Reviews

Vanished by Kat Richardson

kathydavie's review against another edition

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5.0

Fourth in the Greywalker urban fantasy series revolving around a private detective able to walk in a fold of space than sits between the normal and the paranormal. Harper is based in Seattle but most of this story takes place in London. It's also Part 1 of a sinister plot.

My Take
Oh man, the tension Richardson created!! It was a bit slow to start but once it did. I could not race fast enough to keep up!

I've always fantasized about going back in time and then doing a fast-forward through time to watch, to observe how the landscape changes over the centuries. Now we get to do this with Harper as she navigates the time slips within the Grey in London. I suspect I'd get caught up watching the people of all those different centuries engage in their own lives instead of Harper's necessary pursuits. I never knew Tyburn Tree had been located near where Marble Arch stands now.

A few quibbles. Harper is so careful in the first six hours she's in London to contact Bryson to report when she has so little to say and yet just a few hours later when she has a ton of information that Edward really should hear about, she's not at all bothered about letting him or Bryson know. Sure Edward gets kidnapped or disappears or...something but nothing is said about Bryson. Why isn't she letting him know what she discovers? It's pretty damn critical. Especially considering that his and her chief enemy is still there in Seattle!

There's almost too much action to take in. Too much information that comes streaming in to fill in Harper's past. Worse, Richardson drops you with Harper on the plane coming back to America so we have no idea what's happening in Seattle. If Edward is back. What's Wygan doing? Is Quinton okay? And all the background, the behind-the-scenes machinations that have gone into creating the Greywalker that Harper is now is just churning away in your brain...argh!! Be sure to have the next book in the series, Labyrinth, standing by...you'll need it!

The Story
An old boyfriend of Harper's who got killed on a stakeout in LA some years ago appears in her dreams and starts Harper on her quest to learn more about her past. A past in which she learns more than she wants to know. About her dad. About her own earlier death. The family legacy on her father's side and how Wygan is shaping her for his own ends. Cary Malloy makes her aware and the ghost of her father's old secretary, Christelle LaJeunesse, gives credence to her father's journals. The old family photos with their unexplainable streaks of light, smoky faces, "tricks of the light" that mar every photo in which Harper or her dad appeared.

It's while Harper is in the Los Angeles area that Edward contacts her in a panic. Unrest is rising amongst the vampires in Seattle and the disappearance of his business partner in London has Edward insistent upon hiring Harper. That Harper is ideal for reasons they both understand.

A slip in a Grey temporacline introduces Harper to golems and how they are made. How they are used. Useful information but disturbing when she encounters one of a friend. Almost worse is the encounter at the end of a sewer tour in a kayak with a maddened wraith, Norrin, who lurks in the catacombs of old and ancient London down by the bricked-over Fleet River.

Harper quickly learns the pattern of persuasion when the disturbing nightmares she's been having about Will Novak, her ex-boyfriend, turn out to be true. It's the same pattern as used on her dad but Harper is determined that the end result will not be the same. She will not fail. She will not fail Will nor will she fail Quinton. She will twist what the Pharaohn expects.

The Characters
Harper Blaine has been aware of the Grey for two years now and has a better understanding of how it works. Chaos is her ferret. Quinton, her DIY expert in pretty much anything and everything and an escapee from the overly regimented NSA is her lover now. He's also working on a ghost detector. Will Novak hasn't been with Harper for a year now and is currently working in London at Sotheby's; his brother Michael is there as well. It's too bad for Will that Alice isn't up on current events.

Edward Kammerling is the head of both the Seattle vampire community and TLP, "one of Seattle's biggest development groups". He has recently been reworking the way he disciplines and rules in Seattle. Bryson Goodall is Edward's head of security. John Purcell is Edward's vampire partner in Clerkenwell in London; Jakob is a river spawn enspelled to serve Purcell. Master Simeon bin Salah is a sorcerer, a very long-lived sorcerer who deals in black magic. Alice Liddell is being used by the Pharaohn the leader of all the Egyptian vampires, the asetem-ankh-astet, stronger than regular vampires. Wygan. The worm-man who tortured her father. Alice had Simeon create the Kreanou, a vampire to end all vampires who will turn on anyone his masters order for as long as they hold his leash.

Part of Harper's past includes her mother...who knew?!! Harper has an awful relationship with her mother, one colored by her own child's perspective on a mother who insisted on Harper pursuing a career as a dancer to fulfill her mother's dreams. One which Harper endures as an adult as her self-absorbed mother continues to nag and criticize. Cary Malloy was both boyfriend and mentor when Harper was first starting out as a detective. Now he's coming back from the dead in Harper's dreams and in a psychic phone call warns her. Of watchers surrounding Harper always. Evil. Now something is breaking and releasing more of this evil. The worm-man of her father's journals. The significance of the drowned Jilly.

Marsden is a very hostile greywalker Harper encounters in London. He believes the best Harper is one no longer in this world. The caryatids at St. Pancras Church are Hope, Charity, Temperance, and Prudence who provide Harper and Marsden with information; their ghostly attendant, Barnaby Smith, is able to provide more details. Henry Glick was the Primate of the Red Brotherhood of St. John---fool. Mrs. Jabril is a steampunk dream!

Sekhmet challenges Harper outside Sotheby's when she comes to check on Will. Technically, on Harper's side, but not a being Harper wants to encounter again. Ben, Mara, and Brian Danziger play a cameo role in this story. Detective Solis is not present.

The Cover and Title
The cover is shades of gray with black and a metallic royal blue with Harper carefully looking back over her shoulder at a crowd of red-eyed, hooded creatures following her on a London street all a'tilt. Naturally, it's night time with a fractured full moon overhead.

The title is curious. The only Vanished I can figure is Harper's dad's ghost. She can't find it in any of the expected places.

streetdogg's review against another edition

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adventurous dark mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

ogreart's review against another edition

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4.0

When I started the Greywalker series, I was not impressed. I almost stopped reading it altogether, but I am glad I did not. Each novel in the series has gotten progressively stronger.

One thing that has always puzzled Harper was why she of all people became a Greywalker. She was not the only person to die and be brought back. But she is the only Greywalker she knows of. In this novel she travels both into her own past and to London, England in search of the answers to her questions.

The book is fast-paced and well written. The characters are strong and believable within the milieu. There were plenty of surprises and tons of action. I look forward to the next book in the series. As a testimony to how much I liked it, I read it in one day.

cheesygiraffe's review against another edition

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4.0

Best in the series yet. Learned a lot about Harper's dad and his role in the paranormal. A lot of action too. But there is still things unresolved. I can't wait till Labyrinth comes out.

cranea653's review against another edition

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3.0

The ending came kind of abruptly, but it was an entertaining read.

neuroticsilence's review against another edition

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3.0

Unlike previous books in the series, this book does not stand alone. It only feels like half a story, and is clearly a lead-up to a multi-book main arc. I wouldn't mind that so much I I had been prepared for it, but the previous three books in the series resolve the main storyline by the last chapter. This book ends abruptly and has a half-hearted epilogue to get you through to the next book. I hate finishing a book feeling like none of my questions have been answered. On the flip side, it certainly does leave you wanting more.

thisismenow's review against another edition

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4.0

I wish that Goodreads would change their rating system because I would like to give this book a 3.5. I enjoyed this book more than Greywalker and Poltergeist, but not quite as much as Underground.

I've had some issues really connecting with Harper's character in the past, but I did feel like I understood Harper better in this one. Several pieces of her past fell into place that made her personality make a little more sense.

The book starts with Harper having nightmares about her ex-boyfriend, Will, and then getting a visit from the ghost of another ex. This leads her to visiting home and her mother, who was a rather tedious character. There, she learns some very important information about her long deceased father, but before she can really get into that mystery, she is summoned back to Seattle by vampire Edward. From there she is sent to London, where she also plans to check in on Will, to try to locate Edward's missing associate.

I really enjoyed the setting of this book, both in the present and in the grey. The grey has always been interesting, but the descriptions of the differences in how the grey looks from place to place is really fascinating, especially in a historically rich environment like London.

I also enjoyed the pacing in this book. The first part of the book was dedicated to learning about her father and, while interesting, was a bit slower, but once Harper made it to London, it was full speed ahead. Also, the information Harper gleaned in the first part of the book tied into this situation, so there was a bit of a payoff there. The different types of vampires introduced in this book were really cool. A vampire that other vampires are scared of is pretty terrifying. I also really loved meeting another Greywalker. Marsden was probably my favorite character of this book.

I think my only real problem with the book was that so much of the story revolved around saving Will. I've never really been a huge fan of Will, so while I didn't want to see him abandoned, I didn't necessarily feel overly concerned about him. I think I probably felt more for Michael, Will's younger brother, who I did actually like in the previous books.

Even so, this was a fast paced mystery, and as Harper learned more and started to connect the dots, I found myself really fascinated. I can't wait to read the next book in hopes of getting more answers (and probably more questions in the process). I'm also hoping for some more Quinton because he's easily my favorite character of the series.

git_r_read's review against another edition

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5.0

Holey crap-a-duck! This is the BEST of the series! I got to meet Harper's piece-of-work mother and learn more about Harper's background. She traveled outside of Seattle and thar be scary things in California and London (go figure).
She has to leave Seattle and loved one behind to go figure out what is going on in London, part of which are her vivid dreams of her ex, Will.
Action packed, excellent character driven urban fantasy. I wish I could say more, but I fear I will spoiler the heck out of it and I don't want to ruin it for anyone.
Mia Baron has mellowed her narration or voice or something, not sure what, but Harper sounds better this go around.
Five sparkly goin' to London and see what's happenin' diamonds....

saucyknits's review against another edition

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4.0

4+. Books keep getting better (more exciting)!

kblincoln's review against another edition

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4.0

I think I liked this one the best so far of all the Greywalker novels. I feel like the new characters of Harper's mom and Marsden, the London Greywalker were memorable and added alot of interest to the story and to Harper's characterization in general.

However, as much as I was impressed by all the realistic London details, I was kind of worn down with all the map-like descriptions of streets, and while I was hoping at some point the mapness of the description would have something to do with Harper's defeat of Alice, it seems like that wasn't the case.

On the whole, though, Vanished seemed more mature and more thickly developed than the prior novels, and I expect things only to get better and better.