Hexmaker

by Jordan L. Hawk

Hexworld (2)

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A straight-laced policeman. A lighthearted thief. A murdered millionaire. Fox shifter Malachi steals for one of the biggest crime rings in New York City. But when he witnesses the murder of a millionaire, the only person who can keep him safe is Dr. Owen Yates, forensic hexman for the Metropolitan Witch Police-and Malachi's witch. Owen is horrified to discover his familiar is an uneducated thief. Even worse, Malachi threatens to unleash Owen's deepest desires...desires Owen can't act upon, show more as he's destined for an arranged marriage to secure the Yates family fortune Their agreement: Malachi will be Owen's lover as well as his partner, until the day of the wedding. But as their hunt for the murderer carries them from teeming slums to Fifth Avenue mansions, Owens begins to realize Malachi commands his heart as well as his body. With dark forces drawing ever closer around them, Owen must decide whether to bow to the demands of duty, or to risk everything for the man he loves. Hexmaker is the second book in Jordan L. Hawk's Hexworld series, following the adventures of witch policemen and the familiars they bond with. Download today to enter a world of magic, romance, and intrigue. show less

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13 reviews
All the stars. We met Owen in Hexbreaker and he seemed standoffish and up himself. Well, we find out the reason for that here. And how infuriating to find his familiar is a poor thief. Except Mal turns out to be everything Owen needs. And wants... Shame Owen's due to be married in a week!

Well plotted and exciting. Took me forever to work out who the bad guy was. Nice to see returns of the other characters from the previous books as well as a more prominent role for Quigley, who seems to have taken quite a shine to Issac--can't see that being an easy story.

I'd like a story for Nathan, Owen's transgender brother, and Nick, Rook's horse shifter and anti establishment brother. although not together.

Listened to audio - Jan 2018. Lost nothing show more in the transfer to a different medium. Narrator was excellent, story still delivered a punch. show less
All the stars. We met Owen in Hexbreaker and he seemed standoffish and up himself. Well, we find out the reason for that here. And how infuriating to find his familiar is a poor thief. Except Mal turns out to be everything Owen needs. And wants... Shame Owen's due to be married in a week!

Well plotted and exciting. Took me forever to work out who the bad guy was. Nice to see returns of the other characters from the previous books as well as a more prominent role for Quigley, who seems to have taken quite a shine to Issac--can't see that being an easy story.

I'd like a story for Nathan, Owen's transgender brother, and Nick, Rook's horse shifter and anti establishment brother. although not together.

Listened to audio - Jan 2018. Lost nothing show more in the transfer to a different medium. Narrator was excellent, story still delivered a punch. show less
Fox familiar Malachi has had the bad luck to get accused of murdering one of New York's elites. Luckily for him, Dr. Owen Yates is on hand to exonerate him, much to everyone else's consternation. Rich, smart and quite handsome: Malachi could hardly do better for his fated witch.

Yates is less excited to finally meet his familiar, though. Sure, the prospect of having his own magic is nothing to sneeze at, but he's set to leave the Witch Police, get married and start a more respectable lifestyle, with his in-laws. Just as his family expects him to.
With such a well-set-out path in life, our two protagonists can only agree to make the most of their relationship, while they still can.

The murder mystery in Malachi and Yates' story continues show more to build on the secret cult aspect from the prequel. Lots of interesting new details are unveiled about the origins of magic. There's the obligatory secret plot that explodes in the last 10% of the book. And of course the action sequences which culminate in some of the most epic show downs, evidently save the day most efficiently. All in all, a rather enjoyable paranormal action-adventure story.

When it come to the romantic aspect... To be fair, the main characters' relationship evolved very nicely from obligation to love. And having Yates and Malachi's professional roles inverted in their intimate life, was a nice touch in having them be on a more equal footing. Plus the sexual scenes were certainly nothing to sneeze at. That said, instead of feeling excited about the outcome of the story, I was much more focused on being exasperated by Yates' filial loyalty, on subsequent self-sacrifice.

Score: 3/5 stars

I probably would've liked Owen and Malachi's relationship better, had it been a heterosexual one. And I realize how bad this sounds, especially because the whole reason I read MM is due to its healthier power-balance.

Don't get me wrong: I didn't hate the story, and its ending had me suitably teary-eyed. That said, I'd take Cicero and Halloran's problematic interactions from Hexbreaker any time, over Malachi and Owen's well-balanced ones.

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Review of book 0.5: The 13th Hex
Review of book 1: Hexbreaker
Review of book 2.5: A Christmas Hex
Review of book 3: Hexslayer
Review of book 3.5: Wild Wild Hex
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This one was mostly all right, but it suffers from Mal and Owen occasionally acting a certain way because the emotional plot demands it rather than because it feels like an organic action for the characters to take. I think if the emotional through lines had been allowed more room to breathe and develop, things wouldn't have felt so ridiculously dumb when Mal and Owen did the things they did. As it stands however, both of the emotional turning point scenes for Mal and Owen, where they choose the other as their future, feel unearned and with a ham-fisted set up because the work for them wasn't put in beforehand.
4 stars

Synopsis: Mal is a fox familiar, and a thief. One night, he is sent to do a job, but discovers a body, and a red-headed man who pulls the alarm. In fleeing, Mal is caught by the police, but Owen, the forensic hexologist from the MWP, happens to be visiting his parents and sees the paddy wagon. He takes an interest, and proves that Mal wasn't actually the murderer. Mal gets away in the ensuing investigation, but finds Owen the next day because someone goes after him in his apartment. That's when he tells Owen that he is Mal's witch.
Owen only has a few more days at the MWP, because he is marrying someone from the same bracket as him and going to work for her father, for the good of his family, who isn't as wealthy as they come show more off. He is still excited to find his familiar, though, even if they won't be doing work at the MWP. Owen has to try and figure out the figure that was broken at the crime scene before he leaves, and to figure out who is after Mal.

What I liked: that there really were no pretences between Mal and Owen, even though they didn't have the same background. I liked that Mal and Owen actually talked to each other and got to know one another in the short time they had before Owen had to marry. I also liked that Owen didn't try to hide Mal, or treat him with disrespect because of both of their stations. Mal brings a little fun to Owen's life, and lets him enjoy things without there having to be an end game or worry about propriety.

What I didn't like: up until the end, it seemed like Mal was the only one having to make concessions.
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This might be rounded up a little, but I'm giving it 5 stars. I enjoyed this. The adventure was fun despite the mystery not being very difficult to deduce, and the couple was fun to watch together. I like that they had a genuine reason why they couldn't just be a couple already, so they didn't have to spend half the book railing against a paper tiger. I like them individually and as a couple. The steam was kinda spicy, which I approve of. I could see reading this one again.
4.5 stars

Great story. I love this world and am sad it appears to be a trilogy; there is still so much to resolve in this world, although I am looking forward to Nick's story. MCs really completed each other, with all their faults and foibles.

Narrated by Tristan James - 4 stars. Great narration and characterisation.

Merged review:

4.5 stars

Great story. I love this world and am sad it appears to be a trilogy; there is still so much to resolve in this world, although I am looking forward to Nick's story. MCs really completed each other, with all their faults and foibles.

Narrated by Tristan James - 4 stars. Great narration and characterisation.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Hexmaker
People/Characters
Owen Yates; Malachi
Important places
New York, New York, USA

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, LGBTQ+, Romance, Fantasy, Mystery, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3558 .A77Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

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93
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Reviews
10
Rating
(3.81)
Languages
English
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Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1