A murdered friend seeking revenge. An invitation from the werewolf world. An immortal teacher with her own agenda. Four years ago, Julian Blackwood killed his best friend, but death couldn’t hold him. How far must Julian go to protect the secrets they share, and can he protect his new friends from Mitch’s schemes? The London werewolves have finally opened their arms to Rob Cromwell. But the werewolf world is darker than Rob ever imagined and the werewolves have their own reasons for pulling him in. Will the cost of belonging be too high? Fiona has joined the Red Sisters to learn magic, but she's starting to wonder if they really want to teach her. In mirrors and in dreams she is stalked by the Lord of Chains, who knows the truth buried deep within her. What price will he demand for knowledge and power? The Mortal Edge is part of the fast-paced, epic urban fantasy series Hawthorn House. Join the residents of Hawthorn House to continue this exciting series today! The Hawthorn House Book 0.5: Fracture Lines Book 1: Ghost Electricity Book 1.5: The Clock Strikes Book 2: The Mortal Edge Book 3: Immortal Make Book 3.5: Soul Feeder Book 4: Burning Souls
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.
Really, really good but there was so much in, and to, each POV segment that I had to take mini breaks instead of reading straight through. Once again, the characters are all that and more. The storyline keeps surprising. One ring the key to all???? Oh smirk! Alice? Forget Kansas. We're not even in Wonderland any more. Julian is just totally stylin'. And Jessica? Can she be any more funderful? Hmmmm.... Orson....
I think just a touch better than book one, and I'd give that one 5 stars, too. I adore every one of these characters. I was truly scared for them at multiple points in the story, and I had to put the book down for a bit when one was captured, fearing she'd be sacrificed to plot. Many of the minor (and not so minor) bad guys are sympathetic, even--a feat I've rarely seen done as well as this.
Mr. Cunningham has joined my roster of a half dozen UF auto-buy authors alongside Ilona Andrews and Anne Bishop.
Having loved the previous full-length novel and the two novellas in this series, I'm disappointed to say that I struggled with this book. It was bloated and unclear with far too many characters (confusingly 3 of the main characters had names beginning with J!). The propulsive action that worked so well in the previous stories was missing for large swathes of this one. But it did pick up in the second half once all the pieces were in place. The writer did have an impressively frank mea culpa at the end of the book, admitting that the story got away from him somewhat and promising to be more concise in future installments so I will come back for the next volume. Cunningham has an impressive imagination and a real handle on how his mystical London works, I love how his world fits together. Lets hop he can get back to utilising it a bit better.
I enjoyed all the different characters one meets throughout this book and love how the people of Hawthorn House and of course Alice gets together to kick some old evil' ass. Just hope that a new antagonist would come along soon. Fighting the same enemies over and over again does get old.
The more I read this series the more it gels into a detailed world. Good characterization. Some great tactics that pull together at the end. How the world works is slowly becoming clear.
Second book from Hawthorne house, as Julian's past comes back to haunt him, Fiona tries to learn about her past and Rob tries to fit in. Good book, similar layout to the first with multiple threads, but works better, as now familiar with the characters.
Really good, and a bit longer and slightly more complex due to new characters that have popped up, we get to see more of young Jessica in action being a bad ass, and big sister Fiona finding out more who she is, plus various enemies coming out of the woodwork and Alice really going to town.