White Night by Jim Butcher

White Night (Dresden Files, #9)

by Jim Butcher

A series of apparent suicides rings alarm bells with the police. And before he knows it Harry Dresden, professional wizard, is hired to investigate. At the first crime scene he finds an unmistakable magical taint - and a message specially designed for him, referencing the killing of witches. Harry is desperate to hunt down his tormentor and halt the killings, but instead finds evidence implicating his half-brother, Thomas. To Harry, this just doesn't add up, so he must add clearing his brother's name to his expanding list. Something that didn't make the list is subtlety, and Harry's search attracts the attention of the White Court of vampires ...Soon, whichever way he turns, he faces a power struggle that will render him outnumbered, outclassed and dangerously susceptible to temptation. And if he screws up, his friends will die.

Reviewed by Ben Pick on

3 of 5 stars

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This was a great novel, and worthy of 5 stars. However, it was held back by the over sexualization of Molly. Most of the first several books suffer from something similar, but from what I remember, this was the worst offender. Dresden seems to be in the nebulous early 40s range and in very few moments related to Molly does he seem like the more mature one.

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  • 23 September, 2020: Reviewed