Ratings51
Average rating3.8
I find that urban fantasy has pulled me from my reading slump. I was reading paranormal romance for a bit, but find that the quick, sappy endings were getting to be too much.
So I really think this series. Definitely a series I will read straight through to the most recent publication.
I would have given it 3 stars (because of predictedness) but it seems to have gotten me out of a reading slump and made me laugh more than once at the erotic scence which were actually quite good if a little bit too imaginative/diffrent to what I usually read when I want something...spicy. I will get myself the second part to see where the story is going and I'm looking forward to it.
Obviously I didn't know what I was getting into when I picked up this book. As a part of Barnes & Noble's free ebook offer I picked this one because it looked different and I was really surprised that I enjoyed it. I'm the first to say that I'm not into the supernatural/fantasy genre. The most I've ever read is Lord of The Rings or The Hobbit. But, this book kept me interested because it's a very dark, adult book. This is not for Twilight fans, this to me, almost felt like it had the potential for an r-rated movie. This book kind of lost me a couple of times though. One example is Merry's job as a detective: first it was about a detective agency and then it was obviously not about a detective agency, and then it brought the element back in glancing in the last few pages.
Another element that didn't weird me out like I thought it would was all of the references and scenes that were sexual in nature. I didn't feel like I was reading someone's attempt at writing soft-core porn or anything to that extent. The scenes were well placed and as she described how the Faerie courts worked the sex scenes were almost necessary.
So overall, I really enjoyed the book and will be continuing the series.
It's hard not to compare the Anita Blake Series with the Merry Gentry Series. Not and do the review justice. It is indeed true that Merry doesn't have the aggressive edge and judo background as Anita, but she does keep her own gun and two knives when it comes to the court.
After three years of being free of the court, of the Queen of Air and Darkness, her aunt, and the narrowly escaped assassination attempts by the Queen's son, her cousin, Prince Cel; Princess Meredith, Daughter of Esuss, has finally been discovered in the Los Angeles region after a strange undercover job to uncover an illegal case of Branwyn's Tears–what I call hormone-induced oil, yes that type of oil. After trying to strike a bargain with Merry, Sholto, the queen's top go-to guy for little sidhe who do bad deeds, and his otherworldly crew catch a glimpse of the hand of power Merry acquires in a middle of a fight. Who knew that her hand of power would be inherited from her deceased father? And just in time to discover that Merry has a couple more surprises in store that even she didn't know about...But, of course, the queen saw it coming, even as she is trying to purposely ignore her son's attempts on Merry's life. Will the queen truly step down from the throne that has been hers and hers alone for more than a millennium? Will Prince Cel succeed in his indirect assassinations toward the princess or will he finally try get the punishment he deserves?
Throughout most of A Kiss of Shadows, I thought it went very smoothly, as if in the beginning and middle, one scene just flowed into another, and had some tales that just regaled me mercilessly. Though, it was the end scenes and the spaced-out details that discouraged me from continuing on with this particular series, really just reminds me of a different version of Anita, if that's possible. In other words, if you haven't read anything of this author's active imagination–and it is active, indeed–I would recommend A Kiss of Shadows to start off something new; beware of some erotic events and the choppy scenes concluding towards the end.