Reviewed by MurderByDeath on
There's no doubt that this is a great series with excellent characters. I enjoyed the slightly stronger focus on Samuel vs. Adam and I'm happy that this triangle isn't going to drag on indefinitely. I also really enjoyed finding out a bit more about Zee and some of the fae folklore, although the fae as a group don't hold a lot of fascination for me.
Iron Kissed is closer to a traditional murder mystery than the first two, and I have to admit I had the evil pegged from it's first scene, but there's so much going on in this book that it didn't at all matter - I'm not even sure the author's first goal here is to keep us from knowing who the evil is.
Finally the scene I dreaded the most: I was relieved to find the author didn't feel the need to be disgustingly graphic about the physical brutality, but she does manage to convey the horror and creepiness of the scene vividly by exploiting the mental angle. I think of all the disturbing scenes of the overall horror, the one in the car ride over to the garage was the most disturbing for me. In just two (maybe 3?) short sentences, I'm completely creeped out, and horrified by the lack of free will Mercy suffers. The garage scene felt a bit jagged - like a film clip that was missing frames - but I was completely ok with that. I was happy to have details filled in when needed after everything was over and the body parts swept up.
This isn't a series where I'll be reading the books back-to-back until I catch up, but I'll definitely keep on reading.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 5 August, 2013: Finished reading
- 5 August, 2013: Reviewed