was inevitable she'd find more of a home in the supernatural community.

Anyways, this book takes a turn for the best or worst, depending on your viewpoint. I still enjoy the series for what it is: brain candy and no thinking required.LOL. When I just want a bit of escapist fantasy that's all I want. An imaginative and intriguing fictional world that helps me escape from the "real world" for a brief time. This book more than delivers and kept me turning the pages until the end.

Editorial Review:

The "steamy" (Booklist) Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter novel that took Laurell K. Hamilton to a whole new level is now in paperback.

Includes a bonus excerpt from the next Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter novel, Cerulean Sins, coming in January 2003.

The Great Hunt: Book Two of 'The Wheel of Time' (Wheel of Time)

Robert Jordan

The Great Hunt: Book Two of 'The Wheel of Time' (Wheel of Time) Robert Jordan Amazon Price: $37.77
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 335 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

A significant improvement over the first book 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

The Great Hunt is the second volume in Robert Jordan's gigantic, rainforest-devastating Wheel of Time series. It was originally published in late 1990 and like the first volume, The Eye of the World, was an immediate big seller.

The story picks up a month or so after The Eye of the World. Rand al'Thor has discovered he can channel the One Power and thus is doomed to go insane and die, wreaking terrible destruction at the same time. Normally it would be the responsibility of the Aes Sedai sisterhood to 'gentle' him, remove his ability to channel, but Rand's Aes Sedai mentor, Moiraine, and the head of the sisterhood, Siuan Sanche, believe that he is the Dragon Reborn, the long-prophesied saviour who will defeat the Dark One at the Last Battle. As such, they have no choice but to let him go free. When the twisted, insane Padan Fain steals the legendary Horn of Valere and the cursed dagger from Shadar Logoth upon which the life of Rand's friend Mat depends, a band of hunters are assembled to track Fain down and reclaim the dagger. Meanwhile, Egwene and Nynaeve travel to Tar Valon to begin their training as Aes Sedai, but find danger lurking even within the walls of the White Tower. In the far west, on Toman Head, rumours speak of the arrival of strangers who apparently use the One Power in battle and use savage beasts in combat, strangers who will not rest until all the lands are under their control...again.

The Great Hunt sees a notable widening of the scope of the world seen in the first book. Whilst the first novel perhaps veered too close to Lord of the Rings' characters and structure to be entirely comfortable, the sequel takes off in a completely different direction. Whilst the series' slightly irritating tendency to be obsessed with 'plot coupons' gets its start here, it does give the book a classical quest structure and deals with the parallel timelines as the core group from the first book gets split up and we follow them separately until their reunion at the end. Jordan also introduces a whole new threat in the form of the Seanchan, a powerful empire ruling a continent beyond the western ocean who now want to reclaim the homeland of their founder (Artur Hawkwing's son). This out-of-left-field threat does an excellent job of shaking things up, whilst the suspicious timing (the Seanchan invasion occurs at the same time the forces of the Shadow are gaining strength in the world) is later revealed as deliberate. The characters are deepened and made more interesting, particularly Rand and Perrin who are shown to grow and change as a result of the revelations they have discovered and the things they have suffered in the first novel. However, we also get to see the Dumb Aes Sedai plot trope get the first of many wearying outings, as Nynaeve, Elayne and Egwene get led into a trap which couldn't be any more painfully obvious. Only their relative youth and naivete makes it convincing in this book; the fact that Elayne is still falling for these things as late as Book 11 is rather more dubious.

The Great Hunt (****) is a notable improvement on the first book, taking the world, story and characters in refreshing and interesting new directions. Jordan's mastery of his enormous narrative is evident here, and even a certain economy (not a word normally associated with the verbose Jordan) of plotting can be detected as some major storylines are rattled through in just a few pages (the Seanchan themselves, surprisingly, don't appear until the book is more than halfway done). The novel is published by Orbit in the UK and Tor in the USA, and is followed by The Dragon Reborn.

Editorial Review:

The Wheel of Time turns and ages come and go, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the age that gave it birth returns again. For centuries, gleemen have told the tales of The Great Hunt of the Horn. So many tales about each of th Hunters, and so many Hunters to tell of...Now the Horn itself is found: the Horn of Valere long thought only legend, the Horn which will raise the dead heroes of the ages. And it is stolen.

Danse Macabre

Laurell K. Hamilton

Danse Macabre Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $20.06
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 614 Average rating: 2.0 of 5

Not even worth one star, maybe half a star if that 1 out of 5 stars.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

Its been a long time since I read a book that made me repeat, oh brother, in disgust and disbelief. How sad to see this series so far down in the dumps. Its been going downhill for awhile, Micah was a waste of paper, and this is just barely better. I stopped reading LK for awhile, then came across Micah for .25 cents, sad to say that was a total waste of a quarter. I cannot recommend you buy this book, if you must read it then borrow it from a library, that way you'll only have wasted your time and not your money. Sad sad sad, I loved the first books. oh well!

Editorial Review:

Fans have been waiting to sink their fangs into an all-new Anita Blake hardcover in the New York Times bestselling series.

These days, Anita Blake is less interested in vampire politics than in an ancient, ordinary dread she shares with women down the ages: she may be pregnant. And, if she is, whether the father is a vampire, a werewolf, or someone else entirely, he knows perfectly well that being a Federal Marshal known for raising the dead and being a vampire executioner, is no way to bring up a baby.

The Sandman Vol. 5: A Game of You

Neil Gaiman, Bryan Talbot, George Pratt, Stan Woch

The Sandman Vol. 5: A Game of You Neil Gaiman, Bryan Talbot, George Pratt, Stan Woch Amazon Price: $13.59
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 38 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

You may have heard somewhere that Neil Gaiman's Sandman series consistedof cool, hip, edgy, smart comic books. And you may have thought, "What the helldoes that mean?" Enter A Game of You to confound the issue even more, while at the same time standing as a fine example of such a description. This is not an easy book. The characters are dense and unique, while their observations are, as always with Gaiman, refreshingly familiar. Then there's the plot, which grinds along like a coffee mill, in the process breaking down the two worlds of this series, that of the dream and that of the dreamer. Gaiman pushes these worlds to their very extremes--one is a fantasy world with talking animals, a missing princess, and a mysterious villain called the Cuckoo; the other is an urban microcosm inhabited by a drag queen, a punk lesbian couple, and a New York doll named Barbie. In almost every way this book sits at 180 degrees from the earlier four volumes of the Sandman series--although the less it seems to belong to the series, the more it shows its heart. --Jim Pascoe

The Lunatic Cafe (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 4)

Laurell K. Hamilton

The Lunatic Cafe (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 4) Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 120 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Finally a story about werewolves!!! 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

this is one of my favorites from the series. Mostly because it deals with werewolves as the main characters this time. There's been a werewolf in the first three books, but they didn't transform into one until the third book. I think from this book you can see how far Laurell has grown as an author.

The only thing dumb about this book i would say is the cover!!! Just bogus and dumb. I'm a guy and I've gotten a lot of funny looks when i leave this thing lying around. (i've since learned to put a book on top of it or turn it over. The artwork is so irrelevant and dumb) My only beef but that's the company's fault. I don't think Laurell has a say over artwork.

Editorial Review:

In Laurell K. Hamilton's New York Times bestselling novels, Vampire Hunter and zombie animator Anita Blake is an expert at sniffing out the bad from the good. But she's about to learn that nothing is ever as it seems-especially in matters of the not-so-human heart...

Dating a werewolf with self-esteem issues is stressing Anita out. Especially when something-or someone-starts taking out the city's shapeshifters.

Incubus Dreams (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 12)

Laurell K. Hamilton

Incubus Dreams (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 12) Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 758 Average rating: 2.5 of 5

A little too much sex in this book 3 out of 5 stars.
4 of 5 people found this review helpful.

This is the 12th book in the Anita Blake Vampire Hunter series. It is now October, so only a month or so has passed since the conclusion of the last book, Cerulean Sins.

Hamilton has received a lot of criticism from some fans for the direction her series takes (the ardeur/sex plotline) and away from the earlier books of crime-solving detective and vampire executioner (Anita is known as The Executioner, capital "E".LOL). I think it was inevitable the series would take a turn and change. For a character to remain static and unchanging, for the plot scenario to be the same for every book, that just gets boring (for instance, a series that I view in this light is Sue Grafton's Alphabet series where the heroine Kinsey has not changed in personality and she does the same thing over and over in each book). If Hamilton had kept to the old Anita and the earlier books, I'm sure there would have been complaints that there was no growth or development in Anita's character or the plot-line.

It just so happens that the direction Hamilton has taken was not up to the expectations some people may have had. I don't fault the author, us readers are only along for the ride and I for one am more than happy to read whatever Hamilton puts out!

Anyways, Anita in this book is a different Anita from the early books. Now she views vampires as more than a monster, where before she had no qualms about killing them and didn't really care about them as "people". As long as she had a warrant of execution, she had no remorse in executing them as that is her job. Everything about Anita has changed. She still struggles with the way her life has changed, but it's clear in this book that she's slowly accepting who she is. She has to as she can't go back to how life was before tying herself to Jean-Claude as his human servant.

While I still enjoy the series, I will admit that I think Hamilton went overboard on the sex in this book. There are at least 6 sex scenes in this book, and true to Hamilton's writing style, they are all graphic and descriptive.

The first 200 or so pages of this book was basically Anita emo-ing about having sex with one of her male friends, Nathaniel, and I thought it went on for a little too long. But, knowing the character of Anita, I knew that it was something that she would go over in her mind over and over again, stalling and coming back to the issue and work it over in her mind some more (hence, the 200 pages of emo-ing!). Anita has a hard time of giving in, she can't willingly "give" in without a fight. With Anita, there is always a fight whether mentally, emotionally, or physically. She's just one tough cookie, and not an easy person to get along with. Anita isn't unaware of her character flaws, in fact, she faces them and owns up to her flaws and I think that's one aspect of Anita I do like. She does given in eventually, and the flaws in Anita make the character more real and so despite any frustrations with the character I may have, I can still understand and relate because it's a human emotion she's feeling. She is only human (or partly human.heh).

However, despite how I felt there was a bit too much sex in this book, there were reasons behind every single one. Anita was either forced to feed the ardeur to help those she loves, or had to secure her power and those of her triumvirate Jean-Claude and Richard using the ardeur. Actually, all of the sex scenes depicted in Incubus Dreams are a result of something else happening, or a cause and initiator of another "something else" that happens. I won't go into more detail so not to spoil what happens.

There is a small scene of Anita using her necromancy powers, and I thought it was a good scene. Anita's necromancy has also increased in strength and the scene describing her raising a zombie from the grave was very cool. I always like seeing Anita use her necromancy powers in action, so it's always a plus in my book to have some page time devoted to it. Anita also is involved in a police investigation involving a group of vampire serial killers on the loose in St. Louis and again, she kicks butt being The Executioner, which is another aspect of Anita I like reading about. You, the reader, get inside Anita's head as she zeroes in on her kill and the detailed description Hamilton gives about Anita's thoughts and emotions during those times....you really see it all in your mind's eye as if you're right there with her.

As it's been repeated several times in the last few books since Anita gained the power of seduction/sex (the ardeur), Jean-Claude's vampire powers are based in physical touch as he has the power of an incubus and feeds off lust, sex, and seduction. So I can see why Hamilton went this direction in her series (as Jean-Claude has always had a mysterious, sensual power about him since the first book).

I can't presume to know where Hamilton is going with all of this, but I can get an idea and I think that's part of the fun of this series. Wondering where Hamilton will go next and what else will be in store for Anita and her gang of vampires and shapeshifters. So while this isn't her best book, IMO, I still enjoyed reading about Anita's world and all the characters that populate her world.

Editorial Review:

Anita is pushed to her limits-both professionally and passionately-when she is called in on what appears to be a case involving a vampire serial killer preying on strippers.

Bitten (Women of the Otherworld, Book 1)

Kelley Armstrong

Bitten (Women of the Otherworld, Book 1) Kelley Armstrong Amazon Price: $7.99
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Total reviews: 238 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

With rights already sold in seven countries, Bitten is a daring literary suspense novel that is causing an international sensation. Ever since her parents were killed in a car accident when she was five, Elena Michaels has longed for a normal family life. Smart, beautiful, and engaged to be married, Elena hopes to fulfill that dream when disaster strikes. Not only has her fiancé lied about his secret life as a werewolf, but he's made her one, too. She has no choice but to join him at Stonehaven, the upstate New York home of an elite pack of werewolves.

In an attempt to break away, she moves to Toronto to lead a normal life. Working as a journalist, Elena now lives with her new architect boyfriend, works out in the basement gym of their high-rise apartment, lunches with girlfriends from the office, and—once a week, at four in the morning—runs naked and furred through a downtown Toronto ravine, ripping out the throats of her animal prey. But when a band of outlaw werewolves threatens the Stonehaven pack, Elena's feral instincts drive her back there to join the defense. What follows is a war for territory, for pride, and ultimately for Elena herself.

Writing with the visceral power of Anne Rice, Kelley Armstrong has created a fascinating story of a woman struggling for her identity.

The Sandman Vol. 7: Brief Lives

Neil Gaiman, Jill Thompson, Vince Locke, Peter Straub

The Sandman Vol. 7: Brief Lives Neil Gaiman, Jill Thompson, Vince Locke, Peter Straub Amazon Price: $13.59
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 38 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

"If this isn't literature, nothing is." --Peter Straub 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

This is one of my two favorites in the 11-volume "Sandman" series, which has proven Gaiman to be a genius storyteller. Three centuries ago, Destruction -- one of the seven Endless, who existed even before the gods -- abandoned his responsibilities, left his realm, and went off to do his own thing. Essentially, he ran away from home. Not that the world has lacked for destruction since then, but he's not behind it, anyway. Delirium, who has roughly the persona of a three-year-old combined with a drugged-out-flower child -- but is a very sweet person for all that (well, . . . not "person" . . .), misses her big brother and tries to find one of her siblings to help her look for him and convince him to return. Dream (the Sandman) finally agrees to accompany her, but for his own reasons, and the quest brings in a number of innocent bystanders (who suffer, as bystanders do), as well as an assortment of ancient but now out-of-work deities. A number of neat ideas are tossed out casually, too, like the notion that a few thousand people still exist on Earth from the very earliest days of civilization, or even from the dawn of the species.

Bernie the lawyer, killed by the collapsing wall of a derelict building, tells Death, "I did okay, didn't I? I lived fifteen thousand years. That's a pretty long time." To which Death, a pragmatic sort who resembles a Goth girl, replies, "You got what everybody gets, Bernie. You got a lifetime. No more, no less." Great stuff.

Editorial Review:

Delirium, youngest brother of the Endless, prevails upon her brother, Dream, to help her find their missing sibling. Their travels take them through the world of the waking until a final confrontation with the missing member of the Endless and the resolution of Dream's relationship with his son change the endless forever. .

A Caress of Twilight (Meredith Gentry, Book 2)

Laurell K. Hamilton

A Caress of Twilight (Meredith Gentry, Book 2) Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 197 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Not Free SF Reader 3 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

A large part of the whole Sidhe political conflict is the issue of succession. This means that whoever of the next generation that can produce a child is likely to get to be the boss, or at least, stay alive.

It doesn't really look too good for Meredith, because she has copious amounts of faerie meat in her bed, but none of them knock her up. Pretty likely, the problem is hers.

We get to see a few Sidhe powers and other information as the Grey agency helps out an actress who is really Sidhe.


Editorial Review:

“I am Princess Meredith, heir to a throne—if I can stay alive long enough to claim it.”

After eluding relentless assassination attempts by Prince Cel, her cousin and rival for the Faerie crown, Meredith Gentry, Los Angeles private eye, has a whole new set of problems. To become queen, she must bear a child before Cel can father one of his own. But havoc lies on the horizon: people are dying in mysterious, frightening ways, and suddenly the very existence of the place known as Faerie is at grave risk. So now, while she enjoys the greatest pleasures of her life attempting to conceive a baby with the warriors of her royal guard, she must fend off an ancient evil that could destroy the very fabric of reality. And that’s just her day job. . . .

Micah (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 13)

Laurell K. Hamilton

Micah (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 13) Laurell K. Hamilton Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 376 Average rating: 2.5 of 5

A Short Story of Sex and Micah 3 out of 5 stars.
2 of 4 people found this review helpful.

That's it. Really. Were you expecting more? There isn't anything more. No, I'm not kidding.

MICAH is a very short novella put into book form to make Ms. Hamilton more money. And no, I'm not kidding about that either.

Thankfully, I like Micah, although I don't think there are too many more descriptions that the author can make up to describe his physical characteristics. He's not that tall, but he's big where it matters, is hotter than hot, and can have sex as often as Anita needs. Which, we all know, is basically any time she's not unconscious.

I'm glad I read it, because it's part of the series. But the only thing I learned that was new is how Micah became a wereleopard and what happened to his family.

That's it. Really. I tried to tell you.

Editorial Review:

There are lots of reasons to raise the dead - some private, some public. In this case, the feds have a witness who died before he could speak on the record. They want him raised so his testimony can be taken. So here I am, on a plane to Philadelphia, flying off to do my job.

But I’m not alone. Micah is with me. Micah, head of the St. Louis wereleopard pard. King to my Queen. The only one of my lovers who can stir my blood with just a glance from his chartreuse cat’s eyes. I was happy to have him at my side.

Until he mentioned that this will be our first time alone together. No Master Vampire. No Alpha Werewolf. Just me and Micah. And all my fears and doubts…

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