I wasn’t really sure what to expect from this rather generic looking paperback, but I found the most enjoyable collection of urban fantasy stories I’ve read recently. The book is a collection of four novellas by women authors and starring women characters and they were all pretty enjoyable.
The first is an Ilona Andrews story, set in her universe where magic and technology flip back and forth in waves. I read another story in this setting not too long ago and while I enjoyed the writing and some of the story, I found myself disliking the basic premise of the setting. I’ll admit that the same holds true here - I’m not opposed to a magic comes back premise, but I don’t like the way it’s formulated as some weird magic and technology are opposing forces that have gotten out of wack thing.
This story is about a nerdy weretiger who suddenly has to help her hunky alpha solve a mystery. It was told first person from her point of view, which I enjoyed, and I liked her character. She was well developed and her whole complex about not being as attractive or powerful as a lot of the other women she knew was handled well. I also enjoyed the way different cultures were woven into the plot, and it was a neat twist that the werecreatures are able to shift even when technology rather than magic dominates. I’m actually starting to feel like I may want to check out the full series eventually, but I’m still kinda wary.
The second story is by Yasmine Galenorn, an author I haven’t heard of before (which is also the case for the other two women who wrote the last two stories). This one is about a Finnish house spirit who was once in training to be a high priestess until she transgressed terribly - except she can’t actually remember what happened. She was banished from her order, stripped of her title, and cursed to be unable to bear children. Now that she wants to get married and have a family, the time has come after six hundred years to travel into a magical otherworld of ice and snow to face her past.
The story throws a lot of different concepts and characters around very quickly, which was disorienting as somebody who doesn’t know this world. I was definitely turned off by this, but over time I was able to ignore the stuff that didn’t actually matter and get into the heart of the story. The core concept of somebody having to face her past was neat, and there was enough action to keep me going. I’ll admit I’m kinda curious to give the main series a try, though the top Goodreads reviews of the first book are all 1 star reviews, which is somewhat concerning.
The third story by Allyson James is basically the urban fantasy version of a bottle episode. Janet Begay is a power mage who runs a hotel, but one day everything goes horribly wrong as a hex is unleashed, trapping herself, her boyfriend, her staff, and her guests in the hotel. It doesn’t help that the hex is exaggerating everyone’s worst traits, and among those trapped are a vampire, the god Coyote, and a dragon shifter. This story is told from Janet’s point of view and I immediately enjoyed her voice. I also like the hints we get of her backstory, with her mother being an evil goddess sealed beneath the earth.
The plot was a lot of fun, as it’s based largely on personality clashes between the various characters. This works well because everyone is written as fleshed out people with different quirks and wants that make them fun to see bounce off each other. The various attempts to break the hex are clever and the way things repeatedly escalate makes sense and helps heighten the tension. I’m definitely interested in checking this one out, especially because it’s set in between the second and third books, meaning I haven’t had much of the story spoiled by reading this.
The last story by Jeanne C. Stein is about a vampire bounty hunter, which basically sold me on the concept from the beginning. I’m a big fan of vampires and I definitely prefer them to werecreatures and possibly even to wizards as my urban fantasy protagonist of choice. Anna Strong was a bounty hunter before she got turned into a vampire, and now she gets involved in a mix of mundane and supernatural adventures. In this story, as with the second in the collection, the theme is facing her past. She previously travelled into the astral plane to hunt down a threat, unknowingly breaking the plane’s truce as a sanctuary. Now she and a mortal human have been taken back to the astral plane to stand trial.
It’s an interesting concept, basically inverting Anna’s normal life as it takes her from hunter of fugitives to criminal. Much of the story is concerned with the rather unfair spectral trial, and in an interesting twist Anna is returned to being a normal human on the astral plane. She gets a chance to dive into her backstory which I appreciated as somebody who was reading an installment of this series for the first time, though it comes in the form of her bonding with the mortal man in a romance that felt a bit tacked on. In fact, Anna even at first thinks that the prosecutor is using magic to make her fall for the man, though it seems this isn’t the case. Overall it was an entertaining story and I’m curious to check out the earlier books in the series because I like the concept of Anna’s character.
All in all this was a fun read, even if I came into it familiar with only one of the four series represented and not invested in any of them. An at lest 75% success rate in getting me interested in reading more makes this by far the most successful collection of urban fantasy stories I’ve read lately, and if you like them I think it’s worth tracking this down.