Who'd have thought that angels could be more fun than vampires, but in this intriguing novel that's the case. The author sets the hook in right away, as a man and a child are gunned down in the street. Cleaning up this mess, or at least transporting the spirits of the departed is the job of angel Nick (odd name for an angel, more often associated with Satan). Nick is an angel stuck in a dead-end job. His only task is transporting sprits to a location called Terminus, where they are processed for eternity. Nick longs for something more. He thinks of himself as just a "cosmic chauffeur."
Things weren't always so mundane for Nick. He has a sterling resume, a millenium or so before he was a warrior, an angel on the way up. But then he became involved with a human, something strictly forbidden in the angel code. The union of an angel and a human can produce a Nephilim, a being that has super powers equal to or greater than your regular angel, and can use them for good or evil. A Nephilim gone bad is something you never want to meet in a dark alley.
Nick gets a second chance. His new supervisor, Lena, assigns him three tasks, deaths in which he must intervene, not to save them, mind you, but to make sure they die. Nick messes up again. Not only does he rescue those who are to die, he falls in love with one of them. He should have known better.
Nick's new job involves a number of subplots and new characters. There are also a number of POV shifts early on that I found a bit confusing. These subplots are all interconnected, and somehow the author manages to tie together a number of different story lines.
What Nick doesn't know is that his assigned tasks are part of a Nephilim plot to establish a new world order, triggered by a nuclear explosion in a crowded stadium. But Nick, when he finds out, is a weakened angel, because of his attachment to the human female, Hope.
The denouement is complex and full of surprises, an epic battle between angels and demons. It evolves by a deus ex machina sequence in which deus is really deus, that is to say, God.
Nick, because of his compassion for humans, is reinstated with even greater superpowers, and rides off with the archangel Michael to fight evil.
There were a bit too many story lines for me to stay on top of, but that's probably due to my short attention span. This is a highly imaginative and entertaining book.