Ratings11
Average rating3.7
"For five hundred years, the Porters have concealed the existence of magic from the world. Now, old enemies have revealed the Porters' secrets, and an even greater threat lurks in the shadows. The would-be queen Meridiana, banished for a thousand years, has returned in the body of a girl named Jeneta Aboderin. She seeks an artifact created by Pope Sylvester II, a bronze prison that would grant her the power to command an army of the dead. Michigan librarian Isaac Vainio is powerless to stop her, having been stripped of his power and his place among the Porters by Johannes Gutenberg himself. But Isaac is determined to regain his magic and to rescue his former student Jeneta. With no magic of his own, Isaac must delve into the darker side of black-market magic, where he will confront beings better left undisturbed, including the sorcerer Juan Ponce de Leon. With his loyal fire-spider Smudge, dryad warrior Lena Greenwood, and psychiatrist Nidhi Shah, Isaac races to unravel a mystery more than a thousand years old as competing magical powers battle to shape the future of the world. He will be hunted by enemies and former allies alike, and it will take all his knowledge and resourcefulness to survive as magical war threatens to spread across the globe. Isaac's choices will determine the fate of his friends, the Porters, the students of Bi Sheng, and the world. Only one thing is certain: even if he finds a way to restore his magic, he can't save them all ..."--Publisher's website.
Michigan librarian Isaac, stripped of his power, teams up with fire-spider Smudge, dryad warrior Lena, and psychiatrist Nidhi in order to stop a banished queen who has returned in the body of a young girl.
Reviews with the most likes.
DNF - PG 107
Why?
weeps inconsolably
I consider Hines one of my favorite authors. This dud hasn't changed that - though it has cooled my burgeoning interest in urban fantasy.
Anyway, Isaac Vainio annoys the stuffing out of me in this book. In the previous two, he was mostly likable in a typical ‘aw-shucks, nothing special but really superspecial' typical UF lead. His friends, who he was seldom away from, humanized him. But in this book... He's depressing, depressed, got his head shoved up his own ass, and is going to get himself and everyone around him killed. I hate him. And considering how little time he spends in the first hundred pages around his ‘friends' - without paying a sanguinist in their blood - there is little redeeming qualities to Isaac. He even repeatedly leaves Smudge behind. Oh, but only after actually making the spider afraid of him.
So... Yeah. Looking forward to the next in the Janitors of the Post-Apocalypse, even if I do have to wait til next year. I know Isaac won't be keeping me company until then.