Burn Bright
2018 • 308 pages

Ratings25

Average rating4

15

I absolutely love Patricia Briggs. Mercy Thompson is a great series, but the Alpha and Omega series stole my heart. Anna is one of my favorite characters EVER. (Though this book reminded me that I want to know more about one of the side characters, Asil, because he's always amused me.)

This is the fifth book in the Alpha and Omega series. It actually started as a short story that  was originally published in an anthology in 2007. I own the anthology - somewhere - but it's available as a separate ebook on Amazon. If you want to read the series, you really need to start there. It's where Anna and Charles meet and explains Anna's backstory. But in Burn Bright, Anna and Charles have been mated for a few years and gone on a number of adventures already. Now Charles' father, Bran, “the Marrok” is out of town, leaving Charles in charge of the pack, and of course, they're attacked.

In between pack dominance fights, unraveling curses, and pack bond magic, Anna and Charles track down attackers, heal wounds, and discover people aren't always who they seem to be.

The Mercy Thompson series and the Alpha and Omega series have both been hinting at a grand, over-arching plotline that gets revealed a little more in this book, so that's exciting, and I'm eager to see where this goes. I've enjoyed how the two series are very much their own series, but still exist in the same world and have events going on that affect both sets of characters. I think we'll see a crossover book soon.

I feel a little weird calling it urban fantasy- that IS the genre, but the Alpha and Omega series, in particular, usually takes place out in the sticks. Not exactly urban. (You could call the Mercy books the city and Alpha/Omega the country and not be too far off.)

It's a great addition to the series, if you've been reading them. Not good as a standalone if you don't know the rest of the world already, though!

You can find all my reviews at Goddess in the Stacks.

February 27, 2018Report this review