Smartass Magician-Monster Hunter/Spy...did you get all that?
ByWade on May 16, 2016
Format: Kindle Edition|Verified Purchase
First: The Solid Cover is what caught my eye. Yes, I window shop books.
Second: Derek Hawthorne, agent of the Red Room—a family operated Occult-based agency overseeing all manner of nasty monster and mythological creature THE WORLD OVER—seems to always be having a s*** day; he’s the type of guy who complains about his job, but could never do anything else and that Love Hate relationship makes it fun to follow his daily grind.
Infact, at first I felt he was a sarcastic Constantine/Bond hybrid, but I quickly realized he wasn’t either and the assumed weak attempt at combining the two was kinda annoying....but then I realized he’s not JAMES BOND, nor is he as dark as CONSTANTINE: He’s Sterling Malory “ARCHER” yes, the same Archer from the FX show, with a huge lump of Urban Fantasy thrown in for good measure.
Sound good? It did to me. This is about the time my reading picked-up speed.
And it gets better. How?
Do you like gadgets and gizmos? Strange magics and wonders?
Now, you don’t get a lot about that stuff, even less about the overall world, but that didn’t bother me because massive info-dumps to explain everything would’ve killed the flow of this pretty action-paced story and remember, this isn’t in-depth Fantasy of SciFi; not to mention, plenty of these cool things exist in the ether of the narrative, serving to only tease a massive world for the author to draw from in the future. So strap in.
For me, Esoterrorism by C.T Phipps is the kinda F/SF mashup which got the genre(s) started, but to be honest, I’m not a huge fan of the direction most in “Urban Fantasy” have gone, however, I did enjoy it enough to finish it—mostly because of my fondness for Derek “Archer” with magic—which says a lot.
Let me point out, Derek breaking the 4th Wall was A PLUS for me. Plenty of witty banter to make you smile. But I can also see why some purists might not enjoy it; some readers are easily distracted, or need Dialog Tags and some just aren’t fond of the on-going gag of cliche jabs and/or other seemingly out-of-place remarks.
However, once you except it, it blends and becomes part of the author’s creation. Bravo.
I enjoyed the WMD and Evil Corporation plot enough not to be bothered, but not the “Secret Enemy Agency” which counters the Red Room. Feels like this trope within a trope has been done to death, but because of other gems along the way—unknown creatures from diverse backgrounds, some feared by veteran DnD players like myself—this is easily enough smoothed over.
Summary Thoughts:
It took me awhile to settle on giving it a 3 instead of a 4 and it mostly comes down to This: You’re either a Big Fan of Urban Fantasy, or someone like me, who really isn’t for the most part, because of things like Charmed, Buffy, Angel and Supernatural have ruined it for you...I tend to walk a darker, grittier path and while this adventure did get closer than most, I can’t give it a four because it’s not something I’d likely read again.
FINAL WORD:
Everything being equal, I think any fan of the genre should check it out. Also, I bet there’ll be plenty of readers who consider themselves on the fence, who just might end up falling in love with this series.
Happy Reading