Three and a half stars for Hounded, and this review is for that book only (will update review after I read the other books). Delicious Urban Fantasy done exactly right: great characters (the dog steals the show), solid story, plenty of action (god-stomping action), and the kind of wit that had me chuckling on the bus. Hounded is one of the best series intro books I've read, and Hearne is a fast, fast writer which means that he'll keep your Jones fixed if you get into these. My only nitpick is that the ending came abruptly, almost as if he came up to his target page goal and said, "oops, the end." Otherwise, highly entertaining and excellent all the way through.
Three and a half stars for Hexed. Well, I'm not known for tearing through series... in fact, I more often than not will read the first in a series and then wait a really long time to read the following installments. I read Hexed during my workouts and so my progress was very slow. Hexed suffered from the same abrupt ending that Hounded had, and it didn't make me dislike the book at all -- I was plenty entertained throughout -- it's just that the story built up to that delicious climactic tension and then *poof* it was done... I even turned back a page to make sure I hadn't inadvertantly skipped a paragraph or missed something. *BAM* Done, son, and out the door. Still a fun series, still a fun book, and still the sort of brain candy that makes me want more. Oberon rocks this series. I'll dive into Hammered soon... aw, you know: soon enough... eventually. You get the picture.
Cue the Viking death metal and crank the volume to 10; Hammered is no-holds barred action, with our boy, Atticus, and a ragtag band of beings wronged by Thor taking on the host of Asgard. This is wide-screen action, and it takes the series beyond the set up of the first two books with major changes for the books that come after. It also leaves you on a bit of a cliffhanger, one that all but guarantees you'll be back for Tricked.
The stand out piece of the Hammered portion of this anthology is the Graunaile short story, wherein Kevin Hearne flexes his more poetic and lyrical author muscles in taking the druid initiate's point of view. Good stuff, lots of fun, gobs of action, loads of humor. If I haven't said it before, let me say it now: the dog is the linchpin of the series -- Oberon steals the show every time. Totally worth the time and coin.