How stupid do you have to be to accept a rattlesnake-turned-into-a-woman as your instructor? Jo doesn’t think to investigate? Doesn’t do any research on this guy she’s helping? What kind of cop is she that she so blithely accepts what people tell her? She gives the bad guy her name? That bit on the Enemy was a tough read, it took awhile before I could figure out whose POV I was reading. Wow, it’s a tough test on choice, of acceptance. Although, some of the lengths to which man will go can be too much! That change and invention is in our nature, so it’s not unnatural. I do like Jo’s take on man modifying the world, that our building a dam is as natural as a beaver building one. Per my trope complaints, Murphy spends more time telling us that Jo isn’t studying rather than showing us. Yep, strange but true…Ī bit too much on the tell. We finally get the low-down on which role Jo actually plays: she was a mechanic for the cops and events caused her to become a beat cop. We do finally learn that, yes, Jo is a cop. My TakeĮven though Murphy uses the oh, no, I don’t really want this power and the if I ignore it, it won’t be true tropes, Murphy brings in enough twist to it that I’m enjoying this. Based in Seattle, it’s been six months since Urban Shaman, 1. Second in the Walker Papers urban fantasy series and revolving around Joanne Walker, a.k.a., Siobhán Walkingstick. Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo Thunderbird Falls It is part of the Walker Papers #2 series and is a in eBook edition on and has 408 pages. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |