4 bloodbath and asphyxia stars
I totally inhaled this one. I didn't even realise I had finished it until I hit the first page of the following book in my bundle. Ms Dunbar seems to be fond of closing a book in the middle of an action. Not exactly a cliffhanger, just something that you would expect to fully complete and bring you somewhere else, but she also starts the following book right on cue to this last action.
A very satisfying follow-up, considerably more violent, bloody and dark in mood. Many, many threads. There is mystery to solve, a possible serial killer to hunt down, a brother who's almost blackmailing Sam into a very dangerous object retrieval-and-drop and all sort of troubles casting off from these situations. We're introduced to the Vampires, more and more is shown and explained about the Elves' kingdoms and their practices and also about Sam's own Household responsabilities and routines, even two of her siblings are introduced. As if that wasn't enough, she adds a demon horse to her animal family and she finally unlocks her dog to his full, natural hellhound self.
Sam is still impulsive, reckless and antiestablishment with moments of wise cowardice, she spends more and more time practising with her powers, trying to learn control and gain new abilities, she breaks basically every single rule Gregory gave her, she even engages in a little killing spree and resulting piece of art made of bowels and bloody limbs. The Angry Birds challenge scene was a great touch, I filed it for whenver my kids will have to save their lives from an imp, they rock at Angry Birds. Another great scene was Sam totally trashing the Vampires' hot and trendy club and, just before that, the Halloween's customes try-outs, where we finally get to see Sam's first original demon form. All her interactions with the stubborn demon horse were also hilarious. Of course, she ended up making even more enemies and she's now become a target of a pretty pissed off demon of a higher category than she is. We get to see much more of her sadistic and pain loving preferences as well.
Even with all these funny bits, which were truly engaging and uplifting, I found there was something off with the pacing. Every time things were picking up, getting frantic and adrenalized the tension was somehow stopped, the action fractured and a lengthy, slower bit with explanations, internal monologues and/or slower dialogues was introduced instead. I love snarkiness, quick comebacks, absurd statements and actions, after all Sam is an imp, born for misschief, but sometimes she really doesn't say anything useful to the story and she tends to be too slow to see what's right on her face. For instance, the thread of the homeless people being kidnapped and killed was kind of a miss for me: it throws an interesting Ghost character in the mix, a child who manages to tug on Sam's sense of protection and it's the perfect excuse to free her dog Boomer from his restraints, but it took her way too long to take the killings seriously and to realise it's her duty to solve the problem, no matter by how many people and how many times before she had been asked to do something about it. The whole finding and ending the serial killer was anticlimatic, way too easy for a thread that dragged around for so long. All her dealings with the Vampires could have also been much more to the point. Less focus on her insolent attitude and observations and more focus instead on making these new characters somewhat deeper.
What I really liked though, and I think was the real theme of this instalment, was the emotional growth and the way all her relationships change and shift. She ends up with a title and a duty she would glady decline, I hope she will grow to fully own it. She takes great risks to help her brother. She keeps the werewolves close. She might be a demon, she might doubt demons are capable of love at all, but our imp experiences a lot of painful transitions this time. We see someone who has always felt deeply alone and empty, hence her need to devour and own, a hole that is seemingly still there no matter what, she feels terribly guilty and she's more and more possessive of Wyatt. More than that, she finally understands and admits that she does love Wyatt. She's sometimes still very condescending with him and doesn't fully understand him yet, nor he she, but he's so accepting of her and so supportive she can only bask in his warmth in all its glory. I loved the accumulation of all the intimate, tender bits between them that lead to that.
Of course that's not all. Her relationship with Gregory is also only getting deeper and more complicated, no matter how much in denial they both are. There's mentorship, attraction and doubt, a bond deeper than the actual tattoo, flagrant jealousy they won't aknowledge but, most of all, this call, this uncontrollable pull their energies have towards one another. The long scene were they end up having non-corporeal sex, a full fusion and a moment of true together-existance, was for me the best of the whole book. It was magical and hot like none of the alluded or desired sex going on in her life was. Gregory can be such an arrogant prick still, but this time we get to see also how infinitely seductive and burning he is when he is not all closed off behind century-old barriers and misconceptions. Trust and understanding are still an issue between these two, but Gregory is very willing to teach her and try to incite her to be more than what she thinks she is. I wonder how long it will take them to finally get THERE, I will love the ride. Her becoming the Iblis will force them to spend a lot of time together and I'm very excited to get to know more of the Angels at last. I'm sure she will mess with them all.
A final little remark on something that slightly bothered me: there's only one POC in her entourage and she happens to be from Haïti and of course she has an aunt who is a priestess? I hope this was not intentional, or maybe I'm too sensitive about these things.