| The Touch of Twilight | |||||
| Vicki Pettersson | |||||
| Eos, 406 pages | |||||
| A review by Michael M Jones
Things are getting even more complicated of late; everyone's convinced that an ancient prophecy means Joanna's going to go
over to the dark side, despite her constant attempts to make them believe otherwise. Her arch-enemy, the Shadow Cancer, is
using her knowledge of Joanna's true identity to target everything Joanna ever cared for -- including the former love of
her life -- for corruption and destruction. Oh yes, and a mysterious third party has been breaching the walls between
worlds, wreaking havoc wherever it goes, even as it stalks Joanna in an attempt to claim her very essence for its own. As
Halloween approaches, Joanna's going to have to take some serious risks in order to thwart the plans of her enemies, and
she can't even count upon her own side to back her up. It's days like this when she wishes she'd stayed dead.
Vicki Pettersson has taken a handful of urban fantasy elements, and tossed in a healthy dose of comic book sensibilities,
and topped it off with a keen understanding of human nature and astrology, to create something new and different. You
can't really sit back and call this series urban fantasy, for all that it has got many of the usual trappings, and it's
not your standard-issue superhero series, either. Nor is it romance, even though our heroine pines for the man she
can't have, and struggles with her attraction to the man she doesn't want. That inability to easily peg it is just
one of this series' many strengths. More importantly, it has got a fast-paced roller-coaster of a plot, that takes the
reader through a number of twists, turns, and unpredictable loops, before all is said and done. The action scenes are
crisp and easily enough visualized, and play out just like they would in one of your better superhero comics, only
with less spandex, and a touch of realism to keep them grounded. Pettersson's characters are complex individuals, and
it's gratifying that even the bad guys are shown to have their weak spots, vulnerabilities, and sympathies, instead
of being complete one-note moustache-twirlers. Just because someone's unrepentingly evil, and a vicious sadist, doesn't
mean they can't be interesting, after all. Even our heroine's not perfect by any means, though it's nice to watch her
continue to grow, change, and accept her true nature and her role in the greater picture. Joanna's one of those
heroines you can root for, even as you watch her stumble and make mistakes and learn from them.
The Touch of Twilight is the third book so far in the Signs of the Zodiac series, and I hope
we'll see a lot more as time goes on. Pettersson's definitely on to something, tapping into an underused and
underappreciated subgenre of fantasy, using comic books and superheroes as her stepping stone into something
uniquely exciting, and her books are a must-read for me as a result. I can hardly wait for the next one to
come out. It's my hope that she'll eventually touch upon how her set-up plays out in other cities; so far all
of the action's been restricted to Las Vegas as part of the series' concept, but it would be fascinating to
see how the Zodiac is represented in other cities across the world. The potential is there. In the meantime,
if you want something that mixes wide-eyed superhero action with down and dirty action, all lit by Las
Vegas neon, here's the series for you. The Touch of Twilight builds upon the action and threads
begun in The Scent of Shadows and The Taste of Night, and takes it all a bit further in what's
shaping up to be quite the epic tale. Now's as good a time as any to check it out.
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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