I'm happy to report that the Alex Verus series is back on track now, and really, the main reason the previous installment dipped to only four stars was that it focused on two favorite characters (Alex and Anne) putting the others in the background. Now we see the whole team of four working together: Alex, Luna, Anne, and Variam. Although it's still mostly planning and consulting, I was pleased with the view we get of their interactions this time.
This time the surprise for me was a focus, through most of the book, on Alex's growing relationship with Caldera, the earth mage who does her best to turn every story into a police procedural--and now she's supervising Alex as he manages to become an official auxiliary to the Keepers of the Flame, dedicated to preserving and enforcing the centuries-old international Covenant of mages and the laws passed by the British Council of Light Mages.
Light Mages are explained to us very carefully as mages (wielders of magic power of different kinds--more about that presently) who publicly subscribe to the Covenant and the British laws, regardless of what they do in private, being largely out for themselves as each tries to increase personal powers and secure a better position on or with the Council. Dark mages are the ones who openly repudiate the Covenant and laws and amass power nakedly.
Among the Light Mages Caldera stands out as a solid character whose actions are based on the rules, and I've grown to like her. In this installment she's not so antagonistic to our team and even takes risks to support her new subordinate Alex as he gets drafted into an intricately complex enforcement action ordered by the Council--ostensibly against a horrible sex-slave operation run by the dark side, but some of the Council members and some of the enforcers are secretly involved in it too, in different ways. Very little is what it seems, even in the exciting action scenes.
Not only do some of the Light Mages have dirty hands but one of the most powerful of the Dark Mages, named Morden, is pushing to get a seat on the Council, and it seems nothing can really keep him from succeeding and thereby altering the whole nature of the British mage organization. And Morden is the chief agent of Richard Drakh, the darkest of Dark Mages and Alex's former master; many of the Light Mages treat Alex as dark himself and resist his teaming up with them.
Intricate action, intricate politics--and Alex's first-person narration is blessedly clear as usual about every bit of what he knows, discovers, and suspects.
What intrigues me the most in Alex's world is the variety of mages. There are twelve different kinds (unless I've forgotten any), each with specific powers and limitations--mages with powers over exactly one of the elements (earth, ice, water, fire, air); ones with powers over life, death, time, space, or chance; and illusionists and diviners.
Alex is a diviner and frighteningly vulnerable in combat--he sees probable futures and when the action is intense (as it often is in this installment) he can only see one or two seconds into the future, just enough to dodge a bullet but not enough to get out of the way of anything really large.
Unlike mages, adepts have only a single power in one of these domains. Alex's apprentice Luna is a chance adept who of course needs a chance mage to be her teacher, but chance mages are so rare that the only one Alex can find for her is Chalice, a Dark Mage. Fascinating scenes, and I hope we see more of Chalice with Luna.
The other team members--Anne, a life mage, whose power is the transfer of life into someone, healing them, or out of someone, killing them; Variam, a fire mage, excellent for combat but still rash and headstrong. What's likable about the four of them is that with all their powers they have basic good will, and it turns out Caldera does too.
And speaking of good will, yes, Arachne plays a significant role too--the wise giant spider who lives under Hampstead Heath and makes splendid clothes (including armor) for our friends is the only magical being in this story other than "constructs"--things like giant golems that the dark ones hurl against our friends.
Very strongly recommended--better if you read the series from the beginning to follow the development of these characters, but I think you can also jump into this installment without any confusion.