MostlyFiction Book Reviews » Mike Carey We Love to Read! Wed, 14 May 2014 13:06:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.3 VICIOUS CIRCLE by Mike Carey /2009/vicious-circle-by-mike-carey/ /2009/vicious-circle-by-mike-carey/#comments Sat, 31 Oct 2009 15:03:21 +0000 /?p=6004 Book Quote:

“If I could save the child, then I would save her, but I can’t and won’t allow her soul to become the mechanism through which hell’s mightiest general is unleashed upon the world.”

Book Review:

Review by Jana L. Perskie (OCT 31, 2009)

Vicious Circle is a wonderfully entertaining, fantasy thriller a la noir. The novel abounds with otherworldly creatures – demons, ghosts, zombies, a succubus, lycanthropes, (loup-garous) and one of the Devil’s highest ranking minions. What makes the novel really unique, however, is the humor. Felix, (“Fix”), Castor is one of the wittiest protagonists I have come across in a long while. And many of Mike Carey’s other characters are real originals. Some of the dialogue made me laugh out loud while shaking in my proverbial boots.

Castor is a hard-boiled but very sympathetic freelance exorcist/ghostbuster. London is his stomping ground. His business card reads “F. Castor Eradications.” Fix, as his friends call him, is down on his luck and owes his landlady back rent – nothing unusual about this. Close friend, and former landlady, PEN, aka Pamela Elisa Bruckner, lives in a three story inverted penthouse – the penthouse is underground – and the monstrosity of a house has been in her family for eons, literally. She is a Wiccan Priestess and has been Castor’s buddy since college days.

The primary tool Castor uses in his trade is a whistle, a Clarke original, Key of D, (“the saddest chord”). He plays music on his tin whistle to bind and banish spirits. And naturally, he takes it everywhere. The whistle is for him what a gun is for a cop. Since the Millennium, which brought a great upsurge in supernatural activity, he has had to use his whistle and all his other exorcising accoutrements frequently

Felix accidentally wove a master demon, Asmodeus, into his friend Rafi’s soul about a year ago. Rafi and his demon now reside in a facility for the violent criminally insane. And all hell breaks lose, literally, when Asmodeus takes over Rafi’s mind and acts out. At the top of Felix’s “to do” list is to exorcise this powerful demon and set his friend free before he is transferred to a “bottom of the line” facility. This is not an easy task, as magical textbooks put Asmodeus at the top of the “infernal pecking order,” and he is burning Rafi up from the inside out!

Felix’s priorities multiply when he is contacted by the parents of a missing girl. They hire him to find their daughter. There’s one catch – their daughter, Abbie, is a ghost. Abbie drowned on a school trip last summer, and about three months later she “came back home,” to her parents delight. If they cannot have their daughter back in the flesh, they’ll take the spirit rather than lose her altogether. A few days before, a disreputable exorcist named Dennis Peace took Abbie’s ghost, binding her to him, and claiming to be her real father. Abbie’s parents believe that only a strong exorcist like “Fix” can go up against Peace and recover their daughter’s ghost.

Eventually, Felix gets a fix on Peace, but two loup garous show up with an equal interest in the exorcist kidnapper. They bludgeon Felix and do all kinds of other nasty things to him to get him to talk, but he doesn’t have the information they want. So, he is left in really bad shape – barely alive. And the case of the missing ghost becomes more complex – all kinds of twists and turns, and lots more action and violence.

Meanwhile, Felix’s friend, Ajulutsikae, a powerful succubus, is trying her hand at exorcism – one can never have too many skills. Felix is allowed to call the sexual incubus “Juliet,” and she keeps her powers in check for him. Although she does drive him crazy with lust, he is able to control himself when in her company. Juliet is investigating a haunted church. Another one of Hell’s minions has woven itself into the fabric of the church. Resolving this dilemma and saving the congregation proves to be too complex a task for Juliet’s novice capabilities – so she calls upon Felix for help. One could say his whistle is being put to good use.

This is no predictable paranormal mystery. The mystery(s) is extremely difficult to solve and the villains are almost too powerful to defeat. A sinister, shadowy air permeates the novel. Carey’s exotic characters, the human and not so human, are wonderfully conceived and at times outrageous. Carey’s descriptions are very creative and often funny – which provide a break from all the heavy stuff. However, too much extraneous information and way too much graphic violence kept me from rating Vicious Circle 5 Stars. The book needs a bit more editing and toning down.

Vicious Circle is the second in the Felix Castor series, after The Devil You Know. Although this series is Mike Carey’s first foray into fiction, he is a highly successful comic book writer who created the critically acclaimed Vertigo series Lucifer, which garnered numerous international awards and was nominated for five Eisners. I can’t wait to read book 3, Dead Men’s Boots.

AMAZON READER RATING: stars-4-0from 20 readers
PUBLISHER: Grand Central Publishing; 1 edition (July 1, 2009)
REVIEWER: Jana L. Perksie
AMAZON PAGE: Vicious Circle
AUTHOR WEBSITE: Wikipedia page on Mike Carey

Official website with blog

Publisher site on Felix Castor series

EXTRAS: Excerpt
MORE ON MOSTLYFICTION: Read our review of The Devil You Know

More ghost hunting sleuths:

Perfect Circle by Sean Stewart

Second Glance by Jodi Picoult

Bibliography:


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THE DEVIL YOU KNOW by Mike Carey /2009/the-devil-you-know-by-mike-carey/ /2009/the-devil-you-know-by-mike-carey/#comments Wed, 12 Aug 2009 20:11:38 +0000 /?p=3936 Book Quote:

“Exorcism is both more and less than a job. You do it because it’s something you can do, and because once you’ve started, there’s something about it that doesn’t let you stop. But, in the long run, it gets to you.”

Book Review:

Reviewed by Jana L. Perskie (AUG 12, 2009)

The Devil You Know, is a wonderfully entertaining, chilling, thriller. The novel abounds with otherworldly creatures – demons, ghosts, zombies, and lycanthropes, (loup-garou). The Devil himself, or one of his high ranking minions, even makes a brief appearance. However, some of Carey’s human characters are so evil that the supernatural seem charming by comparison. What makes the novel really unique is the humor. Felix, (Fix), Castor is one of the wittiest protagonists I have come across in a long while.

Castor is a hard-boiled but very sympathetic freelance exorcist/ghostbuster. London is his stomping ground. His business card reads “F. Castor Eradications.” Fix, as his friends call him, is down on his luck and owes his landlady mucho back rent. Landlady PEN, aka Pamela Elisa Bruckner, lives in a three story inverted penthouse – the penthouse is underground – and the monstrosity of a house has been in her family for eons, literally. She is a Wiccan Priestess and has been a close friend of Castor’s since college days. PEN needs money badly, and, since Fix is semi-retired as an exorcist, she gets him a gig doing magic tricks at a boy’s birthday party – not REAL magic, just the usual well-performed stage magic. Unfortunately he fails to collect his loot when his final trick goes wrong and the parents of the birthday boy throw him out. So, now it’s back to ghostbusting. However, Castor is traumatized by the thought of returning to his God-given vocation. About a year ago he accidentally wove a demon into his friend Rafi’s soul. Rafi and his demon now reside in a facility for the violent criminally insane.

The primary tool Castor uses in his trade is a whistle, a Clarke original, Key of D, (“the saddest chord”). He plays music on his tin whistle to bind and banish spirits. And naturally, he takes it everywhere. The whistle is for him what a gun is for a cop. He accepts a lucrative job to exorcise a ghost from the Bonnington Archive, a museum which holds priceless archival material from all over the world. The more Fix learns about this ghost, a transparent woman dressed in white with the top portion of her face veiled in red, the more he wants to learn about her and the circumstances behind her death before condemning her spirit to never-neverland. Her appearances have become increasingly more violent, to the point where a staff member is injured. Unlike many, Fix is a very ethical exorcist, and, at times, the truth means more than closing his eyes, doing the job and collecting the money. Sounds hokey, but the author makes it work.

Complications arise when a sleazy pimp named Damjohn shows up with his loup-garou and threaten Castor to back off. This is when Fix realizes that there is more to the sinister situation than meets the eye, especially when Damjohn sends a killer succubus to eat his soul. The mystery, tension and sense of doom heighten as it appears that one or more members of the museum’s staff are involved in a variety of crimes.

This is no predictable paranormal mystery. The mystery(s) is extremely difficult to solve, and takes primary place over the otherworldy action. A sinister, shadowy and really scary air permeate the novel. The authors writing style is taut and the pace is fast. His exotic characters, the human and not so human, are wonderfully conceived and at times outrageous. Carey’s descriptions are very creative and often funny – which provide a break from all the heavy stuff.

The Devil You Know is the first in the Felix Castor series. Although this is his first foray into fiction, author Mike Carey is the highly successful comic book writer who created the critically acclaimed Vertigo series Lucifer, which garnered numerous international awards and was nominated for five Eisners. I can’t wait to read the sequel.

AMAZON READER RATING: stars-4-5from 50 readers
PUBLISHER: Grand Central Publishing (June 1, 2008)
REVIEWER: Jana L. Perskie
AMAZON PAGE: The Devil You Know
AUTHOR WEBSITE: Wikipedia page on Mike Carey

Official website with blog

Publisher site on Felix Castor series

EXTRAS: Excerpt
MORE ON MOSTLYFICTION: Read our review of anothert Felix Castor novel:
Vicious Circle

More ghost hunting sleuths:

Perfect Circle by Sean Stewart

Second Glance by Jodi Picoult

Partial Bibliography:


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