June 19

True Blood aka Sookie Stackhouse the series

Finally! Here you can see photos from the new HBO series, True Blood, based on Charlaine Harris’ Sookie Stackhouse series. For those not in the know these books are urban fantasy with a romance angle about a rural mind reader in Louisiana who falls for a vampire and ends up getting sucked into the supernatural world (no pun intended).

Category: Personal | Comments Off on True Blood aka Sookie Stackhouse the series
March 26

Grave Surprise by Charlaine Harris

Grave Surprise by Charlaine Harris

Grave Surprise is the second book in the Harper Connelly series from Charlaine Harris. Harper is a woman with a bad past, the most obvious event being the day she was struck by lightning, leaving her with a myriad of small damages and the ability to find the dead. Unlike in other urban fantasies Harper is one of, if not the, only person in the world to have a psychic power. She and her brother, Tolliver who acts as her manager, travel the states working cases where people, or their bodies, are missing.

In Grave Surprise Harper has been hired to do a demonstration for a college professor’s class on psychics. Sure that he’s called her there to debunk her instead Harper names the occupants and cause of deaths for a little graveyard with stunning accuracy, right down to finding a new grave, a grave on top of an older grave. The newest addition the the cemetery is an eleven year old girl that Harper herself was hired to find a year ago.

The find is stunning enough for the Memphis PD, but the fact that Harper already worked the girl’s case, and that the parents moved from the city where their daughter was abducted to Memphis, not far from the graveyard, makes the local cops suspect Harper and her brother and they suspect they’ve been set up.

Harris is a veteran mystery writer more popular for her Southern Vampire series, but with the Harper Connelly books she’s turned back to her mystery roots creating a world that’s a strange combination of real and dark. The cover of Grave Surprise (first US mass market edition) features a skulled jack-in-the-box popping out of an open grave. It matches the feel of the book perfectly, implying that this world inside should be bright and whimsical, but never quite makes it out the dark shadows. Likewise Harper and her brother are both trying to help people, and trying to shed the memories of an abusive past, and instead seem to be trapped by subtle chains, like depression and fears, into living dark lives.

This is the best book in the series so far, the plot is sneaky and more compelling than the first, but just as well written and unnerving. While Harris’ other books might appeal to a more romance-oriented crowd this series has the potential to draw in fans who never thought they’d like a book like this, proving that Harris and her work should not be dismissed as another in a line of trend writers.

March 25

All Together Dead by Charlaine Harris

All Together Dead by Charlaine Harris

It becomes difficult to review a book when it is the seventh in a series. There are some things that can’t necessarily be explained to a reader who hasn’t picked up any of the books, like the desire to know how the characters will fare through this newest volume, or the desire to see how the balance between resistance and advancement plays out.

 

There’s more to this book than a glittery cover. There are vampires, once strong, brought down by the chaotic power of a hurricane. There is Sookie, a humble southern mind reader, swept up with vampires who are real people to her, occasionally forgetting that they are different, alien, even occasionally monstrous. There’s the queen of Louisiana herself, her kingdom broken by first a vampire war, then a storm that devastated human and vampire residents alike. There’s a wild card, a danger that no one thought about, that no one expected, standing right in plain sight before both the characters’ and the readers’ eyes.

 

The Sookie books have always been part stubborn will, part sass. They’ve always been shot through with serious plot threads. But in this latest one the danger isn’t just to Sookie’s mind, heart or libido. The danger is very real, and will change not just the humans touched by it, but will affect the vampires as well.

 

I’ve enjoyed reading how Sookie grows, and does so without gaining a power a book. I like these books because the vampires aren’t all progressively one upping each other with supernatural, or political powers. The werewolves aren’t extra from a BDSM movie. And Sookie herself is both strong and weak, a woman who can’t bring herself to be cruel like the people around her, nor can she sit back and let people who have mistreated her die when she can help.

 

Even if I did read it in six hours, it was still worth the hardback cover price and I have faith that the next one will be as well.

Category: Personal | Comments Off on All Together Dead by Charlaine Harris