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The Dark Choir #4

The Dark Interest

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Surrounded by evil on every side, Dorian Lake is about to face his most personal challenge yet…

A wave of dark voudon magic is rolling into Baltimore. With new rivals on every street corner and hidden enemies out for blood, hex peddler Dorian Lake is doing his best to keep his head above water. All he wants is a chance to reclaim his soul, but an unseen adversary is driving the city into chaos around him.

Dorian suspects The Dark Choir, which has both haunted and hunted him for too long, is behind a groundswell of violence in the city. He’s more certain than ever that they are manipulating events to exterminate the human species. Aided by a handful of close allies--a powerful Stregha, a metaphysical scientist, and a coven of Wiccans--Dorian must follow a series of labyrinthine clues to unravel his greatest enemy’s plans before they come to fruition, even if it means facing off with megalomaniacs, nickel-and-dime gangsters, and even City Hall itself.

Dorian goes on the offense, pulling every tool from his magical arsenal to rain down the vengeance he’s believed by so many to wield. Dorian has never embraced his identity as a Curse Merchant, but his life is on the line, and he’s about to become a true believer in his own power. Sometimes you just have to fight fire with fire--or, in this case, darkness with darkness.

382 pages, Paperback

First published August 22, 2017

6 people are currently reading
153 people want to read

About the author

J.P. Sloan

15 books85 followers
J.P. Sloan is a speculative fiction author … primarily of urban fantasy, horror and several shades between. His writing explores the strangeness in that which is familiar, at times stretching the limits of the human experience, or only hinting at the monsters lurking under your bed.

A Louisiana native, Sloan relocated to the vineyards and cow pastures of Central Maryland after Hurricane Katrina, where he lives with his wife and son. During the day he commutes to the city of Baltimore, a setting which inspires much of his writing.

In his spare time, Sloan enjoys wine-making and homebrewing, and is a certified beer judge.

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Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 reviews
Profile Image for Carly.
456 reviews199 followers
October 23, 2017
~2.5

I've been procrastinating on this review for months, to the point that I've even been avoiding all of Goodreads. No matter how it looks, I don't enjoy writing negative reviews, particularly of series that I previously enjoyed. I really wanted to like The Dark Interest. I've relished the rest of the series: I like the magic system that Sloan sets up, the affectionate familiarity with the city of Baltimore, and I even enjoy disliking jerkish antiheroic protagonist, Dorian. The series has routinely gone in directions I didn't experience, often leading to the tarnishing and darkening of Dorian's character. I've found it fun because it's so unexpected.

Sure, there were some rough elements, some moments that made me wince, particularly in the first book. But this book took it to a whole new level, and in ways that can't simply be dismissed as a jerkish protagonist's warped perspective. Fair warning: because some of my issues with the book are major aspects of the plot, there may be spoilers from here on out.

In recent years, Baltimore has been central in a nationwide struggle over race, police brutality, and equal justice. In 2015, following the death of Freddie Gray in police custody (and Tyrone West in 2013), the city erupted into mass protests that led to a declaration of emergency, enforced curfew, deployment of the National Guard, dozens of fires, and hundreds of arrests. For years afterwards, national news was riddled with stories of mass demonstration, civil unrest, and arrests of protesters. Despite it all, all six police officers associated with the tragedy were acquitted or had charges dropped against them. More recently, Baltimore police have been arrested for racketeering and caught on the bodycams they thought were turned off planting evidence to incriminate suspects. Long story short, like many cities in the US, a conversation on equal justice is an inescapable part of the reality of the city.

In The Dark Interest, Sloan brings up that conversation, but in the most tonedeaf way imaginable. A riot erupts when the story starts, and Dorian being Dorian, his major concern is whether his restaurant will be destroyed or whether the riots will generate "a vibrant dinner rush." . Much of the subsequent plot involves the Baltimore riots, without ever quite saying as much. More specifically, he appropriates them as a plot point and attributes the anger to supernatural forces:
"Even though all of this was very real, this uprising wasn't a natural process. Long in coming though it may have been, this violence was engineered. Angry, ancient forces were pushing this city over a tipping point it might not pull back from."
"That's what this Summer of Blood is all about. Don't you see it? They're cranking up the heat."
I'm generally uncomfortable with this sort of twisting and belittling of history, but when the wounds are still so raw and the struggle is still ongoing? There are tragedies it is utterly unacceptable to appropriate, conflicts that it is repugnant to twist and debase and minimize and devalue. America's current conversation about race and justice is one of them.

The problems with this book don't stop there. Much of the story involves the "Jokomo Gang," a Black gang from New Orleans "displaced by Hurricane Katrina" . The members are described as "into drugs and guns" . Their brand of magic is described by Dorian as follows:
"It's not African voudou. It's Louisiana flavor, which blends lots of horrible shit from the Catholic Church, Santeria, and basically anything else the Dark Choir decided to toss into that gumbo pot."
The practitioners are termed
"Reckless dabblers. They stir up primal beings that rage unrestrained and unstewarded into our world."
The leader, Lasalle, is called a "wannabe crime lord" , "a hoodlum" , "an outright criminal" , and the "lead thug" . Lasalle is portrayed as a slow-witted, surly, angry, immature Black man who Dorian actually castigates a "acting like a child." Just in case you're in any doubt about the dog whistles going on here, Dorian later casually accuses the gang of "Get[ting] their free ride in Baltimore."

When the gang confronts Dorian, questioning him about his recent actions, the "good cop" protagonist appears to "save" Dorian by harassing and belittling them without apparent cause, going so far as to refer to them as "boys": "You boys raising a ruckus out here?" If you don't understand why referring to African-American men as "boys" is toothclenchingly offensive, I'm happy to point you to some references. But in the book, this is portrayed as a heroic rescue against a gang of "your basic street thug[s]" . At another point, Dorian ends up in a police station and assumes that everyone else behind bars-- all African-American-- are "probably wondering what a man like me was up to in a police station." (emphasis mine).

I wanted to like this book. I really did. And actually, even though it infuriated me, I found it interesting to explore the perspective of a character so imbued with white privilege that his only thought during a mass protest against police brutality is whether he'll get a dinner rush. But what I have real trouble with is the unexamined nature of much of the prejudice; the thoughtless, caustic nature of the white privilege that imbues it.

Maybe if you understand what this book is going in, you can get past all this, but I couldn't. That doesn't mean I won't give the next book a try; I'm constantly fascinated by how far down Dorian can be dragged, and the ending is a zinger.

Okay, that's all from me. At least now you know why I've been procrastinating and avoiding Goodreads for these last few months.

~~I received this ebook through Netgalley from the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press, in exchange for my (depressingly) honest review. Quotes were taken from an advanced reader copy and while they may not reflect the final phrasing, I believe they speak to the spirit of the novel as a whole.~~

Cross-posted on BookLikes.
Profile Image for Jeannie Zelos.
2,851 reviews57 followers
September 10, 2017
The Dark Interest ,(The Dark Choir 4), Book FOUR of The Dark Choir, J.P. Sloan

Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews

Genre:general fiction (adult), sci-fy and fantasy

I've been with this since book one, and TBH its such a complex series you need to do that. It's full of difficult characters, real world and Old World, and demons of course, charms, hexes, curses, murders, mayhem and magic and without knowing the backstory you'll get lost. I do know the events that have passed and yet at times I'm lost ;-), but always manage to work it out somehow.  It's a sereis outside my comfort zone, that I fell into by accident but that I've come to love.

What I love is that the author mixes up fiction with Fact, with magics that had a real following at one time - probably still do in certain circles. So each time I see an unusual word I think - aha, this time he's made this up - and then check and find its some ancient language, or shade of magic, or a weapon that's used for certain purposes or something like that. I've learned so much about magic since starting this, that its not a one-size-fits-all, but that in the past (and present) it took many different shapes, evolved through some very different practices.
And I'm talking as if it's all real, but reading this it feels real. There are some well respected people in the world who still believe in these practices, and then I think - how come, all over the world each different group through the ages had had the same belief, but taken different routes to it? Or maybe its just human need to believe in something greater than us, something beyond this world..
It's not really a big stretch considering billions believe in a book written centuries ago, believe in a God who's really only a word of mouth figure.We don't have empirical proof, we  can't Know for certain he exists, that Heaven is real, but yet billions believe it.

Well, I guess that's why I enjoy these books, they're complex and yet readable, they have a solid story-line, some very real characters, both pleasant and horribly dangerous, those who just want to live and love their families and get on with life, and those hungry for power, magical, political, they don't care. In the middle is Dorian.

I've always felt he's on the side of good, not a particular do-gooder, but someone with his own morals and beliefs that he lives by, who tries to do the Right thing, not just the easy thing.  
Along the way he's had so many issues, starting with his lost soul, and its taken him on a very strange and complex journey.
He's always worked alone, had his few good friends, been respected and never sought Power for its own sake, and yet he's become embroiled in some dodgy and dark magical practices, got involved in politics against his wishes, gets pulled into different groups and is still searching for his soul. 

Its another deep and dark, and at times complex read. Dorian is tempted hard in this story, confused, trying in his usual way to protect humanity and his friends, but all the while his soul is missing and he's struggling to get it back. 
I love that his magic isn't a wave of a hand and a few muttered words, quick fix solution, but takes work, real work, if he wants to avoid the Dark side, the world of sacrifices. Yet his new lady, Annarose does just that, and how is he to mix her and how he feels about her, with his morals and how he feels about that?
Is the Utilitarian excuse, for the Greater Good, sacrifice one for many really a good reason, or a cop out? 

Its a novel full of danger for Dorian, more than we've seen so far, and he's had some tight escapes. Once more he's in the centre of some dark forces but who or what is pushing them?
It takes time before he can see the bigger picture and he makes some very dangerous enemies along the way. And that ending....I hate it when that happens ;-)

Stars: five, classic Dorian, anther rivetting adventure and complicated read. A real change from so much Light and Twee Magic reads. 

ARC supplied for review purposes by Netgalley and Publishers
Profile Image for A Voracious Reader (a.k.a. Carol).
2,156 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2018
4.5

Book source ~ ARC. My review is voluntary and honest.

Dorian Lake went from man on the sidelines to man in the middle. He’s done a lot to keep his city safe from The Dark Choir and those who would prey on the innocent, but with the downfall of the Presidium he’s facing more problems than he anticipated. It’s time to pull up his big boy panties or turn tail and run. And since Dorian has never been much of a runner, well…

With each book in this series I wonder what poor Dorian is going to go through. What problems will he have to overcome and will this be the book that breaks him? Man, oh, man. There were times in this story that I thought Dorian had bit off much more than he could chew - some of his own doing and some thrust upon him. That he was outclassed in magic and outgunned by behind-the-scenes manipulators. I couldn’t think of a way that he was going to make it out of the many problems facing him in this book. And yet he does. Or does he? That ending? Omfg, that ending. What the hell is he going to do now?! My only complaint is that there seemed to be too many things going on and it was a tad hard to keep them straight. But it’s a small complaint and I love Dorian and the world in which he is trying to survive. Bring on Book 5!
Profile Image for Kristine .
1,803 reviews12 followers
April 26, 2018
This is a captivating story. The author has weaved a story filled with complex characters, action, and so much more. There are plenty of twists, and one heck of an ending. I strongly suggest reading this story in order for best enjoyment.
Profile Image for michael white.
23 reviews
September 20, 2017
Honestly wasn't sure what to expect when I started this one. It's a great read with a few unexpected turns that certainly keep things interesting. One twist in particular that comes at the end I was actually expecting and was glad that particular hook got used. All in all, the best one yet.
Profile Image for Penny.
3,142 reviews85 followers
August 14, 2017
I was so excited when I read the first book in this series by Mr. Sloan, and here it is the fourth book in the series. At this point, I go into the next book hoping it is just as good as the first, and this book in no way disappoints. Dorian is at a stand-still in parts of his life, and he is losing jobs to someone new in town. But, just like always, events and people conspire against him, and he has to delve into the darker side to get ahead of the Dark Choir and to make a living. I just love how well-written the series is. In this book, we go back to events from another book, and I feel that shows how well an author has plotted out a story arc. I also feel that Mr. Sloan does an excellent job with the characters, making them feel so real. To that end, I must admit I’m not sure how I feel about Dorian’s love interest, but we will see in the future how everything plays out. And, I just have to take a minute to address the ending. What an ending! I had an inkling right before the big reveal, and I was right! I’m sorry for being so cryptic, but I definitely don’t want to give away any spoilers. Dorian is in the middle of a mess, and this time it’s really personal. How will he get out of this? I am so eager to read the next one, I don’t know if I can stand the wait. If you are a fan of this series, you will love this latest installment. If you haven’t started it yet, do so now; it’s a great series! Highly recommend! Thanks to NetGalley and Curiosity Quills Press for the e-copy of the book which I voluntarily reviewed.
Profile Image for Roseanna.
340 reviews3 followers
October 2, 2017
This is the fourth installment of the series. I am not sure if there will be more in it or not. I think the end was done in such a way as it let us know what happened to a certain thing, but not so much as what’s to be done about it. The story was as always well written. Dorian is shades of grey. Not all good, not all bad. Which really makes his character more believable I think. This is a great series, I recommend starting from book one. The series reminds me of another in some ways, I can’t recall which, but it has flavors of one I have reading enjoyed as well. Overall great read.
Profile Image for tracey welch.
185 reviews
January 28, 2018
Another fantastic read

Once again we find Dorian up to his neck in trouble. And what a joy it was to read. Excellent continuation of the storyline while adding new plots that need to be fixed. Great characters that are fully developed and the dialogue is completely believable. I really enjoy this series and look forward to the next book. Warning: Major cliffhanger. I loved it. !! Came out of nowhere.
Profile Image for Kriselda Gray.
124 reviews9 followers
August 29, 2017
I received a copy of this book at no cost from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

Wow.

I've loved this series since I started reading it, and have eagerly awaited each new installment. I have yet to be let down, and the series just keeps getting better.

Dorian Lake has been having a rough time lately. As if losing his soul wasn't bad enough, his troubles from the magical world are affecting his friends - some in truly awful ways - messing with his lovelife and getting him caught in the middle of an internal war within one of the most powerful magical groups in the country. And while he has never wanted to participate in Netherwork (dark magic) his enemies aren't leaving him a lot of options.

In this story, Dorian's slow-but-steady fail continues as he realizes that demonic forces are trying to create mass chaos in his city and he finds someone who claims to know where is soul is - but will only tell him if he can get concessions from a new group in town. Of course, this new group has conditions of its own if he wants their assistance. Not helping matters any is an upstart practitioner who is competing with Dorian for customers, and winning a bit too often for Dorian's taste.

Author JP Sloan managers to juggle all of these elements with a deft hand and throws in several twists just to keep things interesting. One thing I particularly liked was that none of the twists were so obvious that I was able to predict what was going to happen, yet when I reflected back on the events leading up to them, I could see how Sloan had carefully set each element up so that when the dominos began to fall it all made sense.

This story was by turns exciting, humorous, touching and devastating. Sloan has created a believable alternate reality and stocked it with interesting - and generally likeable inhabitants. I like that his characters are not clearly divided into good guys and bad ones. Instead, they're multi-dimensional with both positive and negative attributes. It's hard to watch a character like Dorian - who I've grown quite fond of - falling so far and harder still to know he's probably not reached bottom yet, but I'm really eager to find out what happens next and to see how - or if -Dorian can be redeemed.
Profile Image for Ashley Martinez (ilovebooksandstuffblog).
3,120 reviews92 followers
April 27, 2018
Dark

Wow what a book! This one was intense and powerful! I thoroughly enjoyed all the twists and turns this one kept me on the edge of my seat wondering what was going to happen next. And then that ending ah!! Didn’t expect that. Can’t wait to see where the story goes from here.
Profile Image for Kat.
Author 1 book23 followers
December 14, 2017
3.5

Oh, Dorian. Dorian, Dorian. You started out an amusing, inexplicably likeable a-hole, but oh how far you have fallen. Not that any of the people in your stories are particularly good folk, or even very nice, but we're looking at a severe downslide in the quality of your moral choices. If you weren't the hero of your own series, you'd be a villain in someone else's. Harry Dresden would hate you, man.

Apostrophe to fictional characters aside, I'm really finding this series fascinating, as a study of how a man with not-terrible intentions but absolutely no moral compass can slide down and down and down the slippery slope of ends justifying means, until none of the choices remaining to him are good ones, and he has become, for lack of a better word, actually evil. In this installment, Dorian makes one shady deal after another, culminating in murder and betrayal and all manner of horrible deeds, confirming him in his new role as Actual Bad Guy.

On the technical side, this volume felt a little rushed, with typos and infelicities of language that the previous entries lacked. The first half or so was a bit draggy--but the second half more than made up for it.

Will I keep reading after this book? I'm of two minds. On the one hand, I do want to see where the story is going, and find out what happens with Dorian and his increasingly complicated life. Much depends, I think, on the direction it takes. If Dorian keeps making choices so ugly that calling them morally questionable is an understatement of Wyoming-sized proportions ... I guess it would depend on the fallout of those choices. Will he be confirmed in expedient villainy? Or is redemption possible? That's a question I would like to see tackled as the series continues.
Profile Image for Julie.
355 reviews1 follower
November 25, 2017
I love this series. Dorian Lake is a trained "curse merchant" which is a title he dislikes. But he has made his money in Baltimore selling hexes and charms. Dorian's magic is based on karma so when someone asks for his help to hex someone, their karma dictates what might happen. He is trained in the bad stuff too, and can curse others but chooses not to do that kind of work. It carries a stain to the soul with it and there will be literal Hell to pay. However, Dorian's soul is currently missing so he can get away with quite a lot at this time. Lots of plots within plots in this story. Loved it!
Profile Image for Stacy Bradley.
201 reviews2 followers
May 5, 2018
So here we are on book 4 and holy cow I did not see that coming. The mixed up magical world of Dorian Lake is definitely one you dont want to miss out on. I must say tho, you MUST read the first 3 books to truly understand how far down the rabbit hole Dorian and his cohorts are going. For once stepping out my comfort zone has paid off. Read it, you know you want to.
Profile Image for Jennifer percy.
36 reviews
October 5, 2017
Great read

Well thought out twisted plot. So engrossed with Dorian mixed up magic world that I have read series to date. Recommend
Profile Image for Janis Hill.
Author 4 books10 followers
February 10, 2018
I would like to thank Curiosity Quills for approaching me to review this book for them. I was sent a free electronic copy and was not paid to review, it was a totally volunteer basis thingy. I feel I was approached as I have thoroughly enjoyed the other books in this series - ‘The Dark Choir’.

However, I don’t know if they will approach me again after the constructive criticism I am about to give. I don’t think Mr Sloan is going to have me marked as a favourite reviewer any more either. ;-)

But please, please, please realise I am just trying to be honest about how I feel this book matches up to the rest of the series. If you can’t tell by my rating, I didn’t think it matched that well at all. To put it bluntly, I didn’t feel the story actually truly got started or got to the point set up by the previous books until I was about 75% through it. Everything that came before that came across as world building… which isn’t usually so complex when you’re reading the 4th book in a series. Pretty much all of the world building should be done by then.

I have really been dragging my heels on posting this review - I finished the book back in November last year and have been using the messed up sad chaos that has been my life these past eight or so months as an excuse not to publish a review. But, I want to get a clean slate for my reviewing this year and so have put on my big girl pants and here it is.

I am really hoping this is just one of those “mid-series slumps” as I honestly found this a watered down version of Dorian and really more a fluff piece to remind us all about the series, than something that truly added to the series as a whole. Well, except for the last 25% of the book - that was an addictive read like the previous books and the clanger dropped at the end of it… I think I may just have groaned out loud it was such an epic “oh my god no!” It almost beat my reaction to what happened to Julian in earlier books in this series.

So, if I was to base my opinion on the last part of the book alone then I would definitely say Mr Sloan was still on winner as DAMN that was good.

But the rest of it? Yeah, it really came across as padding and world building as if the story needed to turn and start down a new path, but that new path or reason for it wasn’t truly explained. I mean, the writing was still good and if I hadn’t had such high expectations based on the first three books in ‘The Dark Choir’ series, I probably would have enjoyed it a lot better and given it a higher rating. Seriously, this book had a “put on the back burner” feel to it and was then served up half cooked when it should have stayed on that creative cooking stove a little longer. Sorry Mr Sloan, I love your work and you are a fantastic writer… I just didn’t gel with ‘The Dark Interest’.

Would I recommend this book to others?

I would, but only if they had read the first three books in ‘The Dark Choir’ series. This isn’t a stand-alone book and anyone trying to read it as such is doing their imagination - and Mr Sloan - a great injustice.

Would I warn them about how I felt about it? Well, they are going to read that here… but if just asked I would say “it’s alright but not the best book in the series”. I can’t offer more than that.

Would I buy this book for myself?

Of course I would and simply because ‘The Dark Choir’ series is one of the best supernatural series I’ve read in a long time. And while I may have found the majority of this book was pretty “meh” I would still own it to ensure I have the whole series. I am just hoping the next book is better.

In summary - not the best book in the series, but ended with a brilliant cliff hanger.
Profile Image for Ann.
6,025 reviews83 followers
August 17, 2017
This is book 4 in the Dark Choir series and it's the first by J.P. Sloan I've read. I think it would be beneficial to read the previous books to gain insight into the many characters and paranormal groups.
Set in Baltimore, Dorian has a nice business selling hex's and charms to stay afloat. He senses that dark magic is taking over the city and he's right. I'm going to read the earlier book and reread this story.
Profile Image for JussJess .
74 reviews4 followers
February 27, 2018
This is by far my favorite book in the series! Dorian is finally defending himself the only way he knows how CURSES!! He still has a amoral dilemma with actually "hurting" people but then again he is still without a soul...so yeah lolz Dorian is constantly reminded about not having a soul, and actually being hounded by a man with a plan for his soul. In this book we learn that people are actually afraid of Dorian, and the damage he could do if he went off the deep end. I have genuinely loved the internal fighting happening within Dorian, I can't wait for the next book in this series! I voluntarily read an advanced readers copy of this book from Curiosity Quills Press. All opinions expressed are entirely my own.
Profile Image for George the Girl.
170 reviews11 followers
January 16, 2021
With so many urban fantasy series to choose from, it takes a lot for one to stand out like The Dark Choir series. With unique characters, a solid underlying plot, and consistently engrossing stories, JP Sloan is a master. Each new book in this series is a must read, something to look forward to. This installment was no different. Nearly impossible to put down, and disappointing only when it's over. I continue to be a fan.
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