
In a slightly different tone from Maneater, it has to be said, this is the tale of Sophie Garou, accountant by day, werewolf by night. I was a little worried this was going to be a fluffy chicklit-esque romp with the occasional reference to werewolves. I was pleasantly surprised to find this was not the case. Whilst waiting for her human boyfriend to propose and working towards partnership at her prestigious accounting firm, Sophie is being sent mysterious packages that threaten to reveal her true nature to the world. Throw into the mix her psychic witch mother who's just been arrested on suspicion of murder, and Sophie's pretty busy at the moment.
The primary plot - finding out who framed her mum for the murder of a local politician - is nicely blended with a few other plot strands, such as the arrival of a new werewolf in Sophie's life. Sophie herself is a halfbreed werewolf; her father abandoned her shortly after she was born and her mother has spent all Sophie's life keeping her out of the way of other wolves for fear of how they will treat her. So when Sophie meets Tom, a lone wolf on a mysterious mission, she's both curious to learn more about her own kind and afraid she's about to be torn to pieces for being a hybrid.
For me, this relationship with Tom was the weaker part of the story. Sophie's mother is desperate for Sophie to date another werewolf, which is at odds with the way she's raised Sophie, sheltering her from her werewolf heritage. That clash left me a little confused as to whether I was supposed to root for Sophie and Tom or not. In addition, Tom is dating Sophie's best friend which adds a slightly icky feel to their mutual attraction.
The best part of the story is how Sophie deals with the everyday inconveniences of her second nature. She drinks regular doses of wolfsbane tea to suppress her lycanthrope side and carried a razor in her purse just in case. It's quite fun to see her attempting to deal with excess hair in the middle of a career-defining meeting whilst overdosed on wolfsbane. There's a sense of levity to this story that you don't always see in werewolf novels.
Macinerney throws in a few hints of a wider supernatural community - vampires are mentioned, and Sophie meets a werecat towards the end, and I assume these elements will be expanded upon in the next book, but I almost don't want that. Sophie ends Howling at the Moon convinced that her human side is stronger than her wolf side, and obviously this is going to be tested by her relationship with Tom. Personally I'd be disappointed to see this series descend into a free-for-all of supernatural creatures since the central conflict is so interesting by itself, and open to plenty of exploration. Does Sophie have a place amongst other wolves, and does she even need it? She's made a success of herself as a human whilst working to suppress her inner wolf. She lacks the tortured angst of other werewolf characters in urban fantasy, which is refreshing in its way.
Although lighthearted, this is by no means a fluffy novel, and there are enough new twists on werewolf lore to make it intriguing. Sophie is a great narrator and I'm interested in seeing where Macinerney takes her story.
Sunday, 28 December 2008
Howling at the Moon - Karen Macinerney
Posted by Naomi at 05:13
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2 comments:
Gosh... thanks for the lovely review! I hope you enjoy the next two installments, too.
Appreciate you taking the time to read -- and write about -- HOWLING!
Cheers,
Karen
Thanks for stopping by :) I'll definitely be picking up On The Prowl as soon as the UK bookstores get around to stocking it!
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