I'm greatly enjoying the Cassie Scot series, and this third volume is another good entry. It didn't have a great moment equivalent to the previous book (Secrets and Lies), in which I pumped my fist and said "Yes!" out loud when Cassie won against overwhelming odds by being super-smart, but it did have plenty of good moments, and a pleasing amount of intricacy.
This is a series which you need to read from the beginning (Cassie Scot: Paranormal Detective). There's not much recap, and each book builds directly on the events of the one before, so you won't understand what's going on if you start here. Fortunately, it's a series which is strong right from the first book, in which we're introduced to our urban-fantasy heroine: a young woman from a powerful magical family who lacks magic of her own, and has to compensate by being smarter than the more powerful people she goes up against.
Like many urban fantasies, it has a strong romance element, but unlike most urban fantasies with a strong romance element, it isn't silly, and nor is the heroine. It's also not full of explicit sex.
Yes, there is a love triangle in each book. Cassie and her childhood friend Evan are two points of the triangle, and the third point varies. However, a large part of the series' tension revolves around the fact that, for various excellent reasons, Cassie is not going to give in to her attraction for Evan. This is partly because she is a modern, independent-minded woman, and the magical community is stuck in the 19th century (if not earlier), treating women - especially women without power but with the potential to breed magical children - as chattels.
While Evan is more respectful than that, there are other (spoilerific) reasons why Cassie is not willing to accept his love for her. In fact, the reason changes in each book, which is a trick that's hard to do. This author isn't just writing the same book over and over, she's evolving the situation and the characters.
Nor is the romance subplot by any means all that is going on. Cassie is a sheriff's deputy, and investigates crimes with supernatural aspects, which means that she's always out of her depth and in danger. While she occasionally gets herself into trouble with the decisions she makes, she doesn't drive the plot primarily by doing stupid things, which is one of the issues that annoys me about so many urban fantasy heroines. And while Evan, and occasionally others, do rescue her from time to time, it's a significant plot point that she's able to rescue herself quite adequately.
In this particular book, the main and obvious antagonist is a hate-preaching pastor who has it in for the magical community. (The author takes pains to emphasize that this is an aberration, and not representative of all religious people, which I appreciated.) However, there are multiple threads of politics, interest groups, and individuals with agendas (often concealed, at least from Cassie), and the author weaves it all together into a highly satisfactory cloth.
The plotting and character development are sophisticated, well above the level I normally see, and are refreshingly free of urban fantasy cliches. I'm very pleased to have found this series, and look forward to future books.