Live and Let Drood is the sixth book in the Secret Histories series written by Simon R. Green. It stars Edwin Drood, code named Shaman Bond and he is a part of the Droods, an ancient family that purportedly watches over the world and protects it from various threats, including supernatural and magical ones.
Arriving at Drood Hall with his girlfriend Molly Metcalf, a powerful witch, Eddie is aghast to find the heavily defended ancestral pile an utter ruin – even his armor no longer works. After surveying the wreckage and pocketing the Merlin Glass, a handy space/time wormhole, Eddie realizes that this isn't his Hall at all, but a duplicate. The real Hall has been sent somewhere by means of the dimensional engine Alpha Red Alpha, to which only a family traitor could have had access.
Live and Let Drood is written rather well. Green continues his clever world-building, madcap characters, cheeky one-liners, in an urban fantasy thriller that is reminiscent of a James Bond adventure. The narrative is engaging, grapping, fast-paced, although it was a tad slow for the first hundred pages or so. It was emotionally intense, which blends action, science fiction, and pulp fiction wonderfully.
All in all, Live and Let Drood is written rather well and is a good start to what would hopefully be a wonderful series, which I plan to continue in the very near future.