~possible spoilers ahead~
Ugh. I don’t know what it was with this book, but I just couldn’t, for anything, get into it. Don’t know if it was because it’s an audiobook and I have to be in the mood for it to listen to, or if it was just the book - but I strongly suggest the second option.
Okay. This is basically a follow-up to the Sasha Urban series, which I listened to beforehand and which wasn’t a absolute masterpiece but just entertaining enough for me to like it decently well.
Now we follow Bailey Spade, a dream walker briefly introduced in the Sasha Urban series. Bailey is on a job when she gets arrested by the council of New York. They want her to solve a murder case, or else she will be executed for crimes against the mandate (a magical law, basically, to stop Cognizant from telling humans about their magic).
So far, so well.
But then - basically, nothing really interesting happens. Sure, Bailey dream walks a lot, tries to solve the murder case, there are more murders, she gets in trouble, is nearly executed, and then - well, typical ending, basically.
Also, there’s magic, some cameos from the Sasha Urban series and everything I normally like, but I just struggled with it. A lot.
Bailey is the only character who’s really been given a deep characterization. Else we have Felix, whom we know from Sasha, and who is just sometimes there. And then the vampire, who was sometimes promising but was killed off in the end.
Bailey is a massive germaphobe, but I don’t think that phobia was played out well. First of all, it got pretty fast weirdly annoying and just outright hilarious when the only thing Bailey thinks about when her life is threatened are the germs that she is now in contact with. And also, she abandoned that fear pretty quickly when it came to Valerian, the love interest that shows up maybe for 10min at all. Weird.
She has a sick mother in coma whom she has to care for, and does all kinds of jobs including her ability to dream walk to raise money for her mother’s medication and stuff.
That’s also why she hasn’t really slept in a very, very long time, which is just unreal and well, weird. Why?
Aside from that, she was solid, but I just didn’t like her at all at times. So well.
The last part of the book was the best one, because finally Bailey got a grip on the whole murder mystery thingie, solved some clues and there was some much needed real-life action. Also Valerian makes another cameo, brought some more interesting scenes with him (even though they were outright overly sexual given their short meeting time, but oh well).
All in all, I will probably continue with this series, because it does have the potential to become something like the Sasha Urban series for me - entertaining, but nothing more. But entertaining, and that can be enough. Just - this storyline was way too boring and aside from Bailey we got no one to really hang onto, so I will see. Well.