Our heroine is Wren Valere, a talented young woman in her late 20s who is a lonejack, a solo magic user raised up in a soloist tradition. She works as a “retriever” – essentially a thief with considerable magical talents. Someone stole something from you – something magical, dangerous, powerful? You pay Valere and her “manager” Sergei Didier, and she’ll steal it right back.
New York City is a vibrant place at any time, but in LAG’s world talents (those who feel and manipulate current) and nulls (those who neither feel nor manipulate current/magic) intersect constantly, and it’s not always a pretty sight. We have the Cosa Nostradamus -- the fatae who live their own magic, the nonhuman griffins, piskies, dryads, etc. – and those humans who are either lonejacks of varying power and skills, or members of The Council. The Council prefers to run everything in its own city. They want control of all magic-users – but they’ll settle for intimidation.
And then there are the humans who have no magic of their own, but know it exists and want to know what’s going on in every nook and cranny of the city. Among the most powerful are a group called The Silence. They hire lonejacks to work with them, their interface staff called “handlers” who manage the “talent”.
Sergei Didier was once a handler, and was one of the few who turned his back on The Silence and lived to tell the tale. But The Silence want Wren to work for them – and Wren could use a client who pays a retainer. Two things change in Wren’s world, and the first pebbles of an avalanche start rolling: she and Sergei, partners for ten years, choose to become lovers, and they are gathered into The Silence’s embrace.
She and Sergei are off to Italy in search of a missing magical artifact. All they know is that it’s old, dangerous, and that people who go after it seem to disappear. With magical politics heating up at home, sometimes that sounds good. But not this time...
You’ll get one of the best intimate scenes ever in CURSE THE DARK and watch a relationship that rings true like a bell – what really happens when a magic-user and a null start up a relationship? Laura Anne Gilman’s books are intricate, and she has a trick of dropping you into her characters’ lives so at first you can’t see the story for the trees, shall we say. But her work rewards patience. For intricate urban fantasy, give her books a try.
There are benefits to starting with the first book, but I think they stand alone. They do get progressively darker, though.