Blood Price -- Vicki Nelson, Vampire Slayer. No, wait, wrong character. Vicki Nelson, PI, former Police detective, now with retinitis pigmentosa is an interesting heroine. She's planted firmly in the side of good in this book from the beginning. After all, she was one of Toronto's finest, a detective who solved hard cases and solved a lot of them (maybe with a teeny bit of help from her partner Mike Celluci).
But then the eye thing came along and she had to retire and her life finally got interesting. When the book opens she's been a PI for a year, with no particularly special cases. Of course, there'd be no book if something didn't change that. She sorta of witnesses the killing of a young man and then gets sucked into the police investigation by the young man's friends. She meets Henry Fitzroy, and they try to solve the mystery of who killed the kid.
Since the whole reason that I read these books were because of the TV Series on Lifetime "Blood Ties" I can't help compare it to the show. I miss Vicki's wrist tattoos for some odd reason, and I miss Coreen from the show. She is in Blood Price, but in the show it was such a cool secondary character.
Truthfully I wasn't expecting this book or the other ones in the series to be good. Vampire books are such a sensitive thing to write, it can wind up totally unbelievable, or too real and with not quite enough unbelievability in it. But it kept me guessing at the mystery, and wasn't too over or under when it came to the vampire and other supernatural story lines.
Blood Trail - Werewolves, or perhaps they prefer werepeople. This is an interesting novel. It's Henry who asks for Vicki's help for a friend, who just happens to be a werewolf. She, of course, says yes (really, who could say no to Henry, even if he doesn't use his Vampire mojo) and they set off for the Ontario Country side (I think, I'll admit that I'm used to the relatively small states of the USA, not the much bigger provinces. Heck, it took me wayyy too long to realize that Vancouver was on the West Coast of Canada not the East Coast, I know, I know, really bad, what can I say, my brain is unique).
Henry and Vicki get into lots of mischief in the countryside of course, but the plot is simple enough, someone is killing off werepeople. They want it to stop.
I think that one of the reasons that Huff makes many of her mystery story lines so straightforward in this series is because by having the bare plot simple. "Find murderer, catch murderer". The rest of the story, all the werewolf and vampire and other supernatural beings story lines don't get lost or diluted, making them pop from the rest of the story. Like a yellow painting in a black room
Anyway, it was an enjoyable book and I'd recommend it to anyone who wants a fun (though intense at some points) supernatural mystery read that isn't Sookie Stackhouse.