I love werewolves. I love werewolf novels. And yet I nearly didn't finish this book. It dragged. Oh God, it dragged. For a book that promised such high-octane adventure on the cover copy, it really, really dragged. Sasha Trudeau, Special Ops soldier and werewolf attack survivor (or is she?) is thrown into a "shocking" world of government conspiracies after returning from a solo mission. Her team is missing and stunning revelations abound. There are double-dealing vampires and three, count 'em, three subspecies of werewolves. I should have been riveted. Instead I was kind of bored.
First of all, any time a book mentions a "shocking" government conspiracy, I can pretty much rest assured it will not be shocking. At all. Government conspiracies rarely are. They always revolve around the government doing the very things they claim to be stopping bad guys from doing, and they usually involve some kind of weird science. Totally unshocking.
Second, the different types of wolves. We have:
Werewolves: They can only change when the moon is full and they're probably dumb, inferior hicks (or at least that was the impression I came away with).
Shadow wolves: The stealth jets of the werewolf world. They're faster, better, stronger, morally superiour (except for the corrupt ones) and they have the power of shadow! Want to clock a guy with all the strength of a rock? Hop into a rock's shadow and pound the bastard. Want to run with all the speed of a speeding articulated lorry? You know what to do. Huzzah for the shadow wolves! Sasha is, of course, a shadow wolf.
And Demon Wolves: Like regular werewolves, but possessed by demons that sneak in through interdimensional doorways that may or may not be something to do with nuclear weapons. They eat human flesh and get massive erections.
Frankly, for me, there was too much crammed into this book on the werewolf front, and that's really saying something. The differences between the various subspecies never felt properly clarified, but this was a problem that carried over to the plot as a whole. I think if Banks had taken the time to introduce her different wolves, rather than shoving it all into one, confusing lecture at the start of the book, it would have been easier to keep track of them all. And yet, somehow, despite all this confusion over types of werewolves, there's really very little werewolf action that isn't sex-related.
I had the same problem with the government/military aspect of the story. Whilst it was an interesting premise to have werewolf attack survivors working for the military, their purpose as a unit never felt fully realised; nor did the weird science going on around them. Possibly some of this was down to Sasha herself, who seemed willfully ignorant of the people around her. It was like she deliberately chose not to learn important things, and therefore I could never learn them either.
What she did do was have a lot of sex with a shadow wolf called Max Hunter (no, really) and this was when I nearly abandoned the book. Not because I object to lots of sex, but because as soon as Max entered the plot, the book turned into an erotic romance with all the requisite thrusting, moaning and angsting, and never fully recovered. And it happened just when all the military/government stuff was starting to look interesting, which is just plain annoying. The dive into erotic angst was accompanied by a seriously confusing injection of shadow wolf culture, which did nothing to enlighten me. Is Max part demon? Part werewolf? Was Sasha the survivor of a werewolf attack, as implied at the beginning of the book, or did she pick up her wolf genes from her parents, as implied later? Who knows? I certainly don't and nor do I care.
Another thing I disliked was that every woman in the book besides Sasha was either a bitch or a treacherous part of the government conspiracy. Seriously, is there some embargo in Urban Fantasy against women being friends with other women?
My final problem with the book was some of the dialogue. Having one character tell another, "I'll be razzing you until that gorgeous black hair of yours turns stone grey" is a really clumsy way of telling me said character has black hair. And having a character think, "a beautiful woman like Sasha shouldn't have had to do a pack kill" makes me think "so if she was ugly, it would have been okay?"
So, to conclude, interesting premise, poorly executed. I shan't be picking up the sequel.
Sunday, 29 June 2008
Bad Blood - LA Banks
Posted by Naomi at 13:20
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8 comments:
I barely made it halfway through the book -- mainly because of how the plot gragged on and on. I didn't get much into the sex part of the book, but I'm not surprised that there was a lot of it considering that L.A. Banks writes paranormal romances.
I agree that she laid on a LOT of stuff where werewolves are concerned; she seems to have a tendency to think that if a little supernatural detail is good then a LOT will be even better.
Seriously, is there some embargo in Urban Fantasy against women being friends with other women?
Fecking annoying! It's like if the heroine can't/won't shag someone, that makes them the enemy.
Have a lovely day! :-)
Dunmurderin - I can't remember the last time I found it such an effort to finish a book. It's such a shame, because her work seems to get great reviews elsewhere, so I was really hoping I'd found a new author to follow.
Tez, it's a fact. Other Women in UF are bitches, old or evil.
*sigh* I was putting this one off on reading. Sounds like I am not missing much.
Have you read her popular Vampire-Huntress series? What are your thoughts on it?
shartyrant
Haha! In my book the main character is not at all a bitch and her best friend is a woman! And they are not like faux friends Anita and Ronnie either.
Haha! I will swoop in and save your view of the urban fantasy genre! Haha!
Shartyrant: I've read Minion and The Awakening, and just couldn't get into them. A lot of it was to do with the massive amounts of street slang and hiphop talk, which I hate to say was almost completely incomprehensible to me. It was a series I really wanted to enjoy because the later books sound so cool.
Michele - Yes! Save womens' relationships in UF!
Damn girl! I'm so glad you posted this! I've been eyeing that book for about 2 weeks now. I've never been a fan of this author. I tried reading her vampire series when it first came out years ago but JUST couldn't get into it...I guess i'll add this series to that list as well. Thanks for the review!!
BTW...Have you picked up Lilith St Crow's new book? She started a new series and I think the first book is called Night Shift...I know this site is about werewolves but you know me and her books!!! lol! I've gotten the book but..ahem...can't find the damn time to read the bloody thing! LOL!
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