Oct. 18th, 2010

osprey_archer: (Default)
Via [livejournal.com profile] tree_and_leaf: The Case of the Unwelcome Owl is an awesome, awesome Harry Potter and Sherlock crossover. Sherlock Holmes! Is related to Luna Lovegood! That explains SO MUCH!

Also, fic about Luna Lovegood. There is not enough love in the world.

"So," said John, feeling out of his depth once again. "An owl." It was the same mild, politely curious tone of voice with which he had previously found himself uttering such things as: "So – three bags of frozen AB negative," and "So – a selection of human ears."

"Goodness, John, with deductive prowess like that you'll soon be putting me in the shade," Sherlock said tartly. "Can't sneak anything past you, can we?"


Go. Read. Love.
osprey_archer: (books)
Yesterday I borrowed Amelia Atwater-Rhodes’ newest book, Token of Darkness, and gobbled it up. (Her books are svelte. I think there’s an untapped market for shorter books.)

I adore Samantha, the ghost girl who prances onto the page with teal-streaked hair and a green-and-orange peasant blouse. But none of the other characters are as vivid. Cooper and Brent, for instance, are distinguishable by circumstance rather than by character, and the sorceress in training, Delilah, falls particularly flat. She seems like an attempt at a multi-layered character, but her layers never cohere into a whole, so she’s contradictory rather than complicated.

Similarly, the plot and setting feel sloppily constructed. A coincidence kicks the story off, another coincidence wraps it up, and the magic that drives it in between seems to be made up on the fly. This book seems to take place in a different universe than her others – magic, but no vampires – and the setting doesn’t feel as lived in as that of the Den of Shadows books.

The setting may be rickety, but the atmosphere is topnotch. The book builds a thick, foggy atmosphere of confusion and fear and forboding. It is this atmosphere that makes it, despite its flaws, a compulsive read: it feels like something terrible might happen, like Samantha really might be evil, and because she’s so wonderful you rush onward to see whether or not she is.

A fun quick read, but not Atwater-Rhodes’ best.

***

I have a weakness for Amelia Atwater-Rhodes books. She wrote vampire angst/romance before it was cool, and her books are a peculiar yet appealing mixture of sappy love story and angst dialed up to eleven on the “awesomely melodramatic” scale.

Atwater-Rhodes’ characters have “I find myself falling in love with a vampire, even though I’ve been taught since birth to hate vampires, because I am a member of a vampire-slaying clan of witches! And my mother and sister will kill me with their own hands when they find out!” angst.

I eat this stuff up like candy.

And she has a sequel to Shattered Mirror, which is my favorite favorite book of hers, coming out in January! I love everything about that book. (It’s the one with the plot synopsis above.) I love Sarah and her relationship with her sister Adiana, and the vampire Nicholas who is the love interest but completely unlike a vampire love interest is supposed to be. He’s sweet and harmless, like a puppy, and also such a weak vampire that his witch girlfriend can totally kick his ass.

He has a badass twin brother, though. I live in fear that in the sequel, the brother will reform and then Sarah will fall for him. DON’T DO IT, SARAH!

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