Showing posts with label Series - Anita Blake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Series - Anita Blake. Show all posts

Book: Lunatic Cafe


Laurell K Hamilton
Urban Fantasy
Ace / 1996
Paper Back / 352 Pages
Series Anita Blake #4

Vampire hunter and zombie animator Anita Blake is an expert at sniffing out the bad from the good. But in The Lunatic Café, she's about to learn that nothing is ever as it seems, especially in matters of the not-so-human heart


I picked this book up because Series/reread

What I liked the Most?

What I liked the Least? Anita’s view on women

Review:

“I wanted to see Richard in a suit and let him see me in something frillier than jeans. I was after all a girl, whether I liked to admit it or not.” ~ This line bugs the shit out of me, just get over it you were written as a girl.

Recommended to: Fans of the series

Best Quote: “I loved him, but love isn't enough. All the fairy tales, the romance novels, the soap operas; they're all lies. Love does not conquer all.”

Book: Circus of the Damned


Laurell K Hamilton
Urban Fantasy
Ace / 1995
Mass Market / 329 Pages
Series Anita Blake #3

In Laurell Hamilton's wonderfully noir horror thrillers, Anita Blake never knows quite what is going to turn up walking the mean streets she lives on. She really does not appreciate the sexual attentions of Jean-Claude, vampire Master of the city she lives in and proprietor of the Circus of the Damned. No matter how cute he is, he is dead, and Anita gets enough of dead people in her work as zombie raiser and vampire executioner. His friend Richard strikes her as entirely more her sort of thing--sweet, polite and a high-school teacher; yet she knows with an awful inevitability that Richard probably has secrets of his own. Add to this volatile personal mix vampires with ambitions to seize Jean-Claude's throne and mount anti-human pogroms, an immortal snake-woman with agendas of her own and a hit-man with a contract on whoever the Master happens to be at the time, and Anita's problems start to be as entertaining and suspenseful as ever. Hamilton takes us to dark caverns and overlit night-clubs, and to the darker places that live inside human and formerly human sexuality--her books are terrific supernatural thrillers because she is keen to explore sexual heat as well as terror and excitement.


I picked this book up because Series

What I liked the Most? The simplicity of the descriptions

What I liked the Least? Anita’s attitude starts to deteriorate

Review: Ok, maybe Anita (read Laurell in this statement) is a little repetitive (often taking almost blocks of description from one book to the next especially when describing clothes, guns, etc), distressingly anti-girl, and over all Imabadass, but she is still one of my favorite characters, I just kinda tune out the rants. I do love the fact that cops & zombies are featured in this book (well until the vamps take over the story line) and of course we get introduced to Richard in this installment (on of my favs until he goes stark). And how cool was it that one of the heads of Humans First was introduced.

Recommended to: Fans of the series

Best Quote: So he gets furry once a month. No one's perfect.

Book: The Laughing Corspe


Laurell K Hamilton
Urban Fantasy
Ace / 1994
Mass Market / 304 Pages
Series Anita Blake #2

Harold Gaynor offers Anita Blake a million dollars to raise a 300-year-old zombie. Knowing it means a human sacrifice will be necessary, Anita turns him down. But when dead bodies start turning up, she realizes that someone else has raised Harold's zombie--and that the zombie is a killer. Anita pits her power against the zombie and the voodoo priestess who controls it.
Notice to Hollywood: forget Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Anita Blake is the real thing.


I picked this book up because Series
What I liked the Most? The zombies!! They totally rock!

What I liked the Least? The negative light of Voodoo (but it’s something I need to remember that not everyone is respectful)

Review:I love rereading the old (classic) Anita Blake books. Yes the hint of sex is there, but it is NOT the primary focus. I love the murder para mystery, the betrayal, the insights, the search for truth. I love the odd sense of humor that this book has.

My fandom of Laurell was set in stone with this book.

Recommended to: Fans of the series or anyone interested in bloody and gruesome books that are centered around the paranormal

Best Quote: "It's just a little lust, Jean-Claude, nothing special."

Book: Guilty Pleasures




Laurell K Hamilton
Urban Fantasy
ACE / 1993
Mass Market / 326 Pages
Series Anita Blake #1

Anita Blake may be small and young, but vampires call her the Executioner. Anita is a necromancer and vampire hunter in a time when vampires are protected by law—as long as they don't get too nasty. Now someone's killing innocent vampires and Anita agrees—with a bit of vampiric arm-twisting—to help figure out who and why.
Trust is a luxury Anita can't afford when her allies aren't human. The city's most powerful vampire, Nikolaos, is 1,000 years old and looks like a 10-year-old girl. The second most powerful vampire, Jean-Claude, is interested in more than just Anita's professional talents, but the feisty necromancer isn't playing along—yet. This popular series has a wild energy and humor, and some very appealing characters—both dead and alive.


I picked this book up because Wow – I’m not even sure why I started the series all those years ago – it was probably recommended to me by Lori @ Lori’s Used Books
What I liked the Most? Anita’s kick ass attitude

What I liked the Least? Nothing

Review: This was an absolutely stunning book the first time I read it, and I still love it.

I loved Anita's strength, her smart-alecky sense of humor, her brash personality, and even her hostility. I really appreciated the fact that Guilty Pleasures wasn’t overtly sexual – it’s in the background but it’s not the focus of the story. And this isn't a romance (twisted or otherwise).

The world building was pretty dead on – the only real differences between our world and this world is that the things that go bump in the night now exist and are becoming star attrations.

Recommended to: Fans of dark vampire fiction – no Twilight junkies

Best Quote: I know who and what I am. I am The Executioner, and I don't date vampires. I kill them.

Book: Hit List



Laurell K Hamilton
Urban Fantasy
Berkley / 2011
Hardback / 336 Pages
Series Anita Blake # 20

A serial killer is hunting the Pacific Northwest, murdering victims in a gruesome and spectacular way. The local police suspect “monsters” are involved, and have called in Anita Blake and Edward, US Marshals who really know their monsters, to catch the killer.

But some monsters are very real. The Harlequin have been the bogeymen of the vampire world for more than a thousand years; they are a secret so dark that even to speak their name can earn you a death sentence. Now they are here in America, hunting weretigers…and human police.

The Harlequin serve the Mother of All Darkness, the first vampire. She was supposed to be dead, but only her body was destroyed. Now she needs a new one, and she’s decided that Anita Blake’s is the body she wants. Edward thinks the serial killings are a trap to lure Anita closer to the most dangerous vampire they’ve ever hunted. The vampires call Edward “Death,” and Anita the “Executioner,” but Mommy Darkest is coming to kill one and possess the other, and she doesn’t care how many others have to die along the way.


I picked this book up because Series

What I liked the Most?

What I liked the Least? The end of the book – WTF?????

Review: You know – I hesitated to buy the book for a really long time then I saw it on sale and thought why not. I started reading it, not really expecting much but hoping for at least decent. Letting me catch up with the gang – Jean Claude, Richard, Nathaniel & Jason.

Story opens with Anita & Edward at a crime scene and she’s being a girl. Say what?? Yep she was all maudlin and distraught about the death of yet another person she doesn’t know, wallowing in her own misery instead of showing interest in solving the murder.

Flash forward – hotel room with the only other female agent; story starts to heat up. Harlequin has returned to torment Anita some more. Taunting her with the other agents health. Hey we might have a story her.

And that is the way the whole story went – drag drag drag – oh poor pitiful me with my harem of boys (and let’s not forget we added some girls so all the boys have a hole) and all this magical power you’re just jealous of what I have dramatics to WONDERFUL story line and then back again. With the abso most distressing ending EVER!!!!

Recommended to: Die hard fans of the series only

Best Quote: “We settled this, Anita. The … one who can’t be named - I really hate that we can’t even say their names out loud. It feels like we’re in a Harry Potter book talking about He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named.”

Book:Flirt



Laurell K Hamilton
Fantasy
Berkley / February 2010
Hardback / 192 Pages
Series # 18 Anita Blake

When Anita Blake meets with prospective client Tony Bennington, who is desperate to have her reanimate his recently deceased wife, she is full of sympathy for his loss. Anita knows something about love, and she knows everything there is to know about loss. But what she also knows, though Tony Bennington seems unwilling to be convinced, is that the thing she can do as a necromancer isn't the miracle he thinks he needs. The creature that Anita could coerce to step out of the late Mrs. Bennington's grave would not be the lovely Mrs. Bennington. Not really. And not for long.


I picked this book up because Series

What I liked the Most? Yes an old fashioned Anita Blake - raising zombies

What I liked the Least? What happened to morals?

Review:After reading this novella I ranted again at such a waste of time (even if it was only an hour), the total waste of money, the senseless sex and yet another slave. I had some serious issues with this book.
  • It was way too short for a hard cover full price book. Why not put it out in a soft cover trade and lower the price.
  • The plot/story line = totally forgettable.
  • What happened to the plot twists and character development that was the staple ingrediant of her earlier books?
  • Where is Anita's police work and the relationships with those characters?


This is purely "filler" for a series, which felt like an insult to the readers. I would prefer to wait the 6 months to a year (or longer) for a better written, longer, a better developed story.

Recommended to:No one

Best Quote: Really nothing stood out

Challenges: None

Skin Trade - Laurell K Hamilton

Hardcover: 496 pages
Publisher: Berkley Hardcover; 1 edition (June 2, 2009)

Paranormal 999 Challenge/100+ Challenge



(Publisher Bits)
Once you tell someone certain things, like, say, you got mailed a human head in a box, they tend to think you're crazy.

Anita Blake's reputation has taken some hits. Not on the work front, where she has the highest kill count of all the legal vampire executioners in the country, but on the personal front. No one seems to trust a woman who sleeps with the monsters. Still, when a vampire serial killer sends her a head from Las Vegas, Anita has to warn Sin City's local authorities what they're dealing with. Only it's worse than she thought. Several officers and one executioner have been slain -- paranormal style!

Anita heads to Las Vegas, where she's joined by three other federal marshals, including the ruthless Edward hiding behind his mild-mannered persona. It's a good thing Edward always has her back, because, when she gets close to the bodies, Anita senses "tiger" too strongly to ignore it. The were-tigers are very powerful in Las Vegas, which means the odds of her rubbing someone important the wrong way just got a lot higher!
(My Turn)

First up - I've been a loyal fan for YEARS - and I know that LKH has taken hits for a bunch of issues and mostly I've been oh well it's her world - BUT NOW I'M BITCHING! I read this series because the main character is a female. Plain & simple. I enjoy the fact that Anita has Boobs & a gun (or several LOL). It has always given me great pleasure to say you go girl, know what I mean? But OMFG, this book repeated over & over & over & over that Anita should "grow some balls", "be a man", and my personal favorite "stop being such a girl". What type of lesson is this giving women of all ages. Are we reverting back to the 1950s housewife? If that's the case, then I vote Nathaniel in a sheer robe & pearls, thank you. He is the ONLY character that even comes close to fitting the bill for that stereotype. End Rant!

Now I realize that a lot of people have been bitching about the overt & ostentatious sexual style that LKH has started using, but personally I've enjoyed the decadence of the later books. After all the series is maturing and everyone has their right to fantasy, if you don't like it quit reading it - it's that simple folks. However, for those of you that kept reading, yet silent (or not so silently) cursing the sex, your prayers have been (mostly) answered - Skin Trade is almost a flash back to the "old school" Anita Blake supernatural detective thriller. The sex has been limited.

I also found the absolute absence of most of the the political to-ing and fro-ing made for a much more refreshing read - because let's face it, we already knew that Anita has issues kneeling & bowing even if it is only show - enough already - you're beating a dead horse. There's some bounce with the cop works, but hey that's life.

While there is almost no direct appearance of any of the recurring secondary characters (Jean-Claude, Micah, etc), I found this to be mostly relaxing (no whiney Richard or morose London) it was a bit disappointing, because I am always looking for a favorite character or two to return. I had hoped to enjoy the return of Edward but since he was a primary contribitor to the "stop being a girl" moments (see earlier rant) I will simply say, The toy king shows up & make a bit of an impact, but now I find myself hoping he'll get shot soon. And I'm extremely happy with the return of Wicked Truth.

All in all, this book has apparently reset the Anita - here's to hoping that LKH has returned to the story telling yester year when there was an actual mystery to solve.