Fantasy / Urban
pages 161 / 2880 KB
5 Stars
Oh, botheration, lets get the legalities out of the way
first, OK? I received an ARC in exchange for an honest review. I am, truly, a
very lucky lady!
Anne Moody is still cursed. Poor girl, she's going to be
cursed forever, which is really too bad for her, but really, really good for
us. The longer she's cursed, the more books we'll have to read. This is the
third book in the series, and it was ever bit as gripping and fun as the first
two. The cameos in her store are still calling out curses to her, this time
they warn of betrayal, but they don't tell her who the betrayer is, or who the
betrayed is. And Anne Moody is in for a true surprise, as is the reader.
This would have been another one-sit read, but life
interrupted. Admittedly, I was not pleased--I wanted to read. When I get my
hands on a book that is as much fun as these are, I want to escape into that
world, and not be called back to this one until I'm darned good and ready – or
when the book ends, whichever comes first.
Trouble with Gargoyles takes us back to her parents and
their untimely death. It shines a bit more light on the Oddsmakers and why they
are so interested in poor, cursed Dragon Sorceress Anne Moody, and why she
feels the way she does about them.
A monster has arrived in Las Vegas, and is hunting Anne
Moody and her friends. The cameos warn of betrayal, and Vale (her gargoyle
boyfriend) is a prime suspect. Anne takes us to an old time speakeasy,
populated with shifters of various degrees, and learns why she isn't liked, let
alone trusted.
Vale's brother, heir to the Gargoyle Throne drops in, and
Anne sees brotherly love and competition up close. Is this the betrayal the
cameos warn her of?
And we get to see Lucky in his full glory, no holds barred,
as he finally is allowed to become Dragon as Anne carries out orders imposed on
her by the Oddsmakers. Is her biggest fear realized when this happens? Is Anne
Moody now Dragon, and no longer Human?
Some old friends return, and new friends are made in this
book. While this series can be read as stand alone books, I think they just
might be more fun if read in order. If you are a fan of Jim Butcher, Patricia
Briggs, and or Anne Bishop, give Tricia Owens a read. Escape into a Las Vegas
you'll never see, except through the eyes of poor, cursed, Anne Moody!
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