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DARK CURRENTS by Jacqueline Carey

DARK CURRENTS

From the Agent of Hel series, volume 1

by Jacqueline Carey

Pub Date: Oct. 2nd, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-451-46478-1
Publisher: ROC/Penguin

The inaugural volume of a new urban fantasy series, from the author of Naamah’s Blessing (2011, etc.).

Pemkowet, a small resort town on the shores of Lake Michigan, provides the usual facilities for its wealthy summer residents, while the many tourists hope to catch a glimpse of one of Pemkowet’s eldritch inhabitants—fairies (the toothy, vicious kind), vampires, naiads and so forth—whose benevolent supervisor is Hel, the Norse goddess. Daisy Johanssen, daughter of a minor demon and raised by a single mother, is Hel’s enforcer and designated liaison to the Pemkowet Police Department, where she works as a part-time file clerk. Most of her duties are routine, like warning off fairies who try to abduct human children, but when a young college kid drowns in suspicious circumstances, Chief Bryant calls Daisy in—he drowned in salt water, and his pals are downright evasive about what really happened. Carey handles the investigation expertly. On the human side, the dead boy’s parents instigated a political movement to banish the eldritch. As for the supernatural, well, Daisy’s partner, Officer Cody Fairfax, is secretly a werewolf, and she’s had a crush on him since high school. Daisy’s voluptuous friend, Lurine Hollister, was a B-movie actress and is, openly, a lamia. The vampires are sleazy and uncooperative. And as for the ghouls: Having been rejected by both Heaven and Hell, they’re immortal, feed on emotions rather than flesh, and Daisy finds their leader, Stefan Ludovic, dangerously attractive. She has personal issues too, being on the outs with BFF Jen Cassopolis, while her father keeps offering to awaken her demonic powers; this, according to received eldritch wisdom, would unleash big, bad trouble for reality itself.

Beautifully articulated and intriguingly populated: Altogether, an arresting kickoff.