3.98 AVERAGE


This book is so thick with emotion... Loved it.

not...actually sure....what happened

Interesting resolution. Not sure how I feel about it. Part of me is comfortable with it and the other part feels a bit like it was the easy way out. Oh well. All in all, a decent series.

I forgot how much I love the characters in this series, especially the demon 'boys'. I really hope the author writes another book in this series.

Fifth in the Hunter Kiss urban fantasy series and revolving around Maxine, a demon hunter.

My Take
It's a horror of a story, so very depressing. Maxine's and her daughter's lives are on the line, and she makes a life-altering bargain with the entity she carries within her. Grant is dying before her eyes, from his own sense of self, and yet they both know who Maxine will choose to save.

Maxine's demons crack me up. I wouldn't mind having them around, the way they take care of Maxine. Food and drink from out of the somewhere while they gnaw away on their teddy bears and chainsaws with a chaser of engine oil. They have a cute habit of humming rock songs that reflect what's happening at that moment. Moments that are not always cute. Liu also provides a summary of the purpose of their imprisonment on Maxine's body. Whew. Another nail in the coffin of the Aetar and their careless attitude toward others.

Whew, reading of the teddy bear backpacks on the backs of these vicious demons helps take that edge of terror away.

It's their presence that takes the Hunter Kiss series out of the ordinary. It helps that Liu has put a such a huge twist on the whole demon hunter trope. And that "truth" Liu reveals about the demons …*grin*…is a fascinating idea. One that seems preferable to others.

More snippets of Maxine's childhood and her ancestral past emerge as does one of Grant's childhood. I have to say that Maxine's demons are my favorite characters. Maxine fascinates me for her past, her sense of honor and ability to change, and I do like her. I like Grant better. There's a softness to him and yet he can be hard when it's needed. I love his compassion and desire to protect.

Now the world is dying and yet Jack says that the world needs Maxine in spite of the desperation caused by the virus and the terror it induces in Maxine. It's a statement similar to so many others that I'm turned around in my head. Statements that conflict with other comments.

It is a confusion consistent with the earlier stories, and Labyrinth of Stars is well-named as Liu leads us down a bewildering array of paths. Don't get me wrong. In spite of how convoluted each story is, with all the suggestions, hints, inferences that baffle me, I do love this series. Liu drops snippets that make me want more. I want more background, I want a future.

The Story
Death is overwhelming the world, a virus created by the Aetar who want to wipe the earth clean of humanity. To find a cure, Maxine is determined to enter the Labyrinth and find the Devourer. Force him to come up with a way to stop what he created. Save the world. Save the demons.

The Characters
Maxine Kiss, a demon hunter with an armored right arm from a thousands-of-years-long line of demon hunters, is pregnant, in love, and horror of horrors, married. The demons who live on her skin during the day are Raw, Aaz, Zee, Dee, and Mal. The other demons call her Young Queen. The darkness that lives inside her? A God.

Grant Cooper is a former priest who started up a homeless shelter in Seattle. Now he's married to Maxine and bonded to hundreds of demons — the Shurik and the Yorana (Mortal Bone, 4). All due to his being a Lightbringer. The race most feared by the Aetar. His ancestry can also be his death, for he needs a bond to another, an anchor, to keep his power from killing him.

Mary is an old woman who knows all about the Aetar and Lightbringers. She's also got an obsession with marijuana, and we finally learn why. Byron is a serious teen who seems more like an adult. Rex is a possessed human who works at the shelter; his demon allied itself with Grant against his queen. The Messenger broke her bonds with the Divine Lords (Mortal Bone, 4) and is now allied with Maxine and Grant.

Jack Meddler, a.k.a., Old Wolf, Meddling Man, is Maxine's grandfather, her mother's father. He's also an Aetar who slaughters worlds and was the architect of the Reaper Kings' prison. Sarai is another friendly Aetar who appears in this as a unicorn. The Devourer is a sadistic Aetar, too sadistic even for the Aetar. Seems his "art" is death. What he learned, he played with until even his own were too disgusted and terrified.

The demons were…
…freed from the prison where they were held for thousands of years (Mortal Bone). The Shurik are slug-like beings that burrow into a living being and eat him from the inside out. The Yorana are like incubi and refuse to help. The Mahati are warriors and led by Lord Ha'an. The Osul look like big cats, warrior cats. Oanu is their demon lord. And they're all starving, held in by Maxine. A'loua is a demon child who brings it home to Maxine that demons are worthy too.

Oturu is a demon who has power over Maxine due to a pledge of friendship when an ancestor of Maxine's had shown him an act of mercy. Tracker is another demon, imprisoned inside Oturu, and he hates Maxine.

Blood Mama is the "lady lord of the parasites" — "the oldest, slyest nemesis of Maxine's bloodline — and currently inhabiting the body of the sheriff near Maxine's farm in Texas.

The voice of a Lightbringer is power, the power to "alter the fabric of any living creature's soul. The only being, besides Maxine, who can kill an Aetar.

Think of the Aetar as gods. They exist as sentient energy until they inhabit a body. They see humans as toys for them to play with, enslave, destroy. The only beings the Aetar did not create are the demons. Messengers are the soldiers of the Aetar. Lightbringers whose genes the Aetar tinkered with, who were enslaved and taught to revere the Aetar as their Divine Lords. The Wardens were created before the Reaper Kings were imprisoned on a Kiss.

The Labyrinth is a maze, well, yeah, obviously. But it's an alternate plane, or more realistically, it's a "quantum highway that connected countless worlds". All you have to do is survive the ride. The Wasteland is a "sliver on the edge of the Labyrinth, an oubliette.

The Cover and Title
It's a golden cover of flames with Grant looking on at a defiant Maxine in black pants and a cropped black tank, in a ready stance in profile to us, her sword drawn, her long dark hair flowing down her back, her tattoos visible. My one question is, if the sword is part of the armor on her arm, why does it appear to be a separate thing? Where is the armor?

The title is where Maxine goes at the end, into a Labyrinth of Stars, into unconsciousness.

Whoa. Now that was an explosive finale. Almost right from the get-go, the story took of at a blistering pace and pitted our heroes against a threat they couldn't have imagined, and rendered them virtually helpless. I was guessing throughout the whole book, and even I didn't know how they could get out of that peril, or if they would at all.

The tension is palpable through the book and while there are a couple slower moments, the concern you feel for the characters never really goes away. Even relationships are strained as powers change and Maxine, Grant, Jack, and the boys make terrible sacrifices.

I literally couldn't put the book down once I got into it, especially with the wild twists that come at the end. I honestly didn't expect some of them, and the final confrontation was ferocious. I've had a great time reading this series and being drawn in by its creativity and world building. I definitely recommend it to urban fantasy romance lovers who haven't checked it out yet. I'm going to miss Maxine and Grant, but I'm glad I got to share their adventures.

The reveals and major changes with some of the characters in this latest book in the Hunter Kiss series deserve a higher rating. Somehow, though, I had to slog to get through the book and felt that for most of it little happened, so I felt an "I
Iiked it" was closest to how I felt.

This is a must-read for fans of the series simply for those major changes--and I hope it's not the last we'll see of Maxine and the rest of the gang--but don't expect a lot of action throughout the story.

If this was the first in the series or even the second this would be a fine novel, but since there are 4 more just like it, it feels repetitive and unnecessary. The story feels like being trapped in a very violent video game with no ending in sight. You are constantly being bombarded with more twists and turns, you feel like there really are no surprises left. This was my last Hunter Kiss novel, which is not to say that I don't really like Liu's writing. I love her writing and I look forward to reading any other novels she has written or will write. I don't know if this was the last in the series, but for me this series is over.

jackiijackii's review

4.0

This fifth book in Liu's Hunter Kiss series has everything that makes her work so great: a complex story, terrifying and unforgettable visuals, and characters you'll fall in love with even though you know nobody's safe and s*** is going to happen. Big sacrifices make for great storytelling, so if you're looking for a tidy ending where the heroes emerge unscathed, maybe save this one for another time.

I loved it, so why four stars? Most of the story felt like walking. Lots of things happened, but it felt like Maxine was always going looking for something. Then the ending happened in like, 20 pages--BAM! Five books and suddenly it's over. Some questions are left unanswered, and I'm totally fine with that, since I know it leaves the door open for another book, and at least the biggest mysteries are addressed.

Also, why is this book in the Romance section at Barnes & Noble? I know her other series is romance, but if they can justify putting Laurel K Hamilton in Fiction, certainly they can sneak Liu in too. I was walking to the register without it when I saw it on a "New Romance" shelf. Now I'm questioning everything I thought I knew.