Reviews :: Book Genre :: Urban Fantasy :: Page 7

Review

Vicious

Posted: March 20, 2015 by Writer Dan in Books that are Mediocre Meta: V.E. Schwab, Urban Fantasy
Vicious

Sometimes it’s easy to get into the rhythm of reviewing and forget that there’s more going on in conjunction with the books I cycle through. Read, ponder, review, repeat — the mantra of the book reviewer. Occasionally though I like to shake things up and go looking for more, be it details about the author, story inspiration, sequels, interviews, bonus dealings — stuff like that. I happened to do a little homework on this one because for some reason or another the curiosity bug bit me once I’d read it. After very little time, I came across an article about this particular book that made me hesitate and think on my opinions. The article I found talked about a movie deal, and it had a name attached to it: Ridley Scott.
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Review

Awakening

Awakening

McKayla’s aunt Avril has always been a little odd. She travels the world as a psychic for the FBI, to the chagrin of McKayla’s mother, who doesn’t like it when she talks magic with her daughters. Now, Avril is visiting Sun Valley in small-town Idaho where McKayla and her family live in order to investigate a serial killer who – it appears – possesses her victims. McKayla goes with her aunt during a case to interview the widow of a murder victim. There she discovers that maybe Aunt Avril’s psychic abilities are magic and run in the family because McKayla can feel the window’s emotions–she’s empathic.

But that’s not even the strangest thing, because despite outward tears the widow’s inside emotions are not what McKayla expects a widow to be experiencing: she’s not sad, she’s angry.
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Review

The Archived

Posted: October 27, 2014 by Vanessa in Books We Like Meta: Victoria Schwab, Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
The Archived

When people die their memories and experiences are archived in a special library that few people know about. But sometimes those memories wake up, the restless and violent kind especially, and someone has to return them.

That’s where Mackenzie Bishop comes in.

Four years ago, when Mackenzie was twelve, her grandfather introduced her to the Archive, where the people’s Histories are stored, to learn about the job of a Keeper and take his place. She’s spent the years since his death doing just that, finding Histories assigned to her by the Librarians at the Archive and returning them to their rest.
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Review

To Dance With the Devil

Posted: September 30, 2014 by Vanessa in Books We Like Meta: Cat Adams, Urban Fantasy
To Dance With the Devil

In this latest installment of Cat Adams’ The Blood Singer series, we begin TO DANCE WITH THE DEVIL (Amazon) with Celia in therapy. Her mother hates her, Celia’s grandmother doesn’t understand their animosity, all the while dealing with her own problem of being part-vampire and hunted by demons. But it’s not the therapy that lands her in the hospital. No, it’s the guys in suits who run her off the road, trash her car, and leave her on a sun-soaked beach to burn alive.

Not really the relaxing weekend she was hoping for.
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Review

Dead Things

Posted: September 9, 2014 by Nickolas in Books We Love Meta: Stephen Blackmoore, Urban Fantasy
Dead Things

A few pages into Stephen Blackmoore’s DEAD THINGS (Amazon) I realized I would want to start reading the sequel immediately after finishing so I took a risk and ordered BROKEN SOULS (Amazon). Having finished DEAD THINGS I now recognize this was a wise decision. Yay me! Based off the cover alone my eyes would have likely skipped past this novel on a store shelf — there’s nothing wrong with it but there are a hundred trillion other urban fantasy novels with Christian McGrath covers and who has the time to sift through them all? Thankfully, DEAD THINGS comes with a recommendation by M.L. Brennan, whose American Vampire series turns me into a squealing fangirl. I enjoy Brennan’s work because she diverges from the typical hard-boiled style urban fantasy. I enjoyed Blackmoore’s novel because he embraces it with aplomb.
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Review

Night Broken

Posted: August 19, 2014 by Vanessa in Books We Love Meta: Patricia Briggs, Urban Fantasy
Night Broken

The latest in Patricia Brigg’s Mercy Thompson series has her heroine face her most terrifying adversary yet. This opponent is tougher than the river devil that almost killed her; more cunning than the local vampire queen; and a better baker than Mercy herself: Adam’s ex-wife Christy.
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Review

The Eldritch Conspiracy

Posted: August 5, 2014 by Vanessa in Books We Like Meta: Cat Adams, Urban Fantasy
The Eldritch Conspiracy

Celia has been asked to be a bridesmaid at the wedding of the century: her siren cousin the princess Adrianna is marrying the king of Rusland. Celia has been chosen not simply because she’s Adrianna’s cousin, but also because the bride-to-be has already survived one attempt on her life and Celia’s bodyguard experience may just save the day.
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Review

Corporia

Posted: July 29, 2014 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Mark Plemmons, Cyberpunk, Urban Fantasy, RPGs
Corporia

When I was a kid, I read T.H. White’s THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING (Amazon). I recall reading it twice, back-to-back, never quite getting enough of the legend of King Arthur. There is something inherently awesome about those stories, something that pulls at me. Anything that has a sliver of Arthurian legend in it automatically piques my curiosity.
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Review

Skin Game

Posted: July 11, 2014 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Jim Butcher, Urban Fantasy
Skin Game

I’ve often wondered how long Jim Butcher can keep it up. After all, how often have we all seen just how difficult it is for an author to be good for two books in a row. I’m not saying Butcher is perfect–I personally feel that he has two pretty weak novels in the Dresden Files–but that’s two weak novels out of FIFTEEN. Good heavens.
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Review

Reflected

Posted: May 30, 2014 by Vanessa in Books that are Mediocre Meta: Rhiannon Held, Urban Fantasy
Reflected

Silver and her mate Andrew are the alphas of the Roanoke werewolf pack, the largest in North America. But they’re more than just that, they’ve been sworn fealty by the alphas in all the other packs in North America, as well. There’s a benefit to having two alphas–they can  divide and conquer, which comes in handy when there’s an entire continent to manage.
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