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Magic Bites

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Magic Bites (2007) Ilona Andrews

Kate Daniels works as a mercenary in a world that used to be ours, where technology is losing out to magic. Vampires are not romantic creatures (think the older vampires on Buffy) the vampire faction is held at bay by the shape shifters–neither group can take control, which is probably good for the humans. After discovering that her guardian has been killed, she volunteers to hunt for his killer–knowing that whatever managed to kill Greg–a trained knight-diviner–would almost certainly be more than a match for her.

I thoroughly enjoyed Magic Bites. Although Kate is quite powerful, it is made quite clear that much of her power has come through hard work and training, and that power doesn’t necessarily keep her unscathed. She also makes mistakes–real mistakes with real consequences.

The writing was also good. I managed to devour the entire book in several hours, without every being thrown out of the story, even when I stopped to consider some of the differences between Kate’s world and our own. The dialog was good, with plenty of sarcasm (my favorite), and the characters were distinctive

I was also fascinated by the world that Ilona Andrews created. Our present is the past in Kate’s world, and the technology and science that we take for granted is slowly succumbing to magic–when magic flares up, technology ceases to work. I found it interesting to consider the idea that science and magic could not coexist in peace–that the suppression of one was required for the other to work. I also was fascinated by the idea that in Kate’s world, much of modern architecture falls under the auspices of technology, and so the fall of magic would lead to the destruction of skyscrapers and other architecture that only came with the modern age.

Although lots of awful things happen, and the world Kate lives in is built upon the ashes and bones of our world, this book was not nearly as dark as one would expect. Although battling monsters and knowing that evil is real in the world, Kate still somehow manages to remain optimistic to a degree. Not that she’s sunshine and flowers, but that despite the world around her, she has a basic attitude that the world and humanity will continue–despite everything.

Although the story arc–discovering who killed Greg and why–is completed, there are plenty of threads left uncompleted for the series to be continued. However, this was done very well, so there is a definite sense of closure to the ending. Which is something that I particularly like in a story. (And why I’m finding it harder and harder to read epic fantasy that goes on for thousands of pages.)

If you like supernatural fantasy, then you should enjoy Magic Bites. Strong herione, lots of danger and magic, and consequences for actions.
Rating: 8/10

 

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