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SHADOWS BITE by Stephen Dedman

SHADOWS BITE

by Stephen Dedman

Pub Date: Feb. 1st, 2001
ISBN: 0-312-87783-8
Publisher: Tor

Sequel to Australian Dedman's debut thriller, The Art of Arrow Cutting (1997), a Stoker Award finalist, again features freelance photographer Michelangelo “Mage” Magistrale.

Charlie Takumo, a martial arts stuntman, joins public defender Kelly Barbet (both from the first novel), who earlier defended Mage against a murder charge. Mage vanished two years ago but works in Canadian refugee camps and tries to master two magical foci he came into and then use them to conquer diseases like AIDS and cancer. The pot bubbles hard as Satanist vampire/sorcerer Solomon Tudor wrests his two-year-old son from his young mother, Angela, herself an adept at magic. And Kelly Barbet (dark-chocolate and 6’2”) must now defend night nurse Gaye Lind, who has been arrested on suspicion of body-snatching after having taken a photograph of a ten-year-old boy's corpse standing on a ledge outside her second-floor apartment window—body laid open, intestines looped about. The boy had been Gaye's patient, but at death his body was stolen from the hospital during an autopsy that was looking into the wasting disease (anemic anoxia) that killed him and is now killing his parents. The lost body turned up in a storm drain, beheaded, with a bulb of garlic sewn into its mouth. Meanwhile, Mage has killed the Japanese-American mobster Tatsuo Tamenaga, and is pursued by the mobster's daughter, Haruko, 28, who inherits her father's yakuza empire. She hires polished assassin Valerie Krieg to track down and kill Mage—on sight, because he can disappear in a finger-snap. Assassins and vampires are already trying to kill Charlie Takumo, who is helping Kelly Barbet investigate the crazy photograph: How had the body been shot on the ledge, and whose red eyes are those mirrored in the window? At last Kelly and Charlie face a coven of female vampires, some having a tea-party in a sewer, while Mage faces Haruko and asks for a truce.

Builds Dedman's fan base but adds no luster to his oeuvre.