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Three hundred years ago, she sold her soul to a demon. Now she wants it back.

For centuries, the woman calling herself Maliha Crayne has lived a second life - as an assassin for the malevolent creature who owns her soul. A haunted killer with the blood of countless victims on her hands, she has finally discovered a way to nullify the demonic pact that chains her: If she saves a life for every one she has taken, she will be free.

But if she fails, her punishments will be unspeakable, unendurable . . . and neverending.

306 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 16, 2009

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3300 people want to read

About the author

Dakota Banks

8 books219 followers
I have to believe that growing up in a converted turn-of-the-century funeral home, complete with blood gutters and a drain in the basement floor, warped my mind.

I set aside all those macabre thoughts spawned by reading books in the basement at night with a flashlight and undertook a relatively normal life. College, science fiction, husband, computers, Star Trek, mortgage, fantasy, Star Wars, kids, mysteries, writing, thrillers, horror, and cats. I'm not sure in which order all those things happened, but I haven't killed off enough gray cells yet that I've forgotten any of them. That brings me up to now, or at least the last decade.

I wrote short stories in high school and college, submitted them, and got rejection letters. I still have some of them. Writing was shelved while life ran amuck, and I came back to it in the 1990s. I published five books (the PJ Gray series), all hard-edged suspense thrillers dealing with virtual reality, written under my real name of Shirley Kennett. I enjoyed these books because they were my first taste of the writing life, not to mention that they brought in some money and put 500,000 published words under my belt.

I even wrote a middle-grade book about a native American boy and his horse, Honor's Journey, as D.B. Ayers. Fun times!

Something was missing, though, and it took me six books to find out what the missing piece was. Although my books were highly imaginative and extrapolated then-current trends in forensic science, computer simulation, and virtual reality, they didn't go far enough. I felt hemmed in by reality.

I needed to get back into the basement with a flashlight.

I took a deep breath and thought about what I really wanted to do with my writing career. I had an idea that had been playing around at the edge of my mind for a while, and I decided to see what I could make of it. Combining my love of archaeology with the freedom that comes from using mythological elements in a story, I came up with the basic concepts for the Mortal Path series. Developing that world and the characters who bring it to life has been tremendously rewarding for me, and I hope the books provide pleasurable reading for you.

I live on the western fringe of St. Louis, Missouri with my husband. Our two sons, one adopted from Peru and the other from Ethiopia, are well on their way to independent lives. My cats Squeaks and Snickers sometimes ghostwrite my books by walking on my keyboard. Good stuff, too, if you speak Cat.

I'm a member of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, International Thriller Writers, the Horror Writers Association, and Mystery Writers of America.

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Profile Image for Text Addict.
432 reviews36 followers
May 11, 2011
This book could actually be worse, if the basic sentence-level writing wasn’t competent.

This is only my perspective, of course; the book may be much more appealing to people other than me. I have never, for example, been a fan of bed-hopping characters of any gender – so that’s a reason for me not to like it right there. Your mileage may vary.

But there’s a lot more to disapprove of in this book than that. I slogged through to the end through sheer willpower (only actually throwing it across the room once!).

To begin with, facts are important. Even in a story loaded with impossible fantastic and pseudotech elements, the details about the real world need to be correct. Why? Because you never know which incorrect fact will, for any given reader, strike a swift, sharp blow at your story’s credibility and even your credibility as a writer.

Sooo, you say, what facts are you talking about, Text? The big one is a really big one, since it deeply involves the protagonist’s entire reason for being in this book.

See, the demon got a hold on our multiply-renamed protagonist because she’d been burned as a witch (even though she wasn’t one, and was pregnant to boot) – in late seventeenth-century Massachusetts. In reality, the number of witches burned in New England is zero. They were hanged. Furthermore, the likelihood of a 17th-century English justice system executing a pregnant woman is approximately zilch. The English regularly postponed executions due to pregnancy, for offenses up to and including piracy on the high seas. There was even a term for it – “pleading her belly.”

You can see, I think, how this undermines nearly everything about Protagonist’s initial motivation. The fact that she miscarried the baby before her execution is immaterial – she was convinced, against all reason, that they would’ve executed her even if she’d still been pregnant.

And then there’s this other thing – not so much an error as a mind-boggling omission. Seventeenth-century Massachusetts Protagonist never thinks about her (Christian) God. Never prays to Him. Is never shown jettisoning her faith in light of the cruelty being imposed on her by her own religion and justice system. This makes no sense – and really, the whole thing would be more affecting if she did go through the faith wringer in this chapter or the next one. But nothing of the sort occurs.

For that matter, almost no one in the novel ever mentions God or Jesus (even in the too-common meaningless interjection form). Apparently the only real supernatural powers in this world are ancient Sumerian demons and their absentee overlord god, Anu (infodump, pp. 31-32). And I’m not really comfortable with that, personally. But in addition, the response of the characters in the novel who learn of this seems to be, “Oh. That explains everything!” Or something of the sort. Nobody, it seems, has ever been to Sunday school, or had to struggle with such a direct contradiction of their traditional faith. It’s incomprehensible. This issue needs to be given a lot more thought, and dealt with directly. It’s a novel with a demon in it, after all. That ought to loom a bit larger than it does.

Next, the name thing. For the first fifty-one pages, Protagonist is consistently referred to by her original name – Susannah Layhem. At the opening of Chapter Nine, she’s renamed herself Maliha Crayne – a decision that took place some time after Chapter Eight: a decision already accomplished, and thus tensionless and relieved of any particular narrative significance, despite a fairly lengthy (action-free) pause to describe her current circumstances. I think the multiple time frame shifts of the preceding chapters have a lot to do with why this important change falls flat, but more on that in a moment.

Several chapters later in the book, it’s revealed, indirectly, that her current public name is Marsha Winters. Various people call her Ms. Winters before one finally mentions the whole thing. Even though, back in Chapter Nine, it was revealed that she was earning a nice living writing popular trashy crime novels, this pen name / “real name” is not mentioned at that point. This is needlessly confusing (though at least she never thinks of herself as Marsha).

In addition, if she never uses this Maliha Crayne name, why did she bother to adopt it at all? And stating that she felt she needed to change her name isn’t the same as showing why it was so important to her. This whole name change concept needs rethinking, or a better portrayal. I know the symbolism of changing one’s name is powerful, but it isn’t shown powerfully, and the addition of the Winters name dilutes whatever effect it might have had. But at the very least, put something about the Winters name in the same scene as the reveal about her novel-writing, instead of playing all coy with it, please.

The fact-checking and names problems are perhaps not the major issues that the number of words I’ve just spent on them might suggest; they are, however, symptomatic of the larger problem with the novel, which is a fundamental lack of coherence.

The book just doesn’t seem to know what kind of book it is. Most of the time, after page 51, it seems like it’s being a techno-thriller; at other points, it has definite overtones of a semi-humorous caper story. Early on, there are strong elements of supernatural horror / redemption story, but these pretty much vanish, aside from technical details, after page 51. Starting on page 55, Maliha is being stalked by a really nasty and unnamed guy, so maybe it’s actually a crime novel. There’s some romance mixed in, too, which doesn’t jell particularly well with all the other elements.

Oh, and there’s a quest – if Maliha can acquire the Tablet of the Overlord and the seven shards of the Lens to read it with, she’ll probably be able to destroy her personal demon (Rabishu) and his six siblings. In fact, she does acquire the Tablet – in a flashback. And she finds one of the shards – in the course of a minor side plot. What’s up with that? Why the focus on the would-be techno overlord / terrorist, instead of the big quest? Of course, there is her ongoing quest also – under the escape clause in her contract, she needs to save as many lives as she can (why taking more lives in the life-saving process doesn’t affect the outcome is not discussed) in order to escape eternal torment.

In fact, there’s just too much going on here. A lot if it is really interesting stuff, actually, but it just doesn’t add up to a coherent narrative.

Part of the problem is the flashbacks – I’ve mentioned those already. The novel zig-zags through time at intervals that make very little sense to me. Not only are there flashbacks to crucial moments in Maliha’s progress from assassin to ex-assassin (plus the one about getting the Tablet), but each of her good buddies gets his own flashback showing exactly how they met – even though the narrative already briefly explained that, sometimes many pages before the flashback. In fact the only one who doesn’t get one is her best girlfriend; what’s up with that? Anyway, this zig-zagging only exacerbates the problem of figuring out what kind of story this is supposed to be.

Now, there are some good, powerful scenes in this novel, especially in the first fifty pages. There are also events that make no sense at all (how, exactly, did she sneak onto the plane sitting on the remote runway in broad daylight?). There are random things that annoy the heck out of this particular reader (she drives a McLaren F1? Seriously? Including on trips to break into two different corporate HQs?). But with some judicious pruning and alteration of plot lines – and I have to recommend playing up the quest at the expense of the the techno-thriller plot, because it’s a lot more central to the character’s purpose in life – the pretty good book that’s in here could have been liberated, if someone had actually edited it.

I’m not sure it would be all that much to my taste even then, but it wouldn’t be such an almighty trial for me to get through. The average Clive Cussler novel isn’t much more believable, in a lot of ways, but the man does know how to plot and I can read his books without repeatedly going, “What? No, that makes no sense. We’re going where now?”

I mean, I know this book is not meant to be Great Literature. But in its present state it isn’t even a “good read.”

I could offer some more remarks on structural elements, not to mention the flat characters, but this review is long enough already.
Profile Image for Cym Lowell.
Author 2 books23 followers
January 31, 2010
Imagine this: You are pregnant with your first child, homing with your husband and your fascination with herbal medicines. In the middle of the night, religious zealots drag you from your bed and throw you in a cold, rancid jail cell where you are beaten. Your husband stands by. The baby girl, who you would have named Constanta, is born in the squalor of the floor with your own hands. The zealots burn you at the stake as your husband passively watches along with the rest of the community, hurling epithets against the witch that you are supposed to be (accused by a disappointed suitor for your husband).

And then . . . you are extracted from the fire by someone who offers you eternal life. In exchange, you must do his bidding as an assassin with superhuman powers. The dead Susannah becomes the Ageless Maliha. After some 300 years, she thirsts for the love of her child and more to life than being a killing machine. She rebels and begins finding the keys for undoing the demon and his cohorts. The demon offers a way out as a mortal human, which requires that Maliha balance her evil deeds with good. In her day job, Maliha is a popular fiction writer. Sound familiar?

Dark Time: Mortal Path is a great adventure, taking the reader all over the world, back and forth across the millennia. Dakota Banks has crafted the beginning of a series of stories. When the pages stop turning, too soon for sure, I wanted to keep on turning to see how Maliha continues her quest for survival as a human, achievement of good, and whether her new romance has traction beyond passionate encounter. A fine read by an excellent writer with a fertile mind, and a great future.
Profile Image for Jim.
Author 7 books2,089 followers
July 6, 2016
What started out as a fairly nifty idea was then ruined by cliché after cliché. As the book developed, so did the plot holes. I'm being generous giving it 2 stars because younger readers might enjoy it. There is a lot of action. Unfortunately, most of it seems to have been cribbed out of other bad action novels.

I didn't mind the time jumps, which I noticed some others complained about. Because of how they are done (our heroine is supposed to be remembering as she meditates or sleep) they are far too serendipitous, but I could forgive that. Otherwise, the mechanics of the writing weren't bad. The dialog was pretty good.

The plot just got worse & worse, though. By the 2/3 mark, I was gritting my teeth. About 3/4 of the way through the book, I just put it down. Hopefully the next book will be better for those who choose to subject themselves to it. I won't.

Profile Image for Katie(babs).
1,867 reviews530 followers
August 9, 2009
The year is 1692 and Susannah Layhem is expecting her first child with her husband Nathan. The Layhems live in Trenton Village of Essex County. Susannah is worried as any new mother can be. But she is happy as a wife and healer. Late one night some men from the village come and arrest Susannah for witchcraft. She is condemned as a witch based on the testimony of Alice, a young woman of the village who desires Nathan. Because Susannah is placed in a dank, dark jail cell and not taken care of, she goes into labor and her baby is stillborn. She is then burned alive.

As Susannah is dying a demon comes to her. He is Rabishu, a demon who serves Nergal, Lord of the Underworld. Rabishu offers her immortality as long as she obeys him in everything he asks of her. Susannah quickly makes the decision to give up her soul to Rabishu for revenge against those who murdered her and her precious baby. Her first act is to kill Alice, which she does gladly. For the next five hundred years Susannah is known as the Black Ghost, an immortal assassin. Susannah has incredible powers at her disposal and is eternally young. But after centuries of taking lives, Susannah’s conscience is getting to her. She is not sure how much longer she can keep killing.

When Rabishu orders her to kill a baby, it is too much and Susannah defies him. Rabishu is ready to bring Susannah to the Underworld as punishment where she will suffer for all eternity. But Susannah bargains with Rabishu. He will let Susannah change her course. She now must save as many lives as she has taken. She is no longer as immortal as she once was. The twist is that every time she saves a life, she will age. Susannah will become mortal once again but on the positive side she will still have some of her remaining powers. If she dies before this balance is achieved, she will be Rabishu’s plaything as long as he exists. Susannah has no choice and accepts. She will now be known as Maliha Crayne.

Maliha becomes a superhero of sorts. She has a new identity as a well off author of pulp crime novels. This is the perfect cover for her because she can investigate those who are evil and out to do wrong. Maliha picks and chooses who she wants to give payback to. Gone is the naïve and simple Susannah. Now sixty years later after striking her new bargain with Rabishu, Maliha will figure out a way to outwit the demon that has given her no choice but to make others pay so she can escape her own unfortunate destiny.

Dark Time: Mortal Path Book One by is a dark supernatural thriller. The first five chapters or so had me really engaged with the character of Susannah who was wronged in so many ways. She goes from and a defenseless and innocent woman of her time whose only true happiness is a home with a husband and children, to a woman who becomes a soulless wanderer with no place. She is having a tough time trying to outwit a being more powerful than she could ever hope to be. It was interesting to see the change in Susannah’s personality from when we first meet her to when she has become as an assassin to a demon and then transformed into a dark savior of sorts.

After Susannah becomes Maliha, part mortal superhero extraordinare, I found myself growing bored. I preferred the assassin over the savior. Maliha’s personality changed into a spoiled woman who comes across as whiny and bitchy. And it is all about the vengeance to Maliha. I was to the point where I wanted to tell her to get over it. You’re screwed whichever way you spin it, so enjoy your carefree half-mortal existence on Earth for the time being Yes, it was horrible how she died and the way she was betrayed when she was mortal, but Maliha’s transformation into an anti-heroine with no real redeeming qualities does not make for fun reading. Her views and experiences were not as thrilling as I thought they would be. Even as she decides to save lives, in order to save her soul, she has this chip on her shoulder as if she deserves to be the ultimate winner, just because she says so.

Whereas I had a connection with Susannah, I couldn’t find any emotional connection to her new identity of Maliha. The middle section of Dark Time skips along, and not in a good way, even as Maliha pin points her next victim to ruin. Dakota was trying to show Maliha as a person who is essentially lost with no real hope. And because of this, Maliha becomes too cold and calculating. I really couldn’t get a fix on what Maliha’s motivation was. The first part quarter of the novel felt so different from the rest of the book. I am not sure if Dakota began writing Dark Time with a certain direction in mind and then decided to venture into another direction altogether. Because of this, I just couldn’t wrap my mind around the story and what Maliha goes through.

Other than being shown what great things Maliha can do and a few appearances from various supernatural baddies, there were no real memorable fights or action. There was a great deal of explanation and talking about how Maliha was going to accomplish the things she planned to do, but again it just didn’t hold my interest.

Dark Time simply wasn’t the read for me. It was an adequately written book, with a great beginning but overall something was missing to keep me from recommending it to others. If I had to explain Dark Time in one word, that would be “meh”.
48 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2012
This story had a very interesting premise--a supernatural heroine with a dash of action and mystery--but the actual story itself is, well, a mess. There's medical malpractice, drug smuggling, corporate money laundering, and of course, a sinister plan to destroy the United States. Like I said, a mess.
The book starts out with Susana, a pregnant wife in 1697, being wrongfully accused of witchcraft and burnt at the stake. A heart-wrenching tragedy which ends with Susana making a deal with a demon called Rabishu to be his assassin in exchange for eternal life as one of the Ageless. This goes on for a while until Susana, unable to kill innocents anymore, breaks the contract. She has to compensate for all the lives she has taken by saving as many or she ends up in hell forever.
Then we jump back to modern times where Susana is Maliha, a rich, pulp-fiction author moonlighting as a Lara Croft/James Bond/Catwoman-esqe character to do... I'm not really sure what. Given her past, and her dire situation, you'd expect Maliha to spend each second of her time saving a life. But no, she spends her time being rich, attending parties in skimpy dresses and worrying about a blind date she could have fallen in love with. You know, the usual chick-lit fare.
The plot is all over the place and makes significant time leaps. Maliha is not as well rounded as a 300-year old demon assassin could be. Pretty much all the males around her, from the bad guys to the Vietnam vet PI she has a casual relationship with, is madly in lust with her. She has a circle of friends, similarly badly developed and ill-fitted into the overall plot, whose purpose is to provide chick-lit banter and show the reader that Maliha is not a shut-in. The plot is filled with factual errors and flaws terribly. Some plot elements are utterly ridiculous (like a sinister plot to kill millions by staging blackouts).
Profile Image for Melliane.
2,073 reviews350 followers
August 10, 2022
Mon avis en Français

My English review

I had the first three volumes in my TBR pile for a very long time. I finally got into the first one, but I have to say it wasn’t what I expected.

Three hundred years ago, Maliha was accused of being a witch and was burned at the stake. But as the flames consume her, a demon offers her an alternative: he will allow her to survive and become immortal if she agrees to become his designated killer. Without hesitation, our heroine accepts. But after 300 years, Maliha is fed up, she who was a healer has changed and she wants to stop. The only way to escape is to save as many lives as she has killed. Not easy, yet our heroine is very determined.

I had a hard time getting hooked on the story and the characters and while I finished the novel, I almost gave up on it several times. As I said, this was not the story I was expecting and I was rather disappointed. I don’t think I’ll read the sequel.
Profile Image for All Things Urban Fantasy.
1,921 reviews621 followers
October 14, 2009
Courtesy of All Things Urban Fantasy

What do an innocent woman sentenced to burn for practicing witchcraft and a pulp crime novelist moonlighting as an former assassin who now saves the lives she used to take have in common? The answer: nothing. And therein lies the problem with this book.

The main character starts out this book as Susannah Layhem, dutiful 17th century wife, herbalist healer, and expectant mother without a care in the world except how to fend off her overly amorous husband during the increasingly uncomfortable end of her pregnancy. When she is falsely accused of being a witch, abandoned by those closest to her, and then suffers a miscarriage due to maltreatment and harsh imprisonment, she willingly accepts a ‘deal with the devil’ (aka the Sumerian demon Rabishu) to escape a fiery death. She becomes an Ageless assassin, killing indiscriminately at Rabishu’s bidding. Fast forward about 300 years and Susannah wants out. She finds in the fine print of her demon contract a possible way out ; if she can save as many lives as she took she will be free. She starts her life over as Maliha (pronounced Ma-lie-hah), a 007 rip-off with all the expensive toys and boys a girl could want.

But Maliha is nothing like Susannah. When we first meet her, she is busy working on her tan a trying to think of new ways to pose in her bikini to attract a hottie a few feet away. She is unfortunately forced to ‘pose and run’ as a member of her network of saved lives calls in with a murder case for her to investigate. The rest of the book treats us to a confusing mash up of medical malpractice, drug smuggling, and corporate espionage . Sprinkled throughout all this, Maliha goes on a blind date, gossips with the boy crazy friend who set her up, works on her next hit book entitled, A Lust for Murder, and worries way too much that she might be in love with her blind date (while still engaging in casual sex with a local P. I.). In short she does everything except what you would expect: anguish over the insurmountable task in front of her. She is not the dark, brooding character she should be, given her history. She is not wracked with guilt over her past crimes nor is she consumed with desire to even the scales. She almost seems put out when she gets called away from all her fun.

What!?! Did I pick up the wrong book? Was there a mix-up at the printer? This was supposed to be an Urban Fantasy, not a Chic-Lit Mystery. And yet once Susannah becomes Maliha, the paranormal elements seem to die with her. There are a few passing references to the demon bargain, and a few mentions to Summerian mythology. But that’s about it.

This should have been a great book. The premise is one of the best I’ve heard in a long time. One I could easily imagine supporting a long series, and yet sadly, the author largely ignored the great opportunity she created and instead produced a generic thriller weighed down with chic-lit elements and bad dialog:

“What money? By now all records of your transaction have been wiped out. No one can follow the money trail because there isn’t any. What blackmail? The Black Ghost was never here.”

A warning is also appropriate because there is a sexual predator in this book and the author includes chapters from his perspective. One that includes him assaulting a woman while she sleeps, his running thoughts leading up to and throughout the assault , and his future plans of brutally raping her. I cannot emphasize enough how ugly this part was to read.

The bottom line is this: with Susannah, I cared; with Maliha, I didn’t.

Sexual Content: A couple brief sex scenes. A chapter written from the perspective of a sexual predator.
Profile Image for Lillie Roberts.
Author 11 books29 followers
September 24, 2009
As our story opens, Susannah Layhem of Massachusetts (1692) is a healer and works with herbs, but then she's accused of being a witch and sentenced to burn. She has done nothing but bring good health to her community and for it, she is going to gain death and so will the infant she's carrying. The night before her burning, she gives birth in the dirt and squalor of her cell to her stillborn infant daughter; her body too abused and an damaged to continue supporting the life growing within her. She's dragged crying from her cell and placed upon the wooden mound; set aflame. Just as she takes her last breath and utters her final curse, she's snatched from her fiery death, and transported to another place and time. A voice offers her a choice, go back to the flames or becoming his slave. She chooses life and the cursed existence to the demon, Rabishu. She becomes Ageless, continuous life for the rest of eternity.

For centuries, the death that she brings does not burden her consciousness, but when she's told to kill an infant girl, much like her own long dead daughter, Constanta, she has to draw the line. She cannot bring herself to harm the infant who hasn't even had a chance to live. It's the beginnings of her conscious self re-asserting. Over the years, she has come to the conclusion that she can no longer be the demon's killing machine.

After many years of searching for the answer to her release from the Rabishu's service, he reveals that there is an escape clause to her contract. But to escape, she has to set the scales straight, for every life she has taken, one must be saved. She will become mortal again, but with a longer lifespan. She can be wounded, but she'll heal faster. For every life she saves, she'll age faster. And if she is killed, she becomes Rabishu plaything for an eternity of hell. She'll have to re-invent herself over and over again to hide her extended life.

In this incarnation, she becomes Maliha Crayne (alter ego: Marsha Winter, thriller author) and she still trying to balance the scales.

Dark Time: Mortal Path Book One by Dakota Banks was a fast paced thriller/urban fantasy that jumps from the days of early Massachusetts to the present then back again throughout our heroine's existence, showing the trials and tribulations she must endure if she wants to regain her soul from the enslaving demon. When Rabishu released her from his service, he etched the scales of justice into her skin, and with each life earned, the justice scales losses a tiny figure as it marches across her skin with fiery footsteps to create balance. She soon discovers Rabishu doesn't play fair, his assassins will kill her if they're able. But, Rabishu has also trained her well, she is quick and powerful, a force to be reckoned with. She can bring death to even the Ageless. So begins her new life to fight against the wrongs of the world; to the weak, the young, and the powerless, she is their champion. To the cruel, evil, and bloodthirsty, she is their worst nightmare. There are several powerful players in this novel; long time friends, Yanmeng and Amaro, provide a supportive extended family for her as well as back up. New love interest, Jake, may be what he appears to be, DEA agent, or maybe he's something else altogether. If you enjoy a thrilling urban fantasy as much as I do and if you like a kick-ass heroine, pick up this book, an excellent read well worth you time. I loved the qualities that Mahila embraces as she tries to regain her soul. It's a quick read moving through time as Mahila works to right the wrongs. The story leaves me begging for more with one question remaining, who or what is Jake Stackman?
Profile Image for Kelly.
616 reviews165 followers
July 26, 2011
Dark Time by Dakota Banks is a technothriller disguised as an urban fantasy. For it to reach its ideal audience, it should instead be titled something like “The Anu Tablet” and have an ominously lit historic building on its cover.

The story begins in colonial times, when Susannah Layhem is accused of witchcraft and sentenced to burn at the stake. (Never mind that nobody was burned as a witch in the American colonies; they were hanged.) As she is dying, she is whisked away to a strange underworld and approached by a Sumerian demon, Rabishu. He offers to save her and make her immortal — if she agrees to become an assassin in his service. She accepts. Three hundred years later, Susannah has a moral crisis and decides she wants out of the killing business. There’s only one loophole in her contract: she will be free of Rabishu, and granted entrance to paradise by the god Anu, if she saves as many lives as she has taken. She loses her immortality but keeps a few special abilities. Susannah changes her name to Maliha and begins her new life.

Maliha is gorgeous. She’s great at martial arts. She has tons of money, a cutting-edge car, an arsenal of deadly weapons, and a high-tech set of booby traps protecting her front door (though two people manage to break in during the book). What she doesn’t have, unfortunately, is a personality. I never really felt like I knew Maliha. She holds everybody at arm’s length, including the reader. She has a romantic subplot, but it too is lacking. She barely knows the guy, their chemistry doesn’t come across to the reader, and yet it’s “love.”

The plot involves Maliha investigating two corrupt companies, one of which may have murdered two computer programmers. Maliha is also looking for some artifacts that will help her destroy Rabishu and his fellow demons. There’s plenty of action, but for me it just climbed too far over the top in a cheesy-action-movie sort of way.

Meanwhile, the fantasy elements are barely present, and not completely thought out. For example, Maliha kills lots of people (including some possible innocents) while on her “lifesaving missions,” yet these deaths don’t seem to count against her.

If you like technothrillers with a dash of fantasy, you may like this; but if you’re predominantly a fantasy reader, there’s not much to grab you here. The writing is adequate and the plot is filled with action, but I wanted more characterization and better use of the fantasy elements.

Written for FantasyLiterature.com
Profile Image for Scotwithone_t.
18 reviews
March 18, 2010
I loved the premise of this book, and I loved the main character for the first few chapters. But then the author pulls the rug out form under the story and skips ahead 300 years in the character's life, with little to no transition. I understand the timefram jump, but I would have liked to see a few more assassinations of supposed innocent people, and her struggle against guilt to justify her choice to retire from being a life-take and become a life-saver.

Even with the jarring transition, the book still had potential. We have this pseudo-immortal woman who is on a mission to save as many lives as she took to balance out the scales of morality, or karma, or whatever the stupid tattoo is supposed to be a metaphor for. She could have used her powers and speed to stop all kinds of bad-guys from hurting people, terrorists, thugs, etc. But no. She focuses all her effort of saving one person in this convoluted scheme that gives her an excuse to be a detective. That's where this novel just falls on its face. I think the author actually changed her mind as to what kind of book she wanted to write when she was 1/3 of the way into it. To have the main character go to such great lengths and put herself in such dangerous situations (remember, if she dies, she doesn't just die... she spends eternity being tortured by the demon)... all for ONE POTENTIAL SAVED LIFE. Ridiculous and unbelievable.

I'm being harsh, only because I wanted to like this book so much. Like I said, the premise is fantastic and original, but the execution was half-baked and completely inappropriate. There will obviously be a sequel based on the way it ended, and I'll be reluctant to read it. I suppose I will though, since idea of the book is too good to not give a second chance.
Profile Image for Natasha.
289 reviews99 followers
October 20, 2009
I really enjoyed this book. This is book 1 in the Mortal Path series by Dakota Banks.
The beginning was pretty emotional, it drew me in. I really like how Banks writes. I was drawn in from the first few chapters. In the first 50 pages or so there was only brief conversations with others. She mostly talked of her life and back round. But it ended up working well for the book. I like how it goes from past to present ever few chapters to help you focus on what is happened in the present, and give you a better understanding of her life and the current characters in the story. About 100 paces before half way into the book was where I was hooked, from there on I couldn't put it down. It really has a great story and has interesting, well thought out characters. Banks shows us in her book that she is very well diverse in culture, history and religion. I love how she describes her fight scenes, I feel like I'm watching a movie because I can picture ever little detail.
As for the characters, I was impressed. She made a great back round for each personally and in both recent and past chapters she brings them into the story perfectly. Maliha Crayne is a cultural, sexy killing machine, but she is sick of the purpose her life has now and fights to change it. It's almost an impossible task but she'll die trying. She's over 300 years old(currently) and has struck another deal of her life, but it's harder than she thought. She fights many times and the action is great. I really like her character and cannot wait to read more of her in the future. I will be buying the second installment as soon as it hits the shelves. I recommend this book!

Profile Image for Ithlilian.
1,737 reviews25 followers
May 21, 2011
Dark Time starts out with a woman being hanged for witchcraft. She makes a deal with a demon to return to life in exchange for killing on demand. I loved every page of that section, then the main character decides to redeem herself by saving lives and we skip ahead 300 years. We are thrown in the middle of the life of a character that isn't at all familiar. There appears to be some sort of investigating going on, but the reason why the main character is interested in the case isn't that clear. I felt like the time jump created a huge disconnect. The main character was completely different, and so I didn't get a chance to sympathize with her or connect at all. The pace was a bit off to me as well, the wording felt fragmented and choppy. The flashbacks to how she met her friends/lovers/coworkers wasn't very entertaining, and there was no transition into it. There wasn't much life saving going on either. Instead of trying to redeem herself, which she specifically stated she wanted to do, she decided to sleep with random people, fall in love with someone after meeting them once, and go around threatening and killing a few baddies. The beginning of this book and the second part are completely different, and the second part just wasn't enjoyable to me, unfortunately. I think this had potential but fell way short of the expectations set with the opening chapters.
400 reviews47 followers
January 20, 2019
I enjoyed reading this book, so I have to give it three stars in spite of serious problems that many of the one- and two-star reviews bring up. For one thing, the novel desperately needs editing, not for grammar (the writing is part of why I enjoyed it) but for story structure. So here comes your friendly editorial consultant to the rescue.

First of all, the time leaps from chapter to chapter simply don't work. The effect is to make the whole book seem disjointed and chaotic. Even though some of the flashbacks are motivated by events in the preceding chapter, we're forced to zigzag this way and that on the timeline. The best solution is simply to put all chapters in strictly chronological order, with the happy result that we can now trace the main character's evolution as a person.

As the book stands, we flip from (1) Susannah Layhem, a 17th-century wife and mother-to-be wrongly condemned to death and saved by the demon Rabishu to be his "Ageless" killer slave, through (2) captivating scenes in 1920-1955 (but out of order) in which she develops qualms about killing and gets a new deal, to (3) the very different 21st-century woman who calls herself Maliha Crayne (pronounced ma-LIE-ha) and writes trashy novels as Marsha Winters while leading a team to save lives as the Black Ghost, much like a comic-book hero.

If we put everything in chronological order, though, in the first scene after (1) we'll see that Rabishu sends her to a remote location in Asia to meet "Grandfather" (who turns out to be important) and to learn martial arts. After that, a few passing references to the 1800s should be collected here and expanded into a full chapter that (a) shows her using her wealth and free time to become highly educated and appreciate the arts but also (b) fills a major gap: she seems to have no other character development. How does she feel about killing Rabishu's often innocent targets through the 18th and 19th centuries? Her first assignment, on her day of execution in 1692, was to kill her accuser, and she did it with gusto. The next hint we get of what kind of person she has become is the Loon Lake scene in 1920 where she saves a newborn (after killing the father). I need to understand her better.

And how does she evolve from Susannah the puritan into Maliha, who uses her body liberally to attract men for sex without commitment? As the book stands, we just flip from one to the other.

After she gets the new deal from Rabishu--mortal again, save as many lives as she's taken and she'll go to some Sumerian paradise; if she dies first, she's his torture toy for eternity--the next chapters in the suggested chronological order will show her saving individual lives and thereby recruiting her circle of faithful friends for the zippy present-day adventure part of the book, which will then proceed without those flashbacks to interrupt the fun.

As Text Addict and other reviewers point out, the Salem (Mass.) witch trials of 1692 condemned women to be hanged, not burned alive. I understand the author's desire for the drama of Susannah, newly Ageless and impervious to flames, pulling her accuser into the fire; but the choice has to be between (a) figuring a way to combine that first demonic assignment with a hanging and (b) changing the venue to Germany or Denmark, as even in Britain hanging was the rule and only a few of the condemned were burned. And wherever she is, she can't be condemned to death while pregnant, so the order of the stillbirth and the trial must be reversed.
Profile Image for Wendy.
1,098 reviews30 followers
December 28, 2014
Dakota Banks' Dark Time has the flavor of an action thriller urban fantasy novel. There's quite a lot packed into the book as the author sets up the characters and their history and gets the story moving. Susannah is a healer during the 17th century. Accused of witchcraft, she is burned at the stake. An ancient Sumerian demon offers her a deal: immortality with conditions or death by fire. Susannah chooses life at the cost of being bound to the demon and required to do his evil biding. For three hundred years, Susannah kills for Rabishu. She is a master at her art with her supernatural strength and speed and well honed skills. Then, under the weight of the lives she's taken, Susannah rebels against her master, setting in motion a chain of events that could result in her freedom. She must balance the lives she has taken with lives she saves. The catch? She loses her immortality, aging with each life she saves. If she fails, she will forever be the demon's slave.

Susannah becomes Maliha Crayne as she sets out on her new journey. She is tasked with finding the one responsible for the death of two coders. Her investigation opens a can of worms that threatens to destroy more than just the lives already taken. Aided by her trusted friends, Maliha goes on the hunt.

This was quite an interesting novel. I liked it in many ways. The historical aspects and ties to Sumerian legends particularly intrigued me. And I really liked the way the author developed Susannah/Maliha's character. She had the typical earmarks of an urban fantasy heroine--tough and independent--but there is something else to her. As young looking, agile and into high tech as she may be, Maliha comes across as a much older soul. It's easy to believe she is 300+ years old. And I really liked that about her. I appreciated the author taking Maliha there. More importantly, I liked that she was a hot chocolate drinker.

The author spends a lot of time setting up Maliha's background and overall goal to regain her freedom. Very little time is spent exploring the part of Maliha's life in which she establishes her new identity as a crime writer before jumping into her current investigation. The transition is very quick from past to present. I didn't mind so much since I found the background information the most interesting, including the flashbacks to Maliha's past, but it did leave me scratching my head initially. I will be curious to see what direction the author takes in future books of the series.

Overall, I enjoyed Dark Time. The ending is a bit of a cliff hanger, and it was hard not to rush out and buy the next book in the series just so I could find out how . . . well, find out what happens next. I do plan to read more in the series, but I really need to get back to my book club selection for the time being.
Profile Image for Donna.
167 reviews24 followers
October 7, 2009
I guest reviewed this book over at Enchanted by Books:

In Dark Time, Dakota Banks gets down to the nitty-gritty. She holds nothing back in the details whether it’s a city Maliha is working in, out on an assassin’s mission or reliving Mahilia’s burning at the stake as an accused witch. This is not a novel that paints a pretty picture but one that is full of the very real complicated feelings of a woman trying to redeem herself for her past sins and working towards ensuring a better future for all of mankind – hopefully without the presence of the demons such as Rabishu and his brethren. While she is trying to redeem herself, she questions whether she will ever have some semblance of normalcy such as having a family. She wonders if this is something she should even allow herself to dream about, especially with DEA agent Jake Stackman.

I liked the way the novel went back and forth between time periods in Maliha’s life. This helped give me a good understanding to how Maliha went from a cold-hearted assassin to the moment when her heart started to warm up again. The flashbacks helped solidify Maliha’s relationships with the secondary characters, made you feel closer to her and her friends while intensifying the feelings of disgust and dislike for the Rabishu and the other vile characters in the story. They also show how Maliha became the self-confident, strong woman she is in present day, who is self assured in her own skills to take care of herself and those around her.

Dark Time was an intense dark read for me, which I enjoyed very much since it's my favorite kind of reading. It reads like a paranormal Mission Impossible assignment, at least that’s how I kept seeing things in my mind’s eye because of the detailed descriptions of the weaponry and gadgets used by Maliha and other characters throughout the story.

The romance in this book takes a backseat to action, though it’s not without a few passionate moments. I liked that the villains are truly evil because this means no easy way out for the good guys and it thickens the plot. But be warned, this book ends with a cliffhanger. So if you’re looking for a fast paced read that is very dark in nature, that makes no apologies, has a kick-ass heroine and a solid storyline, then this book is for you. I’ll be on the lookout for Sacrifice, the second book in the Mortal Path series. Due to the cliffhanger, I HAVE TO KNOW what happens next!
Profile Image for Kelley.
300 reviews24 followers
November 19, 2025
Courtesy of Amazon

Wow! I loved Dark Time and am very impatient for book two is this fascinating and refreshingly original series.

Over three hundred years ago, Susannah Layhem was wrongly accused of witchcraft and burned at the stake. Just as she is facing her last moments of life before giving in to the flames, she is whisked to safety and offered a trade. If she agrees to sell her soul to the demon Rabishu, he will save her life. But is it worth it?

Now, Susannah is Maliha Crayne, assassin for Rabishu to advance his malevolent plans. However, after a few hundred years, Maliha has grown weary of the life of a killer and longs to be free. She has one chance… Returned to mortal life, if she can save as many lives as she has taken over the years, before dying, her soul will be free. If not? She is subject to an eternity of the most horrendous of tortured that can be inflicted by Rabishu.

Dark Time is a complex novel bound to grab you by the throat and not let go until the final page is turned. We find passion, danger, intrigue, seemingly impossible quests, even a slight touch of romance between the covers of Dark Time. While Maliha’s story may seem superficial at times, there is depth to her plight that mesmerizes. We also have a complicated subplot that is introduced here and guaranteed to unfold over future books in the series. Rabishu is vicious, cruel, and out for himself, determined to stop Maliha from finishing her personal mission. The world presented here is brilliantly portrayed and Dakota Banks does a masterful job with her descriptive imagery. It’s hard to believe this is her first novel.

Maliha is a fascinating woman who seems to have everything her heart can desire, yet she is lacking one thing, ownership of her soul. After centuries of living free of the restraints of her conscience, she finally realizes she is miserable. Guilt consumes her for the wicked deeds in her past and her only goal now is to make amends for all the destruction she wrought and finally be free. She can come across as selfish at times, but then we are reminded that she really does have a big heart, as evidenced by her relationships to the men and women dedicated to helping her with her quest. Those bonds go deep and I enjoyed seeing these people through Maliha’s eyes.

I could not put Dark Time down and eagerly anticipate book two, Sacrifice, due out in June 2010.

© Kelley A. Hartsell, November 2009. All rights reserved.
Profile Image for Yin Chien.
182 reviews115 followers
October 30, 2010

This is my first attempt at reading an urban-fantasy novel, and I'll have to say it's awesome! Dark Time is an action-packed novel which is full of danger and intrigue, in which Maliha strives to achieve a goal that seems impossible to reach. Please be aware that there are some adult contents in this novel.

Maliha is a super-girl. She heals inordinately fast, has looks that kill, is filthy rich, highly-skilled at martial arts and runs at a high speed. Plus, her best friends are a pro-hacker and a remote-viewer. Maliha looks as if she is perfect, and I was never worried about her, not even once. Even though she seems like she has everything anyone can ask for, she is actually lacking of one thing : her soul.

There are a lot of action scenes in this book, which I loved reading. Don't think Maliha is always unwounded, though. She is always hurt, but she heals faster than ordinary people.

Maliha has two best friends : Amaro and Yanmeng. They are loyal to Maliha and will do all they can to help her. Their friendship is true and long-lasting. I think it's a good thing that the author "gives" her two best friends. It must be good for her to have someone to trust after 300 years of solitude.

As Maliha tries to uncover the mysterious death of two computer experts, she uncovers a political scheme which leads to a battle with her with her nemesis/stalker, face-to-face.

Maliha's love interest, DEA agent Jake has a secret concerning his past. He did something that seemed impossible for normal people at the end of the story. Will we find out more about him in the next novel?

Dark Time is a well-written urban fantasy novel which combines a thrilling plot and an interesting concept, nicely blended in both historical and modern backgrounds. The ending is quite surprising, so I hope more will be revealed later. I thoroughly enjoyed Dark Time and I simply can't wait to read the next book in the series!
Profile Image for Sean.
1,003 reviews22 followers
March 29, 2024
Mortal Path series hy Dakota Banks is an urban fantasy series that has three books in it and has huge gaps due to the series not being finished.

It starts with a scene from a long time ago in a small village where a young lady is treated badly and they tried to kill her. It then goes on to her current life in the current timeframe and her trying to love with her past.

This is about revenge and redemption and also about finding your way through the darkest times. The characters name changes as she would no longer be Susannah who was betrayed in the colonies but would become something different and her new name shows her new abilities as well as her new job in life.

I do like that they show a very different side of life that isn't all roses. It shows about jealousy and about what happens with unfounded accusations. This leads to a lot of desperate and evil actions.

What I found the most intriguing it gives you an amazing story showing how Susannah became disillusioned with her life and wanted to be something other than what Rabishu the demon son made her into.

Rabishu is the won of Nergral who is absent from the world and he is creating ageless as they are called who are assassins and do whatever they are asked generally without thinking.

Maliha or the ageless once known as Susannah and was a Hitman for a demon. She lost her way and this story is her finding her way back. Trying to balance the scales as you may say which after over three centuries of doing bad for demons it's not as easy to balance them. Love the redemption arc of this book and the entire series.

The ageless are an amazing magical creation of the demons. They don't age while on the job but can be killed, and they have super speed as well. It's amazing to see this creation and what they can do. There are other gifts that they could have as well but that are more individual as well.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
6,575 reviews237 followers
July 26, 2009
Many, many centuries ago, Susannah was accused of witchcraft. She was ordered to be burned alive. Susannah was saved by an evil creature but for a price. In exchange for getting to keep her life, Susannah has to serve all of eternity as an assassin.

To present day. Susannah is no longer. She now calls herself Marsha Winters aka Maliha Crayne. By day Susannah goes by Marsha Winters, writer but by night she is Maliha, one deadly assassin. Susannah has killed more people than she can keep count. For the first couple of hundred years, the killings weren't so bad but now Maliha is tried and wants out of her deal.

There just might be a way for Maliha to get her wish. The only problem is that Maliha may no longer exist if she is to succeed. Come take a ride into both the depths of the underworld and mortal world as Maliha travels down the mortal path from New York all the way to China and Peru.

Dark Time is book one in this great new series by Dakota Banks. Dark Time is an explosive combination of James Cameron's Dark Angel and Xena, the Warrior Princess. It has all the great elements of being very dark, with a kick-ass heroine! I would recommend this book to sci-fi, paranormal, urban, or any other type of fan. Dark Time is a must read!

I would almost feel sorry for whomever gets on Maliha's bad side but they deserve it. Maliha could strike you down with just one look. Dakota Banks can bank on the fact that her books are going to go all the way to number one. The only thing wrong with this book is that I read it so fast that I have to wait till book two comes out.
Profile Image for Ami.
6,241 reviews489 followers
April 20, 2012
3.5 stars
Although this book had been on my peripheral for quite awhile (thanks to Goodreads's "Readers Also Enjoyed" section), but I didn't want to approach it before. Simply because of the cover. I mean, that woman has no head!! But I was always eager to look for series, so I decided to give this a try.

I was captivated from the earlier chapters. The idea of an ex-demon assassin, who decided to get out from her contract, and now must redeem herself by saving people (and she has timeline!) is simply unique. I never encounter such thing before.

Maliha (I LOVE that name!) is also not like any other heroine. I mean, she used to be Ageless, but now she is mortal. She bleeds (even if she still heals relatively faster) and she can die. Her power is unlike magic or being a vampire or shifter ... which is often a common theme.

There are a couple of flashback scenes in the middle -- which distract me. I learn to welcome it because it gives more nuance to Maliha and how she makes her current friends. However, it does put a dent in my enjoyment. Also, while I like the name Maliha, it is strange that Malina never really uses that name (except for us, readers). She, instead, uses Marsha Winters for others. Which is just weird.

The action near the end is quite good! The ending intriguing. I am going to give the next book a shot because I want to know what happens next with Maliha (or Marsha).
Profile Image for Angie.
1,396 reviews284 followers
July 7, 2015
Boy, this book was BORING. Okay, no, not exactly. But once Susannah becomes Maliha I struggled through the rest of the book and it felt as though it took an eternity to finish.

The first five chapters were quite interesting and captivating, and had the story continued on that trend I would’ve easily given it a four-star rating. As it is, the sudden jumps in the timeline and the unnecessary, pointless name changes of the MC gave me the idea that the author had several ideas for the plot and many names for the protagonist but couldn’t decide which to use, so she just threw all caution to the wind and used them all! The end result is a mash-up of several genres, badly sewn together to form a mediocre novel. A train wreck as a first book in a new series does not inspire me to read the rest of the books, sorry.

Also, apart from the many plot holes, I didn’t feel a thing for even ONE of the characters. All of them had the appeal of stale bread and I couldn’t care less about any one of them. Maliha pretending to be the ghost of a man’s dead wife in order to extract information from him? Absolutely ridiculous, not to mention juvenile.

My overall opinion of this book is that Dakota Banks is an author with lots of great ideas, but she needs an editing team to help her formulate those ideas into a narrative, void of tedious info dump, that wouldn’t put her readers to sleep.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
303 reviews11 followers
May 24, 2011
I found this book incredibly weird and boring at the same time. The main characters name changed so many times I had trouble keeping track of her. Susannah is a herbal healer in the new world around the times of the witch trials. She is accused of being a witch while pregnant and put on trial where she is condemned to die by fire. She delivers her baby the day before her execution but without help the baby dies. They burn her and then a demon offers her the deal of a lifetime revenge and immortality on its not all it’s cracked up to be. Hundreds of years later she is unhappy with herself and must do something about it so she goes back on her deal and has to save a life for every one she has taken before she dies. Ok well not a bad story line I thought. However the book skips around from time period to time period introducing all of the characters as we go letting you know how she met them. Which was totally annoying every time I was getting into the story this would happened and I’d be about to pull my hair. Plus she seems to just sleep around willy nilly with whomever I’m not sure I liked that. I found it hard to get a grip on the story with the time flow though and ended up not enjoying it and the ending what ending!
Profile Image for Angie.
334 reviews4 followers
May 8, 2012
I love this world. Susanna/Marsha/Maliah is an Ageless...she is owned by a demon and is his assassin. Her conscience has gotten the best of her and she no longer wants to be in the demons debt. In order to break her contract she must balance the scales but she doesnt know if she will be able to before her time runs out. She is now mortal and although she won't age as humans do, she will age at random rates every time she saves a life. She has three people who are really close to her: Hound...whom she has a working adn sexual relationship with, Yanmeng who although looks older is actually centuries younger, but she has a kinship with, and he is able to remotely view her, then there is Amaro who she has essentially raised since she rescued him and his sister Rosie from gangs when they were teenagers. She also has a girlfriend Randy who doens't know what she is and of course there is her blind date (courtesy of said girlfriend) Jake who is with the DEA. All through this she is rescuing girls from the highway, stopping madmen from controlling electricity, avoiding Ageless assassins and trying to get with Jake. The mystery is who is Jake because he isn't who we think he is. There are 5 or 6 books in the series and I'm anxious to see if she can save herself and others.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Traci Loya.
20 reviews2 followers
April 30, 2012
I won this series in a contest..I entered several blog contests specifically to win these books (became somewhat of a stalker/fangirl)and after much persistence and commitment to winning Dakota's swag bag, I finally won!!! Thanks Dakota, for the oppourtunity to win your books! Now a reveiw....I started reading Dark Time yesterday (Sunday) morning and could not put it down until late last night!!! From the reviews I had previously read, I knew this was gonna be a great read, but it was soo much better than I expected. Maliha is a strong, fierce kick-ass heroine. I really felt her pain in the first couple chapters and TOTALLY understood the burning rage she felt...(NO sympathy for Alice whatsoever). I really enjoyed the journey the book takes you on, very easy to follow and visualize in your minds eye. Not really a reviewer, just a reader, but I felt compelled to write this review to encourage other readers to come on the journey!!! Dakota really tells an amazing story and keeps you totally enthralled!!! I ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT!!!!! I would HIGHLY recommend this series to anyone/everyone!!
Now if you'll excuse me, book two calls...........
Profile Image for Andrea.
314 reviews17 followers
November 4, 2012
This is not quite a 5 star, but is more than a 4 star book and story. Excellent I must say. The lead character is very likable and you get to see her evolution from wide-eyed naive "bleeing heart" innocent who was a victim of her times, to emotionally numb cold assassin, and back full circle to a caring, thinking-of-others person -- yet with the skills and confidence of her assassin life. There are various snippets of her memories revealed throughout the book; some serve to reveal information about Maliha and some are for foreshadowing what is to come. My only complaint is due to a deviation in history. No one was burned as a witch in American history. All witch burnings throughout western history occurred in Europe only. In American those accused of witchcraft were drowned, pressed to death, and I think some hangings. However, this is a novel and therefore artistic license is allowed. :)
Profile Image for Melinda.
469 reviews7 followers
December 5, 2010
Great book! Maliha is a fantastic character. The story is amazing and I love how the flashbacks advance the story and Maliha's character. It was a book that I found hard to put down. And if I hadn't started another challenge, I would be jumping into the next book in the series.

I am hoping that Maliha finds redemption and I hope things work out with her love interest, Jake. I love the cast of characters that form her team and am glad she has shared with them her "affliction".

I highly recommend this book. It is action packed and full of surprises. Only one caution. There is a place in the beginning of the book that doesn't fit with Maliha's character, but it was short. The rest is wonderful.
Profile Image for Susan.
612 reviews10 followers
March 4, 2012
Dark Time is an excellent start to the Mortal Path series by Banks. Banks does a wonderful job with her character development especially with Maliha by showing her in her innocence through her own harsh death and choice to become a demon slave to her still a work in progress redemption. However Banks also develops the characters that make up Maliha's new family by showing when they came across her path to the relationship they now share. It is these relationships that make Maliha the woman she is today. Overall this was a great read so I will definitely be looking for the next book in the series. I look forward to see what Banks has up her sleeve next.
Profile Image for Sandra.
1,382 reviews85 followers
October 17, 2011
Really ★★★★1/2

I'd give it 5 ★ except for the slow start, cause once it got going it was great. Lots of interesting side characters, lots of evil dudes and dudettes, lots of mayhem and death, just what you want in a book titled Dark Time.

Mahlia is 350 years old and was once an assassin for a demi-god Demon and is trying to win back her soul by saving people.

Not going to say anything else cause it would just be spoilers.....

Except I'm glad I've got the 2nd book cause of a minor cliffhanger in the last sentence.
Profile Image for Brandi.
329 reviews818 followers
January 22, 2012
I never finished this one. In fact when I stumbled across the picture I recognized it and went to look for it....I had stopped right at the end! There was less than 20 pages to go, and I just stopped. I don't remember why, but that's a good sign that I didn't like it. I remembered that this was one I hadn't liked very much, but didn't realize that I had quite reading so close to the end, lol. I don't usually do that.
Profile Image for SaraS Scott.
7 reviews
March 5, 2013
I don't think there are enough ways for me to express how much I did not like this book. I learnt one thing from it, though. Dakota Banks wants to be a sexy, dark haired vixen who takes on lovers like a crazy cat lady takes on cats.
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