Ratings14
Average rating4.1
Now a Hugo-nominated series! The eighth book in the funny and fast-paced InCryptid urban fantasy series returns to the mishaps of the Price family, eccentric cryptozoologists who safeguard the world of magical creatures living in secret among humans. Crossroads, noun: 1. A place where two roads cross. 2. A place where bargains can be made. 3. See also “places to avoid.” Antimony Price has never done well without a support system. As the youngest of her generation, she has always been able to depend on her parents, siblings, and cousins to help her out when she’s in a pinch—until now. After fleeing from the Covenant of St. George, she’s found herself in debt to the crossroads and running for her life. No family. No mice. No way out. Lucky for her, she’s always been resourceful, and she’s been gathering allies as she travels: Sam, fūri trapeze artist turned boyfriend; Cylia, jink roller derby captain and designated driver; Fern, sylph friend, confidant, and maker of breakfasts; even Mary, ghost babysitter to the Price family. Annie’s actually starting to feel like they might be able to figure things out—which is probably why things start going wrong again. New Gravesend, Maine is a nice place to raise a family…or make a binding contract with the crossroads. For James Smith, whose best friend disappeared when she tried to do precisely that, it’s also an excellent place to plot revenge. Now the crossroads want him dead and they want Annie to do the dirty deed. She owes them, after all. And that’s before Leonard Cunningham, aka, “the next leader of the Covenant,” shows up… It’s going to take everything Annie has and a little bit more to get out of this one. If she succeeds, she gets to go home. If she fails, she becomes one more cautionary tale about the dangers of bargaining with the crossroads. But no pressure.
Series
13 primary books26 released booksInCryptid is a 26-book series with 13 released primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by Seanan McGuire.
One Hell of a Ride
No Place Like Home
Married in Green
Sweet Poison Wine
The First Fall
Reviews with the most likes.
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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I didn't know these woods. I'd never been to Maine before, and [didn't have any of the family bestiaries to prepare me for what I might find. There are cryptids everywhere in the world, which only makes sense, when you consider “cryptid” means “science doesn‘t know about it yet.” New species are discovered every year, brought into the scientific fold and lifted out of cryptozoological obscurity. These days the word mostly gets used to mean the big stuff some people say is real and other people say is a big hoax, like Bigfeet, unicorns, and the occasional giant snake.
(Always assume the giant snakes are real. The alternative is finding yourself being slowly digested in the belly of something you didn't want to admit existed, and while I'm as fond of healthy skepticism as the next girl, I'm a lot more fond of continuing to have my original skin. As in, the one I was born with, not the one the snake has left me with after a little recreational swallowing me whole.)
Discount Armageddon
Magic for Nothing
I voluntarily read and reviewed an ARC of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Another fantastic addition to a fun series. I'm so happy we've had three books of Annie – it has been a great journey. I think of the three siblings, Annie is my favorite.
Honestly, these books have a great mix of fantasy while still feeling like real life and there continue to be more and more supernatural creatures which is astounding. This is a world that is easy to get swept up in.
I'm not a total fan of how things concluded in this one- it got a bit complicated, but on the whole I think it worked out well. I do like how we now have potential how other main characters in the future.
I was hoping there would be more Fern, it felt like her character hot pushed to the side in this book, since there wasn't much for her to do. I did like how positive Sam and Annie's relationship is. It is hard because we don't have a chance to see Annie support Sam, but there is love, respect, and patience which hints that no matter what they will be there for each other.
The novella was sweet and I'm we got to see more of Sarah. I have missed interactions with her. I hope she gets a bigger role in future books.
Really looking forward to more additions to this series.
2.5 stars, Metaphorosis Reviews
Summary
Antimony Price made a deal with the crossroads to keep herself and her lover alive, at the cost of her magic. Now, she has a chance to deal with the crossroads again - but this time on her own terms.
Review
I've now sampled three of Seanan McGuire's main series: October Daye, Wayward Children, and now InCryptid, and I think it's fair to say her writing isn't for me. That's not to say she's not a good writer; the prose is smooth and the characters relatively engaging. However, both the October Daye book and this one appear to be sticking pretty closely to a formula, and I lean toward saying it's the same formula, just in a different setting.
October Daye and Antimony Price share quite a few characteristics – strong, independent, sardonic, tough, and beloved by all, despite to all appearances being something of a pain. Both are fairly self-centered and entitled. Both have a good sense of humor. They both limit their independence in odd ways – Antimony is fiercely independent and capable, but likes that her boyfriend's threatens to rip people's heads off if they hurt her; October had something a bit similar. I didn't find that appealing.
While the plot of That Ain't Witchcraft moves forward fairly smoothly at the start, it turns into a hopeless muddle once it approaches the central conflict – how to deal with crossroads deals. While the concept is good, I couldn't make heads or tails of the heroes' plan. It was apparently structured entirely for authorial convenience, and simply didn't make any sense; for one thing, much of the detail was simply left out, and we were left with, “The heroes will prevail, because.” Spoiler – they do.
In the end, the book left me with little trace of its passage. I read it, it passed some time, I likely won't think of it again. The concepts were good, but the approach too formulaic to be interesting, the plotting too sketchy to be credible. I believe I have one more McGuire book on my shelf, but I don't see coming to it any time soon.
I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review.
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