From Dragon Award nominee Daniel HumphreysPaxton Locke saved the day, killed the witch, and got the girl… after a fashion.Recovering from his battle with the witch, Paxton and his new partner–don’t call her a sidekick–Cassie are headed to Phoenix. A spate of mysterious, ritualistic murders has the police baffled. Who better to find the perp than someone who can speak to the dead?While Paxton … who can speak to the dead?
While Paxton hunts a killer, far deadlier creatures stalk him. In the Valley of the Sun, a mystical cold war is about to go nuclear.
Harry Dresden’s sorcery goes on a Supernatural-style road trip. Cool car sold separately.
The Paxton Locke Series
- Fade – ASIN B07D2XZ25Y
- Night’s Black Agents
- Come, Seeling Night – Coming in 2019!
more
a fun variant of everything you love about Harry Dresden. Magic used in inventive ways. Much snark. Solid fight scenes. It’s all in the review.
And now, we have the sequel, Night’s Black Agents. It came out last year. Though I genuinely waited for book three to be near completion before I reviewed it.
Why? We’ll get to that.
The book has two arcs. One is a subplot detailing the travails of Mother Dearest after her escape from supermax in the last novel — as well as the hunt by Humphreys own version of the Monster Control Bureau — only with a different mission.
Our main plot follows Paxton hot on the trail of a magical murderer. The book opens only a week after the end of Fade. (Even Harry Dresden gets more time to rest.) And it begins with “I was halfway through a stack of pancakes when the dead guy walked in the door.” Probably the best opening line since “The building was on fire, but it wasn’t my fault.” (Yes, I hate to open with comparing it to a line from The Dresden Files, but really, it’s one of the few works I can compare it to. One of the lines in the novel is literally “With the exception of magic, the only real talent I had was taking a beating.” — tell me that doesn’t sound like Jim Butcher.)
We open with a random encounter … which will become less random over time. Because this random encounter sees Paxton for what he is, and sees him as a snack.
And this is just the opening.
There are a lot of “oh crap” moments like this scattered throughout my notes. Looking at notes I made on the kindle, many of my comments even at the start of the book are “Oy.” “Oh crap,” “Aw f***”, and “What do you mean she has groupies!?” et al. (By the way, a line for Larry Correia fans: “Forensic accounting, it seemed, was a class of sorcery all its own.”)
It’s even worse when Mother Dearest turns into Kilgrave from Jessica Jones, only creepier.
And all these comments are from Chapter 1. It just gets better from there.
Of course, Dan has great lines to put a backspin on tropes. As Paxton describes his world: “Sheer moments of terror followed by hours of law enforcement shouting.” And there are a bunch of … re-purposed lines from classic Star Wars (as opposed to EU novel Star Wars, as we all know, there were no other films). And all of the one-liners are fun: “an orphaned teenager with sudden-onset wizard syndrome was a fertile field for the corrupting possibility of power,” or even the casual “Buddy, you’re about the ninth worst thing I’ve seen this week.”
Now, I really must compliment Dan on making an interesting federal agency to hunt black magic. These are obviously fictional feds, as the characters are colorful, interesting and entertaining. Also, to add to the humor, they’re attached to ATF (or BATFE, if you want to be picky). I guess black magic is a sort of firearm. They have their own R and D section, complete with the sort of mad tinkerers you’d expect to be working in Q’s lab.
Hell, to be perfectly honest, while I tend to skip the sections on the villains (which is a mistake I made for the Honor Harrington series… oops) Humphreys manages to make these sections readable and tolerable, but more importantly, relevant to the plot as a whole. This is the point where Humphreys fits in magical mechanics in a way that doesn’t make your eyes bleed. Hell, who am I kidding, he actually takes the time and effort to MAKE MAGIC MAKE SENSE. (I’m not naming names, JK). Mother turns into a little bit of a Final Fantasy villain, but it makes more sense in book 3.
Not to mention that the Mother subplot is put to great effect when the villain of the week is enough to make her nervous.
And the feds hunting Mother actually serves to tie the main arc plot very neatly back to the primary plot for the individual novel. Overall, it’s a great balance of series arc and book plot.
(If the author is reading this review, I just got to this exchange
“So, what, you think this is the end of the world?”
“Maybe. Dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria. Fire and brimstone.”
Ahem…. smartass).
And Humphreys does a great job of slow world building. Just casual references to gremlins on satellites, or magical abilities of X or Y person.
Now here comes the boom.
So, why did I wait so long to review this? Because this ends on a cliffhanger.
Imagine the first time you ever saw The Empire Strikes Back. Now imagine if it stopped with Luke dangling in mid-air in Cloud city, Han is still frozen in carbonite, and the last we saw of the Millennium Falcon, it was being chased by TIE-fighters into the clouds.
That’s what the end of this book felt like. My last note on the book is two words, and they are often favored by Samuel L. Jackson.
But book 3 is out, you can go from here and buy books 2 and 3 and read them back to back
I received a free copy of this book from Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review. I laughed at times. This book was a roller coaster ride. Magic used for good and evil.
Amazing characters and a story that kept me reading until the book was done. While
this book is the second in the series, it contains enough back story to be read as a
standalone. I can’t wait for the next book in the series. Loved this book.
This is the second book in the series but can be read alone. It took a bit to get into the style of writing. I found the jumping bake in forth between several characters distracting. The author’s take on how magic worked was different from other books and interesting. The book does end in a cliff hanger, so beware.
Fantastic book I would give it 10* if I could. This is my first time reading this authors work but will definitely not be the last. The book is well written and thought out with interesting characters especially the hero/anti-hero Paxton. The violence is not over the top considering the subject matter and is balanced with humour. Looking forward to reading the next book to see how both Paxton’s powers and his budding relationship with Cassie progresses. Warning there is a massive cliffhanger at the end of the book as well as a huge surprise that I never saw coming. Thoroughly recommend this book to all readers of good fiction.
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.
If you love magic and witches, this is the book for you. Throughout the book, I was glued to the pages, turning them as quickly as I could. I was really upset that a mother could do such things to her son. It doesn’t make sense to me as I have 2 sons of my own who I adore. But without the magic, this is sometimes how it goes. Awesome story that kept me interested until the very end. Definitely need to read the first book as I did not and was a little lost at times but it did fill me in at some point. Now I’ll have to go read the first book which I am happy to do.
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.
In book 1 we met Paxton Locke and his “sidekick” Cassie (dont let her hear you say that). The action this time moves out west to investigate some ritual murders. In the meantime Paxton is trying to teach Cassie some magic so she can be even more helpful. Unfortunately, it seems that maybe Paxton didn’t quite rid the world of the threat from book 1. We also meet some new supporting characters. The only thing I noticed was that Paxton may have matured a little to much….lol, he seems somehow less sarcastic, which I really liked in the first book, so be warned he may be getting older and more serious about his role in protecting the rest of us