Title: Ghost Story
Author: Jim Butcher
Genre: Urban fantasy (part of ongoing series do not read first)
Thingummies: 4
Synopsis: There's no way to do this without spoiling Changes. Being dead sucks. Especially when they send you back to solve your own murder. And every character ever is trying to emotionally cope with your death, only now you're totally haunting them.
Thoughts: There's a note in the author's forward protesting that the end of Changes wasn't a cliffhanger, really. Uh huh. Clearly everyone's been harassing you for a year, but that doesn't change things much. That was totally a cliffhanger. Oh, and while this one isn't nearly as bad, it's a cliffhanger, too.
This book suffers a bit from too-many-characters-itis. Butcher is clearly wrapping up threads to move on to a new phase for Dresden, and this is kind of the interstitial book. So nearly every character shows up here. (Well, ok, none of the White Council, the Summer Court, the Black Court, or Toot toot. But most of the rest.) Some of them feel terribly shoehorned in at the end, when Butcher tries to show how Dresden's death has affected random people. (He checks on Thomas, which is good, but not McCoy? When he's only just found out that the guy is in fact his grandfather?)
What am I complaining about? These books are crack, and I'd take my sweet sweet fix even if Butcher deciding to waltz Harry through Chicago butt naked while declaring he was the Easter Bunny. Which might be awesome. Or have him meet the other wizard named Harry. Which has almost certainly been done before.
So this doesn't remotely stand on its own, but it's still got that laugh-out-loud humor mixed with the pathos-whammy that is what I always loved about Joss Whedon and Gail Simone stuff, too. Similarly addictive. If you aren't a Dresden files fan, this book will make no sense. If you are, it will scratch the itch and you'll love it, even if it is flawed and the logic is stretched a bit too far.
Author: Jim Butcher
Genre: Urban fantasy (part of ongoing series do not read first)
Thingummies: 4
Synopsis: There's no way to do this without spoiling Changes. Being dead sucks. Especially when they send you back to solve your own murder. And every character ever is trying to emotionally cope with your death, only now you're totally haunting them.
Thoughts: There's a note in the author's forward protesting that the end of Changes wasn't a cliffhanger, really. Uh huh. Clearly everyone's been harassing you for a year, but that doesn't change things much. That was totally a cliffhanger. Oh, and while this one isn't nearly as bad, it's a cliffhanger, too.
This book suffers a bit from too-many-characters-itis. Butcher is clearly wrapping up threads to move on to a new phase for Dresden, and this is kind of the interstitial book. So nearly every character shows up here. (Well, ok, none of the White Council, the Summer Court, the Black Court, or Toot toot. But most of the rest.) Some of them feel terribly shoehorned in at the end, when Butcher tries to show how Dresden's death has affected random people. (He checks on Thomas, which is good, but not McCoy? When he's only just found out that the guy is in fact his grandfather?)
What am I complaining about? These books are crack, and I'd take my sweet sweet fix even if Butcher deciding to waltz Harry through Chicago butt naked while declaring he was the Easter Bunny. Which might be awesome. Or have him meet the other wizard named Harry. Which has almost certainly been done before.
So this doesn't remotely stand on its own, but it's still got that laugh-out-loud humor mixed with the pathos-whammy that is what I always loved about Joss Whedon and Gail Simone stuff, too. Similarly addictive. If you aren't a Dresden files fan, this book will make no sense. If you are, it will scratch the itch and you'll love it, even if it is flawed and the logic is stretched a bit too far.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-16 06:04 pm (UTC)From:But I had a great time anyway, so it still gets its four stars.
Your predictions were pretty good!