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Loading... Fool Moon (Dresden Case Files)by Jim Butcher
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I don't hate this book but it was pretty messy in places. This was a case of too many werewolves spoil the broth I'm afraid. Too many of 'em, too many types of 'em... just too many furry things running about tearing chunks out of everybody. Bring back the pizza faeries, that's what I say. ( )In the second book in The Dresden Files, Harry Dresden races to solve horrific murders scattered across Chicago, before Karrin Murphy tries to arrest him again. The clues all point to werewolves, but in a city filled with lupine shapeshifters, who is the murderer and who is just the fall guy? I thought this book was an improvement on the first book in some ways. Dresden let a little more of his backstory slip and we learned there is a mystery surrounding his mother. One thing I wasn't as fond of was the rather gruesome descriptions of the werewolves' victims. Just a little too much detail for my taste. There was also a non-explicit sex scene and the profanity seemed a bit higher. Hopefully this does not mean each book is going to be significantly messier than the next. Wizard Harry Dresden is back in another supernatural mytery. A series of murders are happening around the full moon and it seems like werewolves. This is not as simples as that as it turns out there are four types of werewolf. There are loup-garou's who are cursed to be werewolves and have amazing strength and when they change they loose their humanity. There are classic werewolves and also hexenwolves who wear a magicl amulet giving them the power of werevoles and causing their change. Lastly there are those that are wolves that can shapeshift and take on the appearence of humans. He is initally hired by Murphy from the Chicago PD to help with the case after a long period of no work, but soon loses her trust. His protege becomes involved in the case but doesn't hang around for long causing even more problems between Harry and Murphy. He also has a love interest in the form of journalist Susan who he isn't sure is around to get aheads up on supernatural happenings for her paper. The plot is quite complicated with lots of twists and turns, but it sweeps the reader along and it wasn't too complicated that I lost my place. I really like Harry and his pragmatic approach to the supernatural. I will definitely be continuing further with the series in the near future. Every time I read one of them though I am reminded that the series was sadly cancelled after the first series. It was so good, I really miss it but hopefully the books will keep going much longer and will remain as enthralling. Another enjoyable book from Butcher, poor Harry really knows how to get in deep. I think this one does a good job of setting up a through-line, which I think was missing in the first book. Recommended for those who enjoy Simon Green. Harry Dresden continues to be an interesting character and Fool Moon managed to win me over despite several flaws. Copy editing in this volume allowed a few none-standard words that I found glaring, for example: "oxidating" instead of "oxidizing". The abuse Harry suffers at the hands of various goons, creatures, and villains became repetitive and nearly made me incredulous. The plotting also flirts with the idiot plot problem--Harry's continued inability to communicate and trust allies is so much of a problem, that even Butcher steps outside of the narrative to address it in the dream sequence. Still, the writing is better and the ideas more creative than a good share of the vampire-flavored urban fantasy that's been written in the past 10 years. I haven't given up on the series yet, but I'm not in a hurry to track down volume 3. 0.113 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0451458125, Paperback)Could a werewolf be loose in Chicago? Common sense says no. The grisly evidence says yes. So does Harry Dresden. And with his weird connections, he should know....(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:58 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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