Before I launch into my review, I just gotta ask, why do people always have to make stew in fantasy novels? How about goulash? Pasta? Chicken and dumplings? Half-elves cannot live on stew alone! Also, stew is not travel food. It's called stew because it has to STEW for a few hours before you eat it. No one would say "Gee, we've been walking all damn day, let's wait a few more hours for our stew to simmer before we can eat."
Brief recap:
Magiere (which I couldn't figure out how to pronounce, so I started calling her Maggie in my head), and Leesil (I knew a girl in high school named Leisel, and it was hard to disassociate the two at first, I kept imagining this half-elf playing trumpet in advanced jazz band) run a scam killing vampires for remote villages. Maggie is the hunter and Leesil plays the vampire, she "kills" him, absconds with the village's money and they scram. This is all going fine until they run into a real vampire, and their magic dog goes berserk on the thing. Through the power of teamwork, they kill it.
Turns out our girl Maggie's been hiding money away and bought a tavern in a seaside town called Miiska (I hate when characters and towns names are too close). Our Heroes all move there and turns out there are vampires there too. These vampires have bought the corrupt....guy who's name I can't remember, and he keeps the heat off of them while they terrorize the town and kill people.
That's the set up for the conflict.
I liked this book, enough to give it 3 stars, but I felt it could have been better done. Though there were a lot of internalized struggles and whatnot going on for both Maggie and Leesil, I don't feel like they developed. They still felt shallow, even Brendan the blacksmith...hell, *particularly* Brenden the blacksmith. There were a lot of tropes throughout; stew, tunics, the kindly old couple, the protagonist with the hidden secret, the other protagonist with the hidden secret, etc.
I wish they would have reigned in the cultural color they provided, and the world ended up being a mix of Russian elements and Standard Fantasy Medieval Europe, complete with people running taverns and making stew. The names got a little unwieldy. In what land would people named Beth-rae, Brendan, Leesil and Magiere all coexist?
You definitely learn the most about Leesil, and he was my favorite character out of the book.
On the other hand, there are inventive things present, like how the vampires operate (don't want to give too much away), Chap the dog, the character Welstiel Massing, of who's motives you can't be clear. I will read the next book, because I feel that the authors have sprinkled enough throughout the first one for some really interesting developments. The Fae were name-dropped, the two different paths for vampires, Ratboy's developments, Chap's origins, all of these can make for some interesting reading.
Overall, the good outweighed the bad for me, and I'm glad I picked it up! I'm in a surly mood this morning and that explains my complaining.