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Swallowing Darkness by Laurell K. Hamilton
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Swallowing Darkness (Meredith Gentry, Book 7)

by Laurell K. Hamilton

Series: Meredith Gentry (7)

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682216,693 (3.69)11
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Ballantine Books (2008), Hardcover, 384 pages

Member:madichi
Collections:Wishlist, Read but unownedRating:
Tags:Have Read, Buy, Fantasy, Urban
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Showing 1-5 of 21 (next | show all)
The tags Sex, Faerie and Politics almost say it all. Merry has escaped her uncle, who now claims fatherhood of her twins (even though Merry KNOWS who is the father). Merry now has to try to stay alive in a complicated game of politics and magic. This time thought the politics get her grandmother involved so the family that dislikes each other start to wage war.

With some literal Deus ex Machina moments (I felt like asking her if she really wanted that much attention from the gods?) this is a little overpowered and the character may have been in peril but it never really felt all the perilous.

This series has drawn me in, almost unwillingly, I do want to know what's going to happen but I do wonder that the author hasn't written herself into a bit of a bind. This series is trying very hard to be both a magic returning series and a murderous political thriller while not quite hitting the mark with either. ( )
  wyvernfriend | Dec 14, 2009 |
Book 7 in the series of Meredith Gentry, a Princess of the Unseelie Court in faerie, who works as a private detective in LA ...when she's not fighting off attempts on her life by her evil and mad cousin, Cel, staying out of range of her uncle Taranis, King of the Seelie Court, or not doing anything to anger her vindictive aunt Andais, Queen of the Unseelie Court.

Meredith is pregnant with twins, and the fathers of those twins will be her Kings if she ascends the throne that the Queen will vacate once she has her children. However, it is because she's with child that the attempts on her life from those loyal to Cel, increase, to ensure she does not take the throne from him.

Perhaps it is because she is a half-breed, part human, part faerie, that she manages to call the old power, communicates with the Goddess, and appears to be the instrument by which faerie starts to return to its previous glories. Protected and surrounded by her bodyguards, all of whom are male, some having left the painful services of the Queen, some goblins, the King of the underworld and an old friend, she finds her strength tested as she tries to race against time and magic to vindicate the death of her brownie grandmother, and save her loved ones from death.

You do need to have read the other 6 in the series in order to understand the continuing saga in this one. ( )
1 vote cameling | Oct 25, 2009 |
Recuperating from her uncle's rape, Merry, pregnant with twins by 6 different men (yes, we're all aware that's impossible, but there's magic involved, so suspend disbelief, okay!) can't even languish comfortably for a few hours in the hospital. Powerful forces are, as always, at work against her, and neither the Seelie nor the Unseelie court is safe.

Will Merry be able to claim the Unseelie crown from her Aunt Andais as promised? Or will she find herself doomed along with her men?

After 6 lengthy volumes full of sex - and sometimes little else in the way of forward motion - it was almost a shock to come to the conclusion (of course, it's not, really) of both the book and, possibly, the series. Since I don't want to spoil anything for anyone, I'll simply say that Hamilton isn't out of surprises yet. ( )
  fssunnysd | Sep 10, 2009 |
For once a Merry Gentry book with very little sex, although I am not sure the gratuitous - and boring - violence that has replaced it is an improvement.
The amount of exposition required to bring new readers up to speed in this universe grows with each new book in the series. Fortunately it seems as if critical mass was reached in book 3, making this particular annoyance less outstanding. The overblown prose, however, takes up as much space as ever, and is as repetitive and inconsistent as in all the Merry Gentry stories.
The 7'th Merry Gentry book is high om plot by their own standard, although the actual action takes up a great deal less space than Merrys subsequent editorializing about them. Her portentous declarations throughout the book are excessive and overwrought. ( )
2 vote amberwitch | Aug 3, 2009 |
 the Meredith Gentry series is wonderful. Hamilton has a fertile imagination. every book of hers is a sensual adventure that keeps you waiting with bated breath til the next book! This Gentry novel also happens to be based on Doyle, who is 1 of my faves! ( )
  fairygrl117 | Jul 9, 2009 |
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Epigraph
I feel like one,
Who treads alone
Some banquet hall deserted.
Whose lights are fled,
Whose garlands dead,
And all but her departed!

—From "Oft, in the Stilly Night"
By Thomas Moore
(National Airs, 1818)
Dedication
To Jonathan, who walks the empty places with me, and turns on the lights as we go.
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Hospitals are where people go to be saved, but the doctors can only patch you up, put you back together.
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