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#6 Ghost Story by Jim Butcher

Yeah, yeah, I finally got around to reading this.



I bought this right around the time it came out last year and it's just ... sat there on my shelf.  Why?  Well, honestly, while Changes turned out better than I had expected, I was a little burnt out on Butcher.  I finally just gave up the other day and grabbed #13 to read.

I immediately remembered why I loved the Harry Dresden universe.  It's easy to get sucked in and with this being #13, it's kind of like connecting with an old friend again.  Overall, I thought this was a good romp but nowhere near how good some of the other books were - I hope Butcher's not on a downward spiral. :(

This really, really felt like a transitional book (which IC it was but it shouldn't have felt like it, you know?).  I felt that we got a lot of some characters (Molly and Butters; I will never complain about too much Butters, though, in any of these books) but got the short end of the stick with others (Karrin!  Jesus, we couldn't have gotten a little more Murphy?).  Also, to be honest, I'd completely forgotten who Corpsetaker was and that kind of threw me out of the book while I tried to remember.

Also, it seemed kind of repetitive in some spots.  If I heard one more time how it was wrong to take Molly to Chichén Itzá because she was a sensitive, I was going to scream (we got it, what, three, four times?).

However, it was still fun and there were still some really powerful moments.  I literally went "Holy crap, no way!" in the kitchen at work when I got to the chapter where you find out that Harry arranged his own murder.  And the reunion scenes with both Mister and Mouse were wonderful and heartbreaking.  And there were a lot of really great small moments.

But, over all, not my favorite Dresden novel and I hope that Cold Days returns to the awesome we experienced with the earlier novels.

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Date: 2012-03-10 12:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] technophobia.livejournal.com
I was for sure that it would wind up being Kincaid having pulled the trigger. And I had suspected that Harry might have arranged it, but I wasn't sure until it was confirmed.

The nature of He Who Walks Behind was BRILLIANT. Such a simple concept, and so goddamned creepy.

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