Categories
book reading reviews

Fool Moon – Jim Butcher

Fool Moon is the second in the Dresden Files series of books. It’s fair to say that I’ve seen enough I liked in book 1 to stay with this franchise for a while. There are now I think 14 books and I’ve heard they get a bit repetitive later on but we’ll see how far I get.

With the title it’s perhaps not surprising that this book concerns werewolves. A gruesome series of murders occur on and around the full moon and Harry Dresden is called on for his supernatural advice. Actually at the beginning of the book he knows almost nothing but we learn as he does. There are apparently five different types of creature that could go under the category of werewolf and in this book we meet most of them. The plot concerns which of the various types (if any) committed which of the various murders (are they all from the same perpetrator?) and of course why?

There’s also more in this book about Dresden’s on-going story. We find out a bit more about his past, we see him move on in one relationship whilst apparently getting a bit stuck in another. Also, even though this is only book 2, patterns are developing. Once again Harry gets beaten up a lot. So much so that we have at one point need of a supernatural explanation of how he can keep going at all – properly set up so it’s not pulled out of thin air. Once again Harry has to go it alone and despite his status as sometime consultant to the cops is suspected of the crimes he’s investigating. So some of this already feels like it’s giving us more of the same. However there are signs that this will change in future books. A character that I’d assumed was going to be one of the mainstays of the series got killed off. Also he makes a decision to be more open with his police friend Murphy – which is good because the whole “I can’t tell you what’s going on because of the Mystical-Law-Reason” might be plausible enough but it leads to a fake-feeling kind of dramatic tension – a bit like when a sitcom’s plot is based around a misunderstanding that would be resolved in two minutes if only characters would TALK TO EACH OTHER.

Oh and it also had a dream sequence. I’m not a fan of dream sequences. They’re generally an excuse to be self-indulgent with imagery or deliver up a character’s motivations without having to dramatize them. But there are worse examples of that than the one in this book.

Another pattern-y[*] aspect is that these books are looking very much like detective/police procedurals with fantasy/supernatural set dressing. The bad guys are likely supernatural beasties and in place of CSI tech we have spells and summonings but structurally they work the same way. The question is whether you enjoy the scenery. I think I do (I like the PC Grant books and the same could be said of them) but I also think it’s because Butcher executes that structure as competently as he does that they work. I suspect he could right ‘straight’ crime novels which were just as compelling.

He does write the action sequences well. There’s a scene in a police station which is gripping, frightening and exciting. He manages to make me interesting in a trope – werewolves – that I’m not generally drawn to.

So I did enjoy this. It was “pattern-y” at times but I still enjoy Dresden as a character and there appears to be development there too – both in terms of exploring his back-story and the way his personal ‘arc’ is unfolding.

8/10 – a police procedural with plenty of supernatural splatter.

[*] i.e. formulaic, but I didn’t want to use that word as it carries more of a pejorative overtone than I intend.

P.S. given the title can’t get this completely unrelated song out of my head.

Categories
book reading reviews

Storm Front – Jim Butcher

Being a Buffy fan I’ve long been at least vaguely aware of the name of Harry Dresden. When the Dresden Files TV show was announced I think James Marsters name was mooted to pay him – probably mainly by Buffy fans to be fair though. For some reason I was never that keen to catch up on this franchise. Maybe for a time I wasn’t really into reading/watching supernatural stuff. I did read a lot of straight crime fiction for a while there. Anyway the idea came back around again, partly through seeing Jim Butcher on Geek and Sundry’s StoryBoard discussion stream. On an impulse the other day I started to read the first page using Amazon’s “Look Inside” feature and well… here we are.

Storm Front is the first of the Harry Dresden novels. Dresden is a modern day wizard in Chicago. He’s a wizard for hire and he essentially works as a P.I. One day he’s approached by a woman who wants him to investigate the disappearance of her husband. At the same time he’s helping the police with an investigation into a particularly brutal and baffling murder. Meanwhile his own actions are being monitored by the White Council, which is the (good) wizards ruling body and is not exactly Dresden’s biggest fan. With all this going on and possibly the emergence of a mysterious new, very powerful magic practitioner it’s all starting to look very busy, and dangerous for Harry.

I have to admit that despite the renewed interest I started off sceptical as to whether I would like this book. At first my preconceptions seemed to be borne out. Some of the supernatural jargon felt twee (‘Nevernever’ for the magical realm) and it felt like it was trying too hard to invoke the twin genres of hard-boiled detective noir and supernatural fantasy (I’m not sure whether the term Urban Fantasy had been coined yet when this book came out in 2000). But I have to admit the book won me over.

There were two reasons for that. First the story builds very well. It’s not slow paced to begin with but it definitely ramps up a few notches by the end. So it had the page-turning plot thing covered.

The second reason was Dresden himself. The character is likeable. He seems like the hard-bitten P.I. cliche on the surface (Marlowe as a Mage?) but the internal monologue you get helps you see past the wisecracks to someone much more complicated, with vulnerabilities and his own fears and issues, and a past. He also gets the crap kicked out of him in various magical and mundane ways and that tends to get you on a character’s side. Not just that you feel for him but that when he’s been beaten down and is apparently out of options he tends to react with a defiant resolution to fight back.

So yes I enjoyed this book and yes I will be reading more of his adventures.

8/10 – a tale of a supernatural P.I. (but not the one about the Vampire with a soul 😉 )