Faith Hunter
Auteur de Jane Yellowrock t1, Tueuse de vampires
A propos de l'auteur
Gwendolyn Faith Hunter is an author of fantasy and thriller novels. She writes as Faith Hunter in the fantasy genre and Gwen Hunter for her thriller novels. She also colaborates on thrillers with author Gary Leveille using the joint name Gary Hunter. Hunter was raised in Louisiana and graduated afficher plus from college with a degree in Allied Health Technology. She soon began working in a rural hospital. She found her passion for writing and published her first book in the Garrick Travis Series entitled - "Death Warrant". She has continued her writing carreer with the Rhea Lynch, M.D. Series the DeLande Saga Series and the Rogue Mage Series She has also written several stand alone books like Blackwater Secrets, Rapid Descent, and His Blood Like Tears. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: Author, Faith Hunter
Séries
Œuvres de Faith Hunter
Faith Hunter 18 exemplaires
Cat Tats — Auteur — 17 exemplaires
Haints 16 exemplaires
Dance Master — Auteur — 16 exemplaires
Cajun With Fangs — Auteur — 15 exemplaires
Black Water [short story] — Auteur — 6 exemplaires
Treadlie 5 exemplaires
Snafu 3 exemplaires
It's Just a Date 2 exemplaires
Candy from a Vampire 2 exemplaires
Bound into Darkness 2 exemplaires
The Ties That Bind 1 exemplaire
Shiloh and the Brick (Jane Yellowrock, #7.6) 1 exemplaire
Magic School for Geezers 1 exemplaire
Liz and Eli Sitting: A Jane Yellowrock World Novella 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom légal
- Hunter, Gwendolyn Faith
- Autres noms
- Hunter, Gwen
- Date de naissance
- 1956
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- USA
- Lieux de résidence
- Louisiana, USA
South Carolina, USA - Agent
- Lucienne Diver (Knight Agency)
Membres
Discussions
Found: Fantasy, ex-cult woman connects to land à Name that Book (Novembre 2023)
Critiques
Listes
Read in 2014 (1)
Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 88
- Aussi par
- 10
- Membres
- 11,488
- Popularité
- #2,043
- Évaluation
- 3.9
- Critiques
- 604
- ISBN
- 230
- Langues
- 9
- Favoris
- 26
On the positive side, its premise of a Cherokee skinwalker is different enough, both from the often-cliché world of werewolves and vampires, and from other urban fantasy with a Native American base. The extra twists to Jane's skinwalker abilities (trying to avoid spoilers here) is fertile ground for the future, though only briefly edged into in this first volume.
Jane is snarky and occasionally funny. We're told she's more bad ass than we're actually shown, but she's still bad ass enough that you don't scoff. Given the indications that she's actually somewhat new to the business, that makes some sort of sense.
There are tons of ideas in the book without seeming like everything but the kitchen sink was dumped in.
On the less-positive side, I have a few issues.
I found the pidgin speech used when Beast is in control to be completely grating and totally cheesy. Your mileage may vary; perhaps you won't be as bothered by it. However, after just a few exposures, I started skimming those parts, paying only enough attention to make sure I didn't miss anything important. It seemed totally unnecessary as, more than once, Beast demonstrated higher thought processes totally at odds with the simpleton language. It was a cheap gimmick that came across as poor character construction.
My second issue is that the book is unbalanced. It's plot-light and description-heavy. A full two-thirds of the book passes before Jane even starts to come to grips with the whole point of the plot line: the monster hunt. Yet, we've had tons of food descriptions, admiring the beautiful men around her, (repetitious!) details of her stakes and knives and a Benelli shotgun's construction, etc. If you mentally strip away the fluff, it's a novella. The effect is to make the first part of the book drag and the ending to seem rushed.
Finally, that last positive thing—the tons of ideas—is also a negative. They're introduced and then went nowhere.
A good content editor could have tightened this book up, suggested a few places for more depth, and picked up on ideas that should be signaled as "coming later" to the reader. All of that would have turned this into a very good start to a series.
But as it is now, like I said at the beginning, a little meh.… (plus d'informations)