The Good, the Bad, and the Undead | ||||||||
Kim Harrison | ||||||||
HarperTorch, 453 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Michael M Jones
But life's not always easy for an independent witch/bounty hunter in a world where the mundane and the supernatural exist
with only the barest of polite cooperation, and Rachel's had time to make more enemies than most.
A not-so-routine job as consultant for the Federal Inderland Bureau quickly throws Rachel into a major mess of
trouble. It seems that someone's been killing off witches proficient in ley line magic, and like it or not, the
human-biased FIB needs someone with Rachel's qualifications and skills to help investigate. To Rachel's delighted
surprise, the trails all seem to lead right back to drug lord/crime kingpin and respected businessman, Trent Kalamack,
who gave Rachel no end of grief last time they met. It starts to look like maybe this time, Rachel can take down
her nemesis properly. Right?
Wrong. So very wrong. The hunt for the so-called "Witch Killer" is anything but straight-forward, and the further
Rachel digs, the more she uncovers things she never expected to learn, about Kalamack, about her roommate Ivy, about
herself. Because while Rachel is attempting to peg the killings on Trent, Ivy is attempting to resist her vampiric
urges before someone close to her gets hurt. Meanwhile, there's a demon doing its best to try and claim possession
of both Rachel, and her all-too-inquisitive-yet-foolhardy boyfriend Nick's souls.
Ultimately, things come together in a beautifully violent climax, whereupon certain secrets are revealed, and other
mysteries are brought to light, proving that once again, it's never a good day to be Rachel Morgan.
That summary, by the way, is a gross oversimplification of the complex series of interpersonal relationships that make
up the composition of the main cast. Rachel, Ivy, Jenks, Nick, Trent, even the demon known as Algariarept, are tied
together irrevocably, and the more they try to untangle things, the worse it gets. Will Rachel and Nick be able to
keep outwitting Algariarept's attempts to obtain their souls? Will Rachel be able to resist the vampiric lure of
Ivy? Will Ivy be able to resist her own urges and stay on the wagon, as far as drinking blood goes? And just what
childhood connection links Trent and Rachel, anyway? These threads and more run through The Good, the Bad,
and the Undead, carrying the plot well past the point of no return, injecting the storyline with such momentum
that you know the ending is going to be swift, violent, and traumatic for all involved.
Kim Harrison really manages to lay out a fascinating setting here, injecting the modern world with a very real sense of
danger and foreboding, where the supernatural walks both openly and in secret, and you don't dare travel down the street
alone at night. Her vampires manage to combine sensuality and seductiveness with a cheap, ugly violence; these are
beautiful monsters with horrible hungers, and much of the story revolves around Ivy's desperate attempts to keep from
ending up like the "real," or "dead" vampires that rule parts of the city. More than once, I've thought I'd seen enough
takes on vampires to become bored by that aspect of the dark fantasy/horror genre. Thankfully, Harrison manages to
keep them interesting, and unpredictable.
Ditto with her takes on witches and warlocks, fairies and pixies, even werecreatures (though we see remarkably little of them
in this book.) And I can't even wait to see how she continues to flesh out the demons that play such a pivotal role in the background.
I've been pushing both this book and Dead Witch Walking as "Laurell K. Hamilton, only with a lot less sex," and
while that's a fair description, it's still simplified. First of all, Harrison is very much her own writer, with a
fully-realized world of her own being revealed bit by bit. Rather, these books will appeal to Hamilton's fans, as well
as those who like Jim Butcher, Charlaine Harris, Rachel Caine, or any of the various supernatural romances out
there. Second of all, there's a fair amount of sensuality -- not sex, per se -- infused into the story. Not only do Ivy
and Rachel have a will-they-won't-they tension born of vampiric hunger and Rachel's current vulnerability to vampire
pheromones, but Rachel finds her encounters with certain other vampires to be almost overpowering in their emotional
intensity. But it's still not sex. And that's what I like to point out. A lot of people I talk to are quite open
about the fact that the Anita Blake books are excellent, but have a bit too much sex in proportion to
the plot. Fear not. In Harrison's books, there's a return to the tough girl who can say no to her enemies. One of
the best relationships undoubtedly has to be that between Rachel and Trent, who could very well end up being friends
if she could only stop loathing everything about him.
To sum it up, The Good, The Bad, and the Undead, is a superb book, beautiful, sexy, mysterious, and
violent. I can't wait for the next in the series, because I know for a fact that Kim Harrison has a lot more up her sleeve.
Michael M Jones enjoys an addiction to books, for which he's glad there is no cure. He lives with his very patient wife (who doesn't complain about books taking over the house... much), eight cats, and a large plaster penguin that once tasted blood and enjoyed it. A prophecy states that when Michael finishes reading everything on his list, he'll finally die. He aims to be immortal. |
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