*Rating* 3.5 starts
*Genre* Urban Fantasy
*Review*
Rogue Oracle is the second book in the Oracle series by Alayna Williams and picks up several months after the events of Dark Oracle.
Dr. Tara Sheridan is one of the best criminal profilers in the country as well as being a forensic psychologist and an oracle whose talent lies in cartomancer or Tarot card reading. Tara’s abilities allow her to see into future and investigate using her cards as a tool. Her success rate in hunting down criminals is top rated.
Tara once worked for the FBI’s Special Projects Division (better known as the Little Shop of Horrors) until she came face to face with the psycho killer named the Gardener who buried her alive. After escaping with her life basically intact except for the numerous scars she was left to deal with, she took time out away from her duties, and hid away in seclusion away from everyone including her mother’s former organization called Delphi’s Daughters who believed that Tara was to become the designated Pythia.
Tara has since become the self-appointed protector of Cassie Magnusson who was designated as the next Pythia for Delphi’s Daughters after Tara’s refusal in joining them. The DD have existed since the beginning of recorded time, just behind the scenes, foretelling and nudging the courses of world events to suit their liking. Tara and the current Pythia Amira don’t always see eye to eye on the path that Cassie should take.
Then there’s Harry Li. Harry is a current agent for FBI’s Special Projects Division who has been away from Tara for the past several months working on other cases. After former cold-war era intelligence operatives mysteriously disappear, Harry asks Tara for help in a solving the case that neither his office nor any other office knows what to do with.
The former intelligence operatives are all linked to a project called Rogue Angel. It was their job to keep track of the former Soviet Union’s nuclear stockpile, and ensure it did not fall into terrorists hands. Now, it appears that someone is taking the information culled from these operatives, and selling it to the highest bidders.
Tara and Harry face a killer that is not only methodical and cunning in his killing abilities. He also leaves no evidence behind that he was there in the first place. This includes the bodies of those he kills which he can assimilate into his own body and use their memories he captures to locate what he wants most; uranium for dirty bombs. It will take them to the one place in the world where the Soviet Unions greed during the Cold War with the US led to the worse nuclear disaster in the history of mankind; Chernobyl, Ukraine.
*April 26, 1986 --I would definitely recommend to those who were not born in 1986, that you take a minute and to a web search for the horrific events that happened that day. It's not only enlightening, but it will also be worth learning true history, and not what you are told in school these days.*
This is actually a very interesting novel, which incorporates an actual manmade disaster and those who survived the aftermath into the story line under the umbrella of Urban Fantasy. The story itself is original, suspenseful and very surprising in its direction as well as Tara’s new found abilities to dream walk to find the answers to her own investigation and her future.
I like Cassie as a character. I believe that she is head strong, but not overly so to the point where you want to slap her upside her head for doing stupid things. When she is tested by the Pythia, she does the only thing she knows how to do; she gets the hell out of dodge fast and asks Cassie for help. She believes that violence to settle things in the world is misguided and wrong and she wants no part in it. And, lastly, she refuses to be pushed into a corner by anyone including the Pythia, yet relies on Tara for friendship and direction.
Tara’s character would actually be better off without Harry Li around, but, that probably won’t change anytime soon. I believe Harry is a hindrance to Tara’s investigation and future and nothing more. He doesn’t believe in the esoteric of Tara’s powers and abilities and scoffs at anything that he can’t put to paper. He is also quick to jump to conclusions and gets angry at the drop of a hat.
On the other hand, Tara is an awesome character in my opinion. She is strong and stubborn, but her intuition and abilities are first rate. She is extremely protective of Cassie and will do whatever it takes to keep her from harm. She survived unimaginable brutality at the hands of the Gardener, but is now working her way back to the top of her game while keeping a distrustful eye on Delphi’s Daughters and the Pythia. Tara is the kind of person you can’t help but admire, because she finds strength even in her own weaknesses.
Our villain, Galen (Chimera), is actually a sympathetic character in some ways, because of what he had to endure after surviving Chernobyl as a child. Does the fact that he kills innocent people and sells the secrets to nuclear stockpiles to terrorists and other terrorist sponsored states (Iran) make me happy or give him a free pass that he wants to teach the rest of the world a lesson about the abuse of power and what happens when humans are left to their own devices? Absolutely not! Galen was made by a series of traumatic events, and was left alone after watching everyone he knew die of radiation poisoning. The radiation actually changed his bodies DNA and construction to make him one of the most dangerous characters you can imagine.
For those who weren’t around in 1986, then you would not understand the horror we all felt when the reactors imploded and the firefighters and other rescuers died horribly by radiation exposure. All we thought about at the time was this horrific cloud of radiation making its way across the ocean, and eventually reaching the US shores where it would continue its devastating path and kill thousands more. Luckily, we are still here and that never happened. I’m going to stop here because I don’t believe that it’s my decision to educate the young in what happened in our recent past.
This book is better in a lot of ways than the first, and I especially love the cover of this book in comparison to Dark Oracle. Still, I am left wondering if there will be another book in this series since this particular writer has two series going and both stopped, it seems, after two books each. One can only wait and wonder.