Hawthorn House’s residents live exciting lives. When no one tries to kill them, they have to stop apocalypse. Usually, it’s the mix of the two.
Four years ago Julian Blackwood killed his best friend, Mitch Longfield. But now Mitch is back, and he wants revenge. London’s werewolves have an issue with Rob - he doesn’t smell right for a werewolf. Fiona has joined the Red Sisters to learn magic, but she’s wondering if they really want to teach her.
Don’t read this book if you didn’t read The Ghost Electricity. But if you did and enjoyed series’ opener, read it immediately. Especially when you fancy a rollicking urban fantasy adventure that upends many genre tropes in an audacious style. You‘ll find here all the goodies - werewolves, vampires, warlocks, automatons, sentient van and more. It‘s the book about the restorative power of friendship that happens in a darkly fascinating, and brutal world.
Characters shine and develop significantly. I need more Jessica and her automatons in my life - I hope she’ll get development in the threequel. She’s slowly transforming into plot device that saves the day and zaps everyone. Julian, Rob and Fiona experience dark moments - Cunningham’s offers a fresh and brutal vision of a supernatural world - werewolves’ cage fights, vampires hunt and corrupted magic. He sweetens it with an offbeat humor I enjoy.
I enjoyed the book a lot, but I need to mention two issues:
1. It needs another pass of proofreading. You’ll easily spot misspellings or repeated words.
2. It introduces a ton of new characters and this makes the story difficult to follow at times.
Apart from this, though, I highly recommend Hawthorn House series to Urban Fantasy fans bored with repetitive and formulaic plots. Cunningham’s imagination is full of surprises and his characters never stop to charm the reader.
Excellent read and now I’m impatiently awaiting next book in the series.