Reviews

Sympathy for the Devil by Justin Gustainis

patchworkbunny's review against another edition

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2.0

Sympathy for the Devil is the third book in the Morris and Chastain Investigation series by Justin Gustainis. Quincey Morris is a paranormal investigator and Libby Chastain is a white witch and occasionally their work brings them together. This time it's because a presidential candidate has been possessed by a demon determined to make it to the White House and hell has sent its very own assassin to sort things out.

The premise is a good one but I felt that too much time was spent on politics and that it could easily have been a non-supernatural tale of corrupt politicians. There's not a lot that happens that couldn't just be put down to not very nice people. I understand politics is full of them! Not being American, the run up to the presidential elections is not something I have a lot of understanding of and I only take a passing interest in the whole affair from afar. Though having watched The West Wing, I do have the ability to be entertained by a fictional account but this just didn't hit the mark.

Having been told the book works as a standalone read I felt there were just too many references to something that happened previously for that to be the case. I may be more interested in the earlier books to understand a bit more about the relationship between Morris and Chastain. For a series with their names in, they didn't get much page space. There are just too many characters for a real understanding of any of them. I get that in politics there are a lot of people involved but they didn't all need their own story.

Being told from various different viewpoints, there wasn't much mystery to the investigation. Nothing to keep me gripped and I struggled to get through it at my normal pace. I do think it would appeal to a different audience...not to sound sexist but maybe it's a man's read. There are numerous references to the stereotypical male fantasies which come across as a bit cheesy (but I'd probably say the same if it was reversed).

cacuin's review against another edition

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This premise in the election year is hugely amusing.

emmafromoz's review

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5.0

Fantastic. JG's best novel yet!

philfromocs's review

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3.0

A few flaws but mostly pretty great.

vkemp's review against another edition

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3.0

Quincey Morris and Libby Chastain investigate paranormal stuff. Libby is a white witch and Quincey is following the family business. On Halloween, presidential contender Howard Stark is possessed by the demon Sargatanas, thanks to his administrative assistant, Mary Margaret Doyle. However, thanks to the factions who contend against each other in the NetherWorld, another demon, Astaroth, sends a former CIA assassin back to Earth to kill Stark before he can be elected and begin Armaggedon. Lots and lots of woo-woo, in fact, this book is the very definition of woo-woo (a technical term invented by the readers and followers of Dorothy_L). There was a lot of telling so the book moved rather slowly at first, but the scene had to be set. Once the action started rolling, things picked up quite a bit. Entertaining, but I did not like this one as much as the first two in the series. In the current political atmosphere, evil minions ruling the Earth do not seem so far-fetched.

wyvernfriend's review against another edition

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4.0

Demonic interference with politics, Morris discovers that the aftereffects of being caught by demon fire isn't good and can cost some people. He goes through a downward spiral that needs Chastain to drag him out of it and they also have to try to work out how to defeat a demon who has Armageddon in mind.

Interesting and I like the characters, they are not all powerful and they do have flaws, and there are times when you wonder what they plan to do next. The bad guys were also interesting and I could imagine them succeeding if they kept going. I enjoyed the read.
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