|
| Where Demons Dare (Rachel Morgan 6) | 
enlarge | Author: Kim Harrison Publisher: HarperVoyager Category: Book
List Price: £6.99 Buy New: £2.55 You Save: £4.44 (64%)
New (21) from £2.55
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 8405
Media: Paperback Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.3 x 1.7
ISBN: 000724780X EAN: 9780007247806 ASIN: 000724780X
Publication Date: April 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Catchy July 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The latest book by Kim Harrison which fans around the world has had fans waiting for what feels like an age. However what will cause some concern is that depending where you're getting it from will depend upon the title to which it will have which will cause no end of confusion as fans chat about the events upon different message boards.
As you've come to expect from Kim's writing its witty, classy and a book that concentrates upon the characterisation and interaction of the principle protagonista and her Investagative Posse. Addictive, fun and above all a story that will amuse not only the fans but open darker doors for which we can only speculate as to how much trouble Rachel is going to wonder into in later novels. However one thing I would say to readers is, if this is your first KH book, don't, whilst it is the newest you will lose out on a whole host of adventure as well as plot points by having missed out the earlier tales. You could read it as a new reader but to do so would ruin the opportunity of reading the earlier novels as certain plot points are gently placed within this book's pages.
Well worth the wait! May 6, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've been addicted to this series since the impulse-buy of "Dead Witch Walking" in my local bookstore one rainy afternoon. I worked my way quickly through the series, and very patiently waited for the paperback edition of this book. (Hubby says I'm not allowed any more bookshelves!) I wasn't disappointed. This book ties up a few loose ends, and opens new ones. I miss Rachael's vampire boyfriend Kisten, even if he was a bit of a ratbag now and then, and I'm now waiting for the next book in the series to find out exactly what her business partner Ivy will do to his killer when she finds him...she is NOT a happy vampire. I'm also dying to find out how Rachael manages to deal with her demon tutor Al during her demon-magic lessons- there's so much scope for mayhem right there..
A great series, and I'd recommend it highly to anyone who likes the comic supernatural genre.
Don't get me wrong I enjoyed it but... May 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Its been sooo long since the last book that I literally forgot who all the secondary charceters were. I read a lot of fantasy series and the authors have just got to try and speed up! Anyway - its a great book. As always everything starts off nice and normal, how could a shopping trip go wrong? Well if a demon turns up to kill you thats pretty bad, and then your mom starts flirting with another demon. Rachel's day is not going well. So throw in some Elf issues, a houseful of pixies, a werewolf alpha suggesting pack tatoos and its all back on track. As the other reviewers have noted the plot sags when the action tails off for a while, but we learn lots of new info in this book so theres plenty of life in the series. I just hope that the on-off relationship between Rachel and Ivy is sorted, the will they won't they always interrupts the plot. As always the book drops another plot bombshell at the end leaving us to wonder how Rachel will cope with the changes in her life, I for one will keep wondering until the next book. I just hope that harrison doesn't keep me waiting too long.
Outlaw demons and witchy wonders April 14, 2008 8 out of 12 found this review helpful
Kim Harrison ended her last book with a shocking twist: the death of Kisten, Rachel Morgan's vampire boyfriend.
And the repercussions of that climactic twist are felt all over "Where Demons Dare," a glorious follow-up that continues twisting (or is it spindling?) the plot all over. Harrison weaves together a half dozen vital storues into an even more tightly-written, shocking novel -- where we get lots and lots of new revelations and answered questions.
Rachel and her mother are shopping for Halloween costumes and talismans when the demon Al appears, destroys the shop, and nearly kills Rachel. Somebody is summoning him out of demon prison, and setting him after Rachel -- and her personal patch of holy ground is getting a big cramped, due to an increasingly bloodlusting Ivy and Jenks' massive family moving in.
And as Rachel struggle to cope with these problems, she learns that Ceri is pregnant -- and to keep her baby and the elf race healthy, they need a sample of ancient elf tissue from the ever-after. Though Rachel initially refuses, she finds that this elf drama is somehow connected to the terrible secrets of her past -- and a journey to the ever-after might help her defeat Al. But it might also open a Pandora's box of secrets about Rachel's own future...
Rachel's parentage. Her father's horrible death. Her memory loss after Kistan's death. Her friendship with Ivy. The true nature of the witches, elves and demons. Not to mention her future love life.
Yes, all these plot threads get dealt with in an utterly satisfactory way. And unlike many of her urban fantasy contemporaries, Kim Harrison weaves them into a solid, thrilling plot with a good balance of characters, action and humour. And she can keep the storyline twisting right up to the end -- literally. She introduces two massive twists toward the end that have enormous repercussions for Rachel.
It must be admitted that the plot sags in the middle of the book, when Al and the elf problem seem to get derailed in favour of Rachel's love life/social life problems. But Harrison picks up the slack quickly, and she hasn't lost her knack for tightly written, wry descriptions ("Hence the general weirdness of elves eating hot dogs in my backyard") and snappy, entertainingly self-deprecating dialogue ("Fried eggs!").
And there's plenty of quirky situations that help lighten the rather dark mood -- such as a very apologetic gargoyle crashing into Rachel's church. Jenks and his equally troublesome family provide loads of comic relief as well -- gotta love them pixies.
And Harrison's feisty heroine goes through some painful growth, learns more about her family and her true nature, and has some old wounds reopened. In a sense, this is Rachel's "grief book" -- she spends a great deal of time thinking about the loss of her father and Kisten, and freaking out when she starts remembering how they died. Fortunately Harrison avoids letting her heroine become "emo" -- note the hilarious scene where she's ashamed to admit that she's perused a vampire sex book.
But as Rachel deals with her grief and love for Kisten, Harrison delicately introduces a potential love interest. She doesn't spin anything more than chemistry yet, but it's a person who could become something to her in future.
Other characters get fleshed out as well -- we get to see underneath Trent's coolly slimy exterior to some of his hidden feelings, Ivy's vampiric nature, and even Al gets some new dimensions. And even among the peripheral characters, Harrison's quirky sense of humour is present -- just consider the vampire-sex-manual-writing ex-Presidential vampire master.
Kim Harrison's "Where Demons Dare" has a slowdown in the middle, but revs up fast for a twisty-turny, revelation-filled finale. Urban fantasy as it ought to be.
And it continues... April 10, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Kim Harrison continues with her series about rachel morgan...I really must insist that if you havent read the other books in the series then do because you will be lost as well as missing out on the other excellent books. Anyway this book holds a few suprise about Rachel that people have probley been trying to guess at from the first book. I cant say more than the previous reviewer about the plot without giving away the plot...but I highly recommened this book and series which is getting better book by book.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |