Friday, April 22, 2022

#Review - A Grave Spell by Jenna Collett #Fantasy

Series: The Spellworks Files # 1
Format: Kindle, 222 files
Release Date: November 29, 2021
Publisher: Amazon
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Urban Fantasy

With a name like Graves, evil comes with the territory.

Monsters are real. I should know. I come from a long line of demon-hunting royalty. But not everyone is destined for the throne, and I'm just the backup if anything ever happens to my cousin. Not a bad gig, since I prefer books to blades and use magic mostly to get out of speeding tickets.

But when the unthinkable happens, I'm forced to take my cousin's place, and I'm less than prepared. I'm also not alone. My assigned team comes with a mysterious new partner. Caden Bishop is drop-dead gorgeous, but he's got a secret that could get me killed.

Lucky me. With demons on the hunt, the last thing I need is another reason to die. Too bad, I might not get a choice.

I'm the dark horse in a fight against evil. But don't count me out just yet.




A Grave Spell, by author Jenna Collett, is the first installment in The Spellworks Files series. Elle Graves is one year away from being the first member of her family to graduate from college. For years, Elle has been coasting through life because no one expects too much from her. Enrolled in a local university and living a normal college life has its perks. Until one of my professors summons a demon and ends up dead.

Even though she has dreams, they are put on the back burner when her impressive demon hunting cousin Ivy Jennings and her team were declared dead by the Spellwork organization, and she has to become a reluctant demon hunter. She's joined by a nineteenth-century ghost named Oscar Clarke, his faithful ghost dog Loki, and Caden Bishop who has plenty of secrets that's he's withholding for some reason. After finding out that her professor was likely murdered, Elle and team focus on finding a missing artifact that in the wrong hands, could be deadly for humanity.

In this world, the chosen hunter shall investigate all instances of supernatural crime and use her skills to rid the area of any offenders. Basically, the hunter sends evil back to where it came from without letting the general population in on the secret. The Spellwork Organization has divisions located around the globe. It is a time-honored, essential position that keeps the balance between good and evil squarely in the good box. While we don't get a look at the Organization itself, the sequel apparently will reveal more. Also, yes, the story ends on a cliffhanger ending that just made my blood boil.





#Review - The Mark of Fallen Flame by Brittany Matsen #Fantasy #Paranormal

Series: The Weapon of Fire and Ash # 1
Format: EBook, 378 pages
Release Date: March 13, 2020
Publisher: Bookwyrm Books; 2nd edition
Source: NetGalley
Genre: Young Adult / Urban Fantasy

The balance between good and evil comes down to one girl.

But is the darkness really so bad?

Emma Duvall starts senior year with one thing in mind: make Seattle, home.

All her life her mother lived with one foot out the door, but no more. That is, until Emma discovers she has the power to turn terrifying creatures of the night to ash with a single touch. That one moment unveils a hidden world of supernatural beings, both good and bad.

Suddenly her best friend is acting strange, the new guy that's mysteriously in every one of her classes is too beautiful to be human, and an ancient, powerful being is stalking her.

To top it off, the "good guys", the Giborim, aren't convinced that Emma can be trusted. But their unofficial leader, Blaze, becomes her unwilling protector--and perhaps something more--setting fire to millennia of hard-set prejudices.

Especially when her newfound power awakens a deep and dark hunger that can only be sated with death.


Brittany Matsen's The Mark of the Fallen Flame is the first installment in the authors The Weapon of Fire and Ash series. 17-year-old Emma Duvall starts her senior year with one thing in mind: make Seattle, home and find a way to go to college where she can finally have a life. All her life her mother Laura has lived with one foot out the door, but no more. That is until one night, Emma and her best friend Adrianna are attack by terrifying spider-like creatures, and Emma kills them with a single touch. 

Thanks to Laura's secrets, Emma has no idea how important she will one day be to either the light, or the darkness. Emma discovers a hidden world of supernatural beings, both good and bad. When war started raging in their city causing catastrophic devastation, crazy things started happening, including unholy creatures that should not exist. The story also features Levaroth, a General under a Demon Prince who also goes by the name of Rowek. 

Rowek takes an interesting in Emma, but it seems as though he has a much greater plan in store for her after her school dance is attacked by demons, and someone messes with the survivors memories. To top it off, the "good guys", the Giborim, an immortal race of protectors, aren't convinced that Emma can be trusted. But their unofficial leader, Blaze Thomas, becomes her unwilling protector--and perhaps something more--setting fire to millennia of hard-set prejudices. 

Emma's newfound power awakens a deep and dark hunger that can only be sated with death and she soon learns that the violence and kidnappings in the news and her state stem from an ancient supernatural battle for power. I think one of the biggest problems I have with this story is the secrecy behind Laura not letting Emma know about her past, and why they are always moving to keep out of reach from some dangerous people. 

I haven't spoken of Adrianna yet, and that's pretty much because she gets a book all of her own called The Spellcaster's Weapon which will explain why Adrianna will one day be just as important as Emma. The final part of this story is action packed while also leaving a stunning cliffhanger ending which will pick up in the third book in this series. Even though Laura acted strange throughout the book, I honestly can't hold it against her for not telling Emma the truth about her heritage and who she really is. After all, Emma will soon know the truth, and there's nothing good that comes from being angry at a character.





Thursday, April 21, 2022

#Review - Rise Up from the Embers by Sara Raasch, Kristen Simmons #YA #Fantasy

Series: Set Fire to the Gods # 2
Format: Hardcover, 352 pages
Release Date: August 10, 2021
Publisher: Balzer + Bray
Source: Library
Genre: Young Adult / Fantasy / Epic

Avatar: The Last Airbender meets Gladiator in the conclusion of this exciting and fast-paced epic duology about two elemental gladiators whose powers could determine the fate of the world in an ancient war between immortals and humans—from Sara Raasch, the New York Times bestselling author of the Snow Like Ashes series, and Kristen Simmons, acclaimed author of Pacifica and The Deceivers. Perfect for fans of An Ember in the Ashes, And I Darken, and The Winner’s Curse.

Two gods are dead. The Mother Goddess has returned. War is rising.

Fleeing war-ravaged Deimos, Ash and Madoc sail across the ocean to their only possible allies: the water and plant gods. But when Anathrasa attacks on the way, Ash leaps to the defense—by using a power she didn’t know she had.

When Madoc made the fire and earth gods mortal, he inadvertently transferred their magic to Ash. Now, if Ash can get energeias from the other four gods, she would be powerful enough to end Anathrasa once and for all.

But not all the gods want the Mother Goddess defeated. To stop her, Madoc will have to become the obedient son his mother always wanted, and Ash will have to take a merciless place among the gods.

To defeat an immortal, Ash and Madoc must fight like gods—even if it means sacrificing their humanity.

 



Rise up from the Embers, by co-authors Sara Raasch, and Kristen Simmons, is the second installment in the Set Fire to the Gods duology. Set Fire to the Gods introduced readers to a world of corrupt immortals, kick-ass gladiators, and plenty of intrigue. This story begins about 2 weeks after the ending of the first installment. Once again, the authors alternate between Ash Nikau and Madoc, the son of the Mother Goddess who created 6 Gods and Goddesses and gave them powers over fire, water, plants, earth, and animals. 

Fleeing war-ravaged Deimos, Ash and Madoc sail across the ocean to their only possible allies: the water (Hydra) and plant (Florus) gods. But when Anathrasa attacks on the way, Ash leaps to the defense—by using a power she didn’t know she had. When Madoc made the fire (Ignitus) and earth (Geoxus) gods mortal, he inadvertently transferred their magic to Ash. Now, if Ash can get energeias from the other four gods, she would be powerful enough to end Anathrasa once and for all. But at what cost? Especially know what happened to her ancestor.

Not all the gods want the Mother Goddess defeated. Biotus (animals) and Aera (air) are firmly on Anathrasa's side knowing that if Hydra and Florus fall, they will win Hydra and Florus's people and territory. To stop her, Madoc will have to become the obedient son his mother always wanted, and Ash will have to take a merciless place among the gods. Ash and Madoc aren’t just fighting for their lives, they’re fighting to save all of humanity from the gods’ disregard for human life, as well from an even more dangerous ancient force. 

For the most part, Ash and Madoc spend most of the book on their own paths. Ash trying to control her new abilities, missing her mother, and finding a path forward with Tor who promised her mother he'd watch over her. Even though she's now considered a Goddess to her own people who are looking for hope and protection against Anathrasa and her gladiators, there's also the loss of not having Madoc to throw ideas back and forth. Madoc leaves Ash behind trying to get close to Anathrasa and see if he is able to collect the final pieces of the 6 powers that will be needed to defeat Anathrasa. 

I think that when all is said and done, Ash shows more growth than anyone in this book because of her choices in the end. I have to say that Hydra might be my favorite character in this story because she's truly magnificent trying to teach Ash about her abilities, and standing tall when it's time to go to war to humanity.





Wednesday, April 20, 2022

#Review - The Girl and the Moon by Mark Lawrence #Fantasy #SyFy

Series: Book of the Ice # 3
Format: Hardcover, 416 pages
Release Date: April 26th 2022
Publisher: ACE
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / SyFy

In the third exhilarating novel in this dazzling epic fantasy series, a young outcast will fight against staggering odds to save her world.

On the planet Abeth, a narrow Corridor of green land is surrounded on all sides by ice plains where only the strong survive. Ice triber Yaz has completed a perilous journey and arrived at the Corridor, and it exceeds and overwhelms all of her expectations. Everything seems different but some constants remain: her old enemies are still two steps ahead, bent on her destruction. She makes her way to the Convent of Sweet Mercy, where nuns train young girls who show the old gifts, but like the Corridor itself the convent is packed with peril and opportunity. Yaz has much to learn from the nuns—if they don’t decide to execute her.

The fate of everyone squeezed between the Corridor’s vast walls, and ultimately the fate of those laboring to survive out on ice itself, hangs from the moon, and the battle to save the moon centers on the Ark of the Missing, buried beneath the emperor’s palace. Everyone wants Yaz to be the key that will open the Ark – the one the wise have sought for generations. But sometimes wanting isn’t enough. 



Mark Lawrence's The Girl and the Moon is the third installment in the authors Book of the Ice series. The Girl and the Moon picks up immediately after the cliffhanger ending from The Girl and the Mountain. The story is set on the planet of Abeth. Abeth is an ice-bound world with a think strip of land known as the Corridor circling its equator, kept free of ice by an artificial moon. On Abeth, there are four old bloods that show in a small majority of children:

Gerant - which makes you grow very big.
Hunska - which makes you very fast.
Marjal - which can give you some of a variety of lesser magics, like command over shadows, water, air, rock, fire, etc. 
Quantal - which can give you major magics, including accessing the vast power of the Path, and the ability to weave the threats of existence to achieve more subtle manipulations of people and things. 
The Missing are people of a fifth tribe that arrived before these four tribes and were thought to have vanished by the time they arrived. 

16-year old Yaz is an Ictha Ice clan member who has completed a perilous journey from Black Rock, and arrived at the Corridor, and it exceeds and overwhelms all of her expectations. She has the blood of the Missing and can control Stars, and is said to be key to opening the Ark which will destroy the moon. Her traveling companions are Thurin born under the ice with powers over water and fire, Erris is 5,000 years old and we're not really sure if he is real, or a doppelgänger of someone who lived centuries before, Quina is a hunska who was rescued by Yaz, and finally Mali, a Sweet Mercy Novice who lost her friends, and her hand before Yaz found her. 
 
Everything  at Sweet Mercy Convent seems different but some constants remain: her old enemies are still two steps ahead, bent on her destruction. Sweet Mercy is dedicated to the worship of the Ancestor. Within its walls, young girls with the traits of the four original tribes of men are raised to killers, honing their skills to deadly effect. But like the Corridor itself the convent is packed with peril and opportunity. Thanks to the treasonous Eular, Yaz and friends were found guilty of murder and as the story opens, their sentence is about to be carried out.

Thanks to Seus's desire to bring down the moon so that the ice will close over the Corridor and reduce mankind to an ever more tenuous survival on the ice, the fate of everyone squeezed between the Corridor’s vast walls, and ultimately the fate of those laboring to survive out on ice itself, hangs from the moon, and the battle to save the moon centers on the Ark of the Missing, buried beneath the emperor’s palace.
Everyone wants Yaz to be the key that will open the Ark – the one the wise have sought for generations. After all, she is the rare blood of the Missing who can control the stars. 
 
But sometimes wanting isn’t enough. So, while Quina and Yaz are expected to join in on the training with the other Sisters, Yaz has to find a way to destroy Eular and his minions. While being hunted by forces which are far superior, more resourceful and always a step or two ahead of her, Yaz isn't ready to surrender to inevitability of her death at the hands of Seus, or Eular. As Yaz struggles to open the Ark, all the while trying to deny Seus, Quina is finding friends and a home within the Convent, and Mali gets a peek at her future thanks to a quirk in time. 
 
It is fair to say that I am confused as to the timing of this series in comparison to the authors The Book of the Ancestor. One could call the series a companion. Truth be told, I had to go back and read the final pages of Nona Grey's series to find out if she would be making an appearance or not. This is a series that blends fantasy with science fiction and I couldn't have been more impressed with the authors world building and his characters like Mali and Quina, get a chance to shine outside of being aligned with Yaz. 
 







Tuesday, April 19, 2022

#Review - Angelbound by Christina Bauer #Fantasy #Paranormal

Series: Angelbound Origins # 1
Format: EBook, 374 pages
Release Date: December 2020
Publisher: Monster House Books
Source: Amazon
Genre: Fantasy / Paranormal Romance

Myla Lewis is a girl who loves two things: kicking ass and kicking ass. She’s not your every day quasi-demon, part-demon and part-human, girl. Myla lives for the days she gets to fight in Purgatory’s Arena. That is, until she meets Prince Lincoln, a super-sexy half-human and half-angel demon hunter. But what’s a quasi-demon girl to do when she falls for a royal demon killer? With a love with fighting for, Myla’s about to shake up the after-realms.


Christina Bauer's Angelbound is the first installment in what's being called the Angelbound Origins. 18-year-old Myla Lewis is a Quasi-Demon, mostly human, with demon DNA. Myla lives in Purgatory with her mother Camilla. She has no clue as to who her father was due to her mother's failure to enlighten her about what happened 20 years ago that saw the Quasi become slaves to Ghouls. Purgatory is populated by Demons, Ghouls, and Quasi. What makes Myla interesting is that she's an arena fighter who is called to service whenever a soul is to be judged.
 
Myla doesn't use weapons. She has a tail like most Quasi, and the tail makes her nearly indestructible. Every Quasi-Demon has one of the 7 deadly sins they're aligned with. For Myla, hers is wrath. When a soul arrives in Purgatory, they are given a choice. Trial by Jury or combat. If they choose combat, those like Myla steps in. The fight is always to the death. If the soul loses the challenge, they go to Hell. If they win, they go to Heaven. As the best fighter, they save the nastiest ones for her.
 
Myla enjoys her battles in the arena, particularly when it’s against a demon and she keeps extensive notebooks on how to beat the various demon races. To make things more interesting, Myla and her friend Cissy attend a party where Myla meets Lincoln, the High Prince of the Thrax who has no love for the Quasi since his people hunt demons. Myla also has part lust demon in her which makes it hard for her to stay away from Lincoln who is half-human, half-angel. 
 
When the demons start to act weird, even for demons, and the King of the Demons, Armageddon, shows up at Myla’s school, things begin to change. Angels are visiting the school, which never happens, and the Angels want the students to learn to fight and protect themselves which offends the Oligarch, a group of 4 Ghouls who are aligned with Armageddon. Something is up and when it comes to Armageddon, that something could indeed have dire consequences. 
 
Myla starts to question everything, and doesn’t like the answers she finds. Around twenty years ago, demons invaded purgatory and left ghouls running things. There's a reason why Myla’s mom is super over-protective and won’t say anything about her life before the war. The only person who seems to have any concern Myla's people is Verus, an Angel who is also an oracle who seems to be pushing Myla towards something greater than an arena fighter. It is through Verus that readers will come to solve the mystery of what happened 20 years ago, and what's to come for Myla, Cissy, Walker, and Lincoln in the near future. 
 
Angelbound is part of a Angelbound Origins Box Set which includes the first three installments in this series. 
 
 



Monday, April 18, 2022

#Review - Notorious (Max Revere #1) by Allison Brennan #Mystery #Thriller #Suspense

Series: Max Revere Novels (#1)
Format: Mass Market, 432 pages
Release Date: December 30, 2014
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thrillers / Suspense / Mystery 

The first in New York Times bestseller Allison Brennan's thrilling new series featuring investigative reporter Max Revere

Maxine Revere, a nationally renowned investigative reporter with her own TV show and a tough-as-nails reputation, tackles cold cases from across the country. But the one murder that still haunts her is a case from her own past.

When Max was in high school, one of her best friends was strangled and another, Kevin O'Neal, accused of the crime. Max stood by Kevin, until she found out he lied about his alibi. Though his guilt was never proven, their relationship crumbled.

Now Kevin has committed suicide, and Max is home for his funeral. But Kevin's sister insists that he didn't kill himself. Max isn't interested in digging around Kevin's troubled life, but she agrees to. And she soon finds herself caught in a complicated web of lies that hit far too close to home.


Allison Brennan's Notorious is the first installment in the authors Max Revere series. Maxine (Max) Revere is a freelance investigative journalist who has her own True Crime Show. Max is inspired by the disappearance and presumed murder of her college roommate years ago during Spring break. She travels the country to investigate cases of missing persons or unsolved murders and shed light on them. In this episode, Max returns home to Atherton, California for the first time in years. 

The occasion is the funeral of her estranged friend Kevin O’Neal who committed suicide. Back in high school, Kevin was a close friend to Max. When he was accused of killing her best friend, Lindy Ames, Max defended him against everyone else, even her family. But Max also found out that he lied to her which caused a permanent end to their friendship. Kevin was never able to recover from the stigma of being accused of Lindy's murder, so he'd drank and drugged himself into oblivion in the ensuing years. 

But he'd also been doing some digging into the murder when the police wouldn't do anymore, but not before leaving scattered breadcrumbs for Max to follow. An investigation that puts Max at odds with the original detective on the case. Max promises the sister of her late best friend, Jodi O'Neal, that she will look into his suicide death, because something just does not sit right, there is more to the story and she is determined to get to the bottom of it, no matter who or what tries to get in her way.  

As Max explores, she’s drawn back into the mystery of who killed her best friend, Lindy Ames, in their senior year of high school, which deepens the wedge between her and her family. But that's not the only thing that she has on her plate  At the airport, an elderly couple approaches her and asks if she would look into the murder of their grandson, Jason Hoffman, who was killed on the campus of her high school Alma mater, Atherton Prep. 

She agrees to do so solely because of where he was killed. While Max had every intention of only attending the funeral of Kevin and immediately returning to New York, her investigation of Jason Hoffman’s murder led down paths that put her squarely into those of family and acquaintances. Her probing of Kevin’s suicide just reopened old wounds that needed to be re-examined. Max is a character who doesn't give a damn whose feelings she hurts. Not her families. Especially not the Detective who continues to try to stop her investigation.  

Even though she grew up rich and privileged, she was the black sheep of the family since her flighty mother dropped her off to live with her grandparents when she was ten years old. Her family certainly wasn't happy when Max sided with her friend Kevin, the boy accused of killing Lindy, and they sure the hell are not happy that Max is digging up old memories that could destroy the families reputation. The only two people Max can rely on are her bodyguard/assistant David who is off spending time with his daughter, and Detective Nick Santini who eventually comes to realize that the original Detective is a dirt bag who needs to be brought down a peg or three.

I definitely want to continue this series to see how Brennan susses out Max as a character. I am definitely encouraged that Max isn't a sheep walking the same path as everyone else. Doing everything everyone else does because it is expected. She's daring, brave, pushy at times, and really puts her family in their place because she knows she doesn't need their approval any longer. She's made a place in the world, and that place is to bring justice to the lost.  





Friday, April 15, 2022

#Review - Pay Dirt Road by Samantha Jayne Allen #Mystery #Suspense

Series: Standalone
Format: Hardcover, 304 pages
Release Date:  April 19, 2022
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Mystery / Suspense

Annie McIntyre has a love/hate relationship with Garnett, Texas.

Recently graduated from college and home waitressing, lacking not in ambition but certainly in direction, Annie is lured into the family business—a private investigation firm—by her supposed-to-be-retired grandfather, Leroy, despite the rest of the clan’s misgivings.

When a waitress at the café goes missing, Annie and Leroy begin an investigation that leads them down rural routes and haunted byways, to noxious-smelling oil fields and to the glowing neon of local honky-tonks. As Annie works to uncover the truth she finds herself identifying with the victim in increasing, unsettling ways, and realizes she must confront her own past—failed romances, a disturbing experience she’d rather forget, and the trick mirror of nostalgia itself—if she wants to survive this homecoming.


Friday Night Lights meets Sue Grafton in this small-town mystery about an unlikely private investigator searching for a missing waitress. Pay Dirt Road is the mesmerizing debut from the 2019 Tony Hillerman Prize recipient Samantha Jayne Allen. Annie McIntyre has returned home after 4 years of college and is now a full time waitress. The problem is that she lives in a small town called Garnett, Texas where everyone knows everyone and hardly everyone ever leaves, and those who have, are likely well off.

Annie often wonders why she didn't continue to pursue a degree in law, instead of partying with her former school mates, and her cousin Nikki Avery. After attending a party with Nikki, Annie learns of the death of her co-worker Victoria who has a young daughter and is in the middle of a divorce. Annie decides to join her grandfather Leroy's private investigation firm known as McIntyre Investigations to track down what really happened to Victoria, as well as another fatality which happend that same night.

Annie is a rookie under the tutelage of Mary Pat, her grandfather's partner, and digging into places that could get her killed. Land grabs, shady dealings, powerful families and proof that not all the cowboys in white hats are the good guys. When the threats start, will Annie be able to pull the pieces together, or will she just be another murder victim? Pay Dirt Road is both a mystery and a story of family relationships and small town suspicions in Garnett, Texas, where Annie's past comes back to haunt her, and more than one person in her past may have played a part in Victoria's murder. 

As Annie works to uncover the truth behind Victoria's disappearance and murder, she finds herself identifying with the victim in increasing, unsettling ways, and realizes she must confront her own past—failed romances, a disturbing experience she’d rather forget, and the trick mirror of nostalgia itself—if she wants to survive this homecoming.

There's an interesting dynamic in play between Annie's grandfather, and Annie herself. 20 years ago, her grandfather became famous by solving a murder, and by now, should be retired. His relationship with Annie's father is frayed, and yet, there's no real resolution in this story. Annie should be attending school to become a lawyer, not waitressing in her hometown. Much of the this story is developing the main characters which has me curious if there will be a sequel.