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"A rollicking good ride. Caine's prose crackles with energy, as does her fierce and lovable heroine."—Publisher's WeeklyJoanne is all-out exhausted. When not donning a rain slicker and camping it up for the camera as a TV weather girl, she has to contend with a vengeful cop on her tail, her newly divorced sister moving in—with a charming but mysterious British beau in tow—and getting caught in the middle of a supernatural civil war. Worst of all, her boyfriend in a bottle can't stop show more draining her powers and is fast morphing from the Djinn of her dreams to the Ifrit of her nightmares.
As the agreement between the Wardens and the Djinn starts to self-destruct, Joanne finds herself forced to choose between saving her lover, saving her Warden abilities...and saving humanity. show less
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This review also featured on Behind the Pages: Windfall
Joanne has reached an all new low. She’s left the wardens and is under threat to never use her powers again. David is near death. Every interaction outside of his bottle brings him closer to the edge and her new job isn’t exactly glamorous. She’s taken up working for a news station as a weather girl. But she isn’t forecasting the weather, instead, she’s the stand in for the butt of jokes to amuse the viewers. When Joanne’s sister shows up on her doorstep, newly divorced and begging for a place to stay, it’s just the icing on the cake of her new life. But something is brewing in Florida. A threat of violence that has continued to grow over time reaches the breaking show more point, fracturing the wardens and dragging Joanne into the middle of it.
Each new Weather Warden book brings a host of problems for Joanne. This time around it is a mix of supernatural and human-related issues. And each book reaches a higher level of action and potential for the series. The world-building never ends and the challenges characters face keep escalating. Not to mention the emotional dive Joanne has to face in Windfall. She’s losing everything, her life is falling apart. Add into the mix high stakes tension, near death experiences, and threats from some of the most powerful creatures on Earth. Every page you turn, there is something to keep you reading, driving you forward to find out what is going to happen next.
A common theme that has cropped up in each Weather Warden book, is how close Joanne comes to dying. Normally this would become repetitive since Windfall is the fourth book in the series, however, Rachel Caine does something clever. Multiple characters point out to Jo that courting death is not a fitting characteristic, nor is it a good hobby. This puts it into perspective that yes, this is happening all too often, and even the characters are not happy with it. Do I think Joanne will stop having close calls? Most likely not. It’s not in her nature to back down when she thinks she has a chance, even if it is a slim one. And it’s one of the reasons I enjoy her character.
I’ve mentioned the magic system often enough in my book reviews, but another component unique to the Weather Warden series is the way Rachel Caine personifies elements. Storms take on personalities of their own, boiling in angry streaks across the atmosphere, lashing out with lightning and rain. Fires surge in fits and starts, consuming all they can in hunger. Each encounter brings readers closer to the concept of mother earth being a living breathing being. An idea Rachel Caine has teased since the first book, Ill Wind.
Something else I have not mentioned in my book reviews is how focused on fashion and body image the female characters are in this series. Joanne zeroes in on designer fashion and feels ashamed when she isn’t wearing the latest trends. While fashion is not a topic that interests me, I see it as just another trait of Joanne’s personality. And she does tend to surround herself with females of similar interest. Joanne is also a woman self-conscious about her body image. Her sister takes trendsetting and body image to a whole new level. But this is a minor element of each story. Sort of a reminder of Jo’s base personality while she is also kicking butt and taking names.
Joanne has her faults, but every character does. Despite her shortcomings, she feels deeply for those she cares about. Any time she has no choice but to make a decision that may harm someone she loves, it cuts her deeply. Watching her character develop throughout the series has been such a joy. And given everything that is thrown her way in Windfall, I’m interested to see how she continues to develop in the next book. show less
Joanne has reached an all new low. She’s left the wardens and is under threat to never use her powers again. David is near death. Every interaction outside of his bottle brings him closer to the edge and her new job isn’t exactly glamorous. She’s taken up working for a news station as a weather girl. But she isn’t forecasting the weather, instead, she’s the stand in for the butt of jokes to amuse the viewers. When Joanne’s sister shows up on her doorstep, newly divorced and begging for a place to stay, it’s just the icing on the cake of her new life. But something is brewing in Florida. A threat of violence that has continued to grow over time reaches the breaking show more point, fracturing the wardens and dragging Joanne into the middle of it.
Each new Weather Warden book brings a host of problems for Joanne. This time around it is a mix of supernatural and human-related issues. And each book reaches a higher level of action and potential for the series. The world-building never ends and the challenges characters face keep escalating. Not to mention the emotional dive Joanne has to face in Windfall. She’s losing everything, her life is falling apart. Add into the mix high stakes tension, near death experiences, and threats from some of the most powerful creatures on Earth. Every page you turn, there is something to keep you reading, driving you forward to find out what is going to happen next.
A common theme that has cropped up in each Weather Warden book, is how close Joanne comes to dying. Normally this would become repetitive since Windfall is the fourth book in the series, however, Rachel Caine does something clever. Multiple characters point out to Jo that courting death is not a fitting characteristic, nor is it a good hobby. This puts it into perspective that yes, this is happening all too often, and even the characters are not happy with it. Do I think Joanne will stop having close calls? Most likely not. It’s not in her nature to back down when she thinks she has a chance, even if it is a slim one. And it’s one of the reasons I enjoy her character.
I’ve mentioned the magic system often enough in my book reviews, but another component unique to the Weather Warden series is the way Rachel Caine personifies elements. Storms take on personalities of their own, boiling in angry streaks across the atmosphere, lashing out with lightning and rain. Fires surge in fits and starts, consuming all they can in hunger. Each encounter brings readers closer to the concept of mother earth being a living breathing being. An idea Rachel Caine has teased since the first book, Ill Wind.
Something else I have not mentioned in my book reviews is how focused on fashion and body image the female characters are in this series. Joanne zeroes in on designer fashion and feels ashamed when she isn’t wearing the latest trends. While fashion is not a topic that interests me, I see it as just another trait of Joanne’s personality. And she does tend to surround herself with females of similar interest. Joanne is also a woman self-conscious about her body image. Her sister takes trendsetting and body image to a whole new level. But this is a minor element of each story. Sort of a reminder of Jo’s base personality while she is also kicking butt and taking names.
Joanne has her faults, but every character does. Despite her shortcomings, she feels deeply for those she cares about. Any time she has no choice but to make a decision that may harm someone she loves, it cuts her deeply. Watching her character develop throughout the series has been such a joy. And given everything that is thrown her way in Windfall, I’m interested to see how she continues to develop in the next book. show less
After the trauma of finding out she's pregnant, coming face to face the man who raped her years ago, being betrayed by a friend, and having her lover turned into an ifrit, Joanne's retired to Florida to work as a local weather girl. She spends mornings dressed up in funny costumes and getting water dumped on her, and afternoons shopping or at the beach with her new friend Cherise. Cherise is a blast; she's just the kind of friend Joanne needed.
Meanwhile, David's still trapped in his bottle conserving energy so he won't turn fully into an ifrit or die. This is good because it takes the emphasis of the books off the romance, but leaves enough bittersweet tension to satisfy me.
Here's what I really liked: Mother Nature is not happy that show more the weather wardens have been tampering with her. Not at all. And she's got the djinn, at least some of them, on her side. show less
Meanwhile, David's still trapped in his bottle conserving energy so he won't turn fully into an ifrit or die. This is good because it takes the emphasis of the books off the romance, but leaves enough bittersweet tension to satisfy me.
Here's what I really liked: Mother Nature is not happy that show more the weather wardens have been tampering with her. Not at all. And she's got the djinn, at least some of them, on her side. show less
As the others, this novel is like a whirlwind - or maybe more like a hurricane - battering furiously away at the plot and barely giving the poor protagonist, Joanne Baldwin, time to breathe. Poor Joanne, things just seem to go from bad to worse for her - and that's pretty serious given she's died twice in earlier instalments.
With this volume the epic nature of the plot is becoming more apparent - the djinns have decided to break free of their masters and rebel, the Wardens are corrupted or enfeebled and poor Joanne is working as a weather girl. A literal weather girl. On television. She should, however, enjoy that moment for as long as she could, because at least this novel allows her some respite in the beginning (it has been three show more months since she quit the Wardens).
I am still officially addicted and now moving on to book #5, with plans to play library-hopping on my weekend to acquire #7,8 and 9. Then, perhaps, I shall finally get my literary freedom back instead of being ensnared to this series as surely as a djinn to its master. Not that I'm complaining, really! show less
With this volume the epic nature of the plot is becoming more apparent - the djinns have decided to break free of their masters and rebel, the Wardens are corrupted or enfeebled and poor Joanne is working as a weather girl. A literal weather girl. On television. She should, however, enjoy that moment for as long as she could, because at least this novel allows her some respite in the beginning (it has been three show more months since she quit the Wardens).
I am still officially addicted and now moving on to book #5, with plans to play library-hopping on my weekend to acquire #7,8 and 9. Then, perhaps, I shall finally get my literary freedom back instead of being ensnared to this series as surely as a djinn to its master. Not that I'm complaining, really! show less
How far the mighty Weather Warden has fallen. Instead of saving the world Joanne is now the weather girl on TV wearing everything from a yellow slicker to a foam rubber sun (and don't even get her started on the bikini). It doesn't help that her essence is being sucked dry by her dijin boyfriend or that her now divorced sister has moved in. However, it's just a matter of time before fate finds Joanne and saving the world is once again on the agenda.
Windfall is another exciting installment in the Weather Warden series and I've been enjoying them immensely. I think I'm going to have a bit of withdrawal once I finish book five.
Windfall is another exciting installment in the Weather Warden series and I've been enjoying them immensely. I think I'm going to have a bit of withdrawal once I finish book five.
Joanne is working as a TV weather girl, trying to stay away from weather warden issues, she's trying hard to be normal but events are conspiring to keep that from happening, her Djinn is draining her, her sister is visiting and everything is going wrong.
This one was fun but kinda lagged a bit, I haven't gone back to this series but really should. It's not a bad series but sometimes I feel that the powers are getting overpowered and characters are starting to be a bit stagnant.
This one was fun but kinda lagged a bit, I haven't gone back to this series but really should. It's not a bad series but sometimes I feel that the powers are getting overpowered and characters are starting to be a bit stagnant.
The storyline is getting darker as we learn more about how the relationship between the Wardens and Djinn has become more brutal and twisted through the years.
Evil doesn't triumph here, but the war of attrition that is being waged on several fronts costs the side of "good" more so than the side of "evil." As always, it's about power. Who has it, who wants it, who wants to use it and how.
Dark, sad, and brings ache to the heart and a lump to the throat. All you can do is hang on and empathize with different characters and their different points of argument.
Evil doesn't triumph here, but the war of attrition that is being waged on several fronts costs the side of "good" more so than the side of "evil." As always, it's about power. Who has it, who wants it, who wants to use it and how.
Dark, sad, and brings ache to the heart and a lump to the throat. All you can do is hang on and empathize with different characters and their different points of argument.
What a way to jump into the new book. I swear Joanne has nine lives...or more...I've lost count. These books are a continuation of the previous books, but there were a few more unanswered questions than normal. I'm still a big fan though. I think the whole weather warden thing and having Djinn is a nice change from vampires and shapeshifters, so I'm sold. I'm just a little angry with the author for what she's done to David and Joanne. I sooo want to see them have some kind of HEA, but then again this is UF. Loved the story. It was angsty, witty, exciting, and I devoured it in one setting. I hated to see Jonathon go (I still think he was a good guy at heart). I hated what his death did to David even more, but I have high hopes for the show more next book. show less
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ThingScore 100
"Caine ups both the pace and the stakes in the fourth entry in her stellar series. Joanne is as appealing as ever, and the revelation that the future of both the djinn and the Wardens -- indeed, of perhaps the whole world -- is at stake underscores both her strength and vulnerablility."
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Author Information

160+ Works 51,044 Members
Rachel Caine was born Roxanne Conrad in White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. She received a bachelor's degree in business administration from Texas Tech University. Before becoming a full time author in 2010, she worked in corporate communications. She has written more than 40 novels including the Morganville Vampires series, the Weather Warden show more series, the Outcast Season series, the Great Library series, Prince of Shadows, and the Revivalist series. She has written under the names Julie Fortune, Roxanne Longstreet and Roxanne Conrad. She received a Paranormal Pearl Award, an RT Booklovers Award, and a Career Achievement Award from Romantic Times. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Windfall
- Original publication date
- 2005-11
- People/Characters
- Joanne Baldwin; David the Djinn; Marvelous Marvin McLarty; Janie; Kurt; Cherise
- Important places
- Florida, USA
- First words
- I kept trying to tell myself, you've survived worse than this, but it didn't seem to be working. Any second now, I was going to scream and kill somebody, not necessarily in that order... You've been through worse. Yep. I had.... (show all) It just didn't feel like it, right at the moment.
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Statistics
- Members
- 1,481
- Popularity
- 15,684
- Reviews
- 14
- Rating
- (3.82)
- Languages
- Czech, English, French
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 9
- ASINs
- 7




















































