Reviews

Magie změny by Hana Šimečková, Ilona Andrews

kmilnic's review against another edition

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mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

kzimm2024's review against another edition

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5.0

Original read in May 2018, 5 stars and no review

Re-read Feb 2024, 4.5 stars since I love it but the storyline wasn't as appealing to me (the Djinn aspect). Its still super interesting and I love to see the everyday interactions between Kate, Curran and Julie. It's impressive because man, IA does their homework! It just wasn't as exciting to me personally as some of the others.

These stories are all about the characters for me. 47 highlights for example, I love to take these slowly and savor the banter since the first time thru I rushed.

Ghastek:
“But still, I heard you were promoted. Don’t you have flunkies to do your bidding?”
The vampire twisted his face into a hair-raising leer. Ghastek must’ve grimaced.
“I thought you would be happy,” I said. “You wanted to be the head honcho.”
“Yes, but now I have to deal with you. He spoke to me, personally.”
He said “he” with the kind of reverence that could only mean Roland, my father. “He believes that you may hesitate to kill me because of our shared experiences,” Ghastek continued. “Which makes me uniquely qualified to lead the People in your territory.”

Curran:
“Hey, is there any of that apple pie left?” Curran asked.
“I think so.”
“Oh good. Let’s go home, baby.”
Our home. It still hit me like a punch, even after months of us being together—he was right there, waiting for me. If something attacked me, he’d kill it.
If I needed help, he would help me. He loved me and I loved him back. I was no longer alone.

Julie:
He stepped close to me and brushed a kiss on my lips. Mmm.
“That’s nice,” Julie said. “I still want a new horse.”
“Request denied,” Curran told her.
I flipped my pancake. This ought to be interesting.
“What? Why?”
“Because ‘want’ is not a need.” Curran leaned against the kitchen island. “I saw you in the pasture. You don’t want a new horse. You require a new horse. Lay your case out.”
----------------
Julie’s eyes narrowed. “If I keep getting hurt, it will cause both of you emotional distress and you will have to pay for my medical bills. If I lose control of him, he may injure another horse and you would be financially responsible for the damages. And if another child got hurt, you would feel terrible.”
Curran nodded. “Valid points. Bring it home.”

Dali:
I heard the door swing open. A moment later a tiny Indonesian woman with long dark hair and thick glasses swept into the kitchen and dropped into a chair.
“Dali!” Julie smiled. Dali waved at her. After we retired, Jim Shrapshire, Curran’s best friend, became the Beast Lord. That made Dali the Beast Lady. She now had my job with all the pain and trouble that came with it.
“Consort,” I said. “You honor us.”
“Fuck you,” Dali said. “Fuck your shit. I quit.”
I laughed and reached for a potato.

Jim:
“My paranoia is keeping us safe.” Jim brushed his face. Suddenly he seemed tired. “Dali, I just spent eight hours arguing with the Pack Council. Do you think you could postpone yelling at me until later?”
“No!” She sighed. “Yes. Fine.”
I reached into the fridge. We would need more sausage.

And the Pack comes to Curran with an offer for cashing him out. At first I was offended that Jim would do this but now I see how clever it is to get Curran a job where he rules over people other than the Pack. It's security for Jim's future, LOVE Currans response:
“This would make sense,” Curran said, “if I had no eyes to read it or no brain to understand it. Did Raphael write this?”
“He might have looked it over,” Jim said.
-----------
“What are you offering?” I asked.
“The Mercenary Guild,” Jim said.
What?” I must’ve misheard.
“The Mercenary Guild,” Jim repeated.
“That’s stupid,” I told him. “I have the business sense of a walnut and even I know it’s stupid.”

Then we are treated to several instances where people don't recognize Curran and refer to him as a dick and an asshole. I love Kates response:
Curran walked next to me. “So I am a dick?”
“I can’t help that you have a reputation.” He grinned.
---------------
“Does everybody think I am an asshole?” Curran asked.
“Only people who know you or have met you.”
He looked at me for a long second.
“You were a zealous advocate of the Pack’s causes,” I said. “The Pack’s interests are often at odds with human interests. I still love you. Derek still thinks you’re the stuff.”

Eduardo has disappeared and George wants help to find him. They meet some weird monsters that spawn in to more monsters:
Curran was breathing deep. The wound on his shoulder gaped with red. The edges had begun to pull together, but long brown bristles stuck out of it—the stiff “hairs” that had lined the giant insect’s leg.
“Do we have a flamethrower?” Curran asked.
No.”
“We should get a flamethrower.”

And they still struggle with their power dynamics as they are both used to being in charge:
“Fine. I’ll stay here with this thing, and you will drive yourself to the hospital.”
“No.” He hit me with an alpha stare.
I opened my eyes as wide as I could. “Why, of course, Your Majesty. What was I thinking? I will go and do this right away, just please don’t look at me.”
“Kate, get in the car.”
“Maybe you should growl dramatically. I don’t think I’m intimidated enough.”
“I will put you in the car.” (Spoiler she doesn't get in the car)

Luther gets more coverage in this story:
Luther looked at Curran. “Who is the male specimen?”
Curran offered Luther his hand. “Lennart.”
Luther grabbed Curran’s hand and smelled it. “Shapeshifter, feline, probably a lion, but not the run-of-the-mill African Simba. You’ve got an odd scent about you.”
He glanced at me. “Why do you always hang out with weirdos?”
“It’s her special talent,” Curran said. “She attracts us like bees to honey.”

And Christopher breaks our hearts:
“And Christopher?”
Barabas sighed. “Christopher wouldn’t stay in the Keep without you or me. Once he realized that both of us had left, he wandered the hallways crying and then went catatonic.”
I ground my teeth. “I told them to call me if there were problems.”
“They called me instead,” Barabas said. “So I came and got him.”

Not much of Andrea this book but a funny update:
There used to be only two desks, one for me and one for Andrea Nash, but now Andrea was busy running Clan Bouda. She was also pregnant.
We tried to have lunch every Friday, and the last time we went, she ate four pounds of barbecued ribs by herself. She wanted to eat the rib bones too, but I talked her out of it.
Then she pouted and called me a downer.

Curran plans to take over the Guild as they navigate the politics, attacks from giants and this sad set back/nightmare:
“S.”
I would make the goddamn word come out.
“St . . . stroke.”
Next to me Curran dragged his hand over his face.
“Yes,” Doolittle said. “You had a stroke. You had several microstrokes simultaneously.”
That’s me, the overachiever.
---------------
I struggled to say the words. “Don’t want . . . to die . . . here.”
“You’re just insulting me now. Nobody is dying today, if I can help it.” Doolittle said.
His voice faded, growing weaker and weaker. “You’re safe.
--------------
“What if she never comes home? What would I . . . I won’t have anybody . . .”
“You will have me. She will come home, but if she doesn’t, I will still be there,” Curran said. “We are family. You will always have a place in my house. I won’t abandon you.
If something happens to me, Andrea and Raphael will step up. Derek will always be there for you. You have people, Julie. You are not alone.” You are not

Thankfully Doolittle has the juice to help her heal, yet again:
“Are you back or are you not?” he asked quietly.
“Somewhat.”
“Kate.” The way he said my name made me want to reach out and touch him. “I need to know where we are.”
His gray eyes had grown dark, not angry but resigned. “Are we okay? Are we complete strangers, are we on a first date, or are we going home together tonight?”

Kate gives Ascanio shit for scaring Julie:
Do you have a car?”
“Yes.” He nodded.
“Go and do this for me. Don’t come back until you dig something up. I need a name.”
“Okay. And then will you remember me?”
“I don’t know. I have amnesia, paralysis, and a death wish, and they don’t go away just like that.”
He opened his mouth and froze. “Okay. I’m an ass. She wanted to know what could happen, so I told her. But I shouldn’t have.”
Good call. “Bring me a name. Then I’ll give remembering a shot.”

LOL- professionals:
“Where is Fluffy?” a woman asked.
“Jana took her on a job,” a man answered.
“Oh, come on! What good is a tracking dog if she’s never here to track?” Luther threw his hands up. A fireball tore over our heads and splashed flames onto the street.
“Garcia, will you stop setting things on fire?” Luther roared.
“Sorry!” the man from the window called. “It was an accident.”

I love Julie's instincts:
I pressed the speaker button and put the phone down. I wanted both hands free in case something jumped out of it and tried to rip out my throat.
“My night is brighter,” my father said.
Rowena froze, completely still like a statue.
Julie pulled a piece of chalk out of her pocket, drew a protective circle on the floor, and sat in it.

HUGE come-to-jesus moment between Mahon and Curran:
“Did you protect her?” Curran asked. “Did you help her? Did you do anything to support this future legacy?”
“She was not a proper mate. She will never be a proper mate. She is a human!” Well, of course.
“You don’t get to decide that.” Curran said. “It isn’t your place. I chose her. I led the Pack for seventeen years and it failed me when I needed it most. You failed me.” Mahon recoiled.
“My obligation to the Pack is over,” Curran said. “You failed to uphold your end of the bargain.”

Curran has a moment:
“It occurred to me that one day I will be a father,” he said. “And I have no idea how the hell I’m going to do that.”
“You’re already a father. Sort of.”
“Julie was already a good kid when you found her. Most of the hard work was done. I am talking about raising a little human from the first breath. I don’t even know what the hell I would do with a baby.”
“I think you will make an excellent father. I’d worry more about what kind of mother I would make.” LOLOLOL

Roland keeps pestering Kate so he can see her, love this Applebees dinner:
“Iced tea for me as well. That will be all,” my father said. The manager took off.
“Is there any way you could refrain from magicking our waiter?” I asked.
“I abhor poor service,” he said and smiled. “I took the liberty of ordering potato skins and onion rings. I’m so glad we could do this.”
------------------
“We consider it a threat,” Curran said. “If you want a war, you will get one.”
“I’m building a residence,” Roland said.
“Why?”
“So I can be closer to you, of course. I’ve come to dislike hotels over the years and I want to have a comfortable place to stay while I visit you.”
“I don’t want you to visit me.”
“Parents don’t always do what their children want them to do,” Roland said. “Sometimes they show up unannounced and nag you about your eating habits.

Kate: WALKED INTO my house to see the knight and the wizard sitting in my kitchen, drinking coffee. If you added in Julie’s thieving skills and my sword, we almost had an adventuring party. “It’s too bad we’re missing a cleric,” I said. They both looked at me like I had grown a second head.

They defeat the Djinn in a creative way with the help of Eduardo's absent father and some of the Pack. We are treated to some happy nuptials and the promise of more to come!

astrodish's review against another edition

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4.0

I will follow this to the end. In love.

I'm getting close to the last few books and my heart is squeezing NOO don't let go. But 😍how I love everything about this world and the characters and oh well everything

caitybell's review against another edition

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5.0

There’s only so many ways I can say how much I love this series. If anything happens to my precious characters in the final two books I will riot.

leschroniques_delea's review against another edition

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4.0

J’ai un peu moins aimé ce tome-ci mais ça reste une très bonne lecture et j’adore toujours autant cette saga.

J’ai trouvé que la narration était plus lente et plus axée sur la recherche étant donné qu’un membre de la meute a disparu et au début il n’y a aucune piste valable. Pendant les ¾ du roman Kate et Curran cherche à le retrouver et un ennemi très mystérieux leur met des bâtons dans les roues à chaque fois qu’ils ont une piste sérieuse.

Je suis un peu déçue du combat final qui a été vite expédié alors qu’il aurait mérité plus de développement étant donné l’ampleur des dégâts.

Cependant on découvre une nouvelle mythologie que je ne connais pas beaucoup : la mythologie orientale qui a été assez bien développée pour qu’on comprenne bien les choses.

Kate vers la fin du roman va apprendre quelque chose qui va certainement bouleverser la suite des événements et son avenir avec Curran.

being_b's review against another edition

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3.0

Disappointing. Plot threads introduced then dropped, horrible things happening without any seeming long-term consequences, and generally a whole lot of motion with little progress. It feels very much like the middle book of a trilogy, lots of time spent positioning and laying the groundwork for the Big Finish.

is_book_loring's review against another edition

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4.0

“You see, the mailman saw your husband during one of his walks."
"He's my fiancé," I told her. "We are living in sin."
Heather blinked, momentarily knocked off her stride, but recovered. "Oh, that's nice."
"It's very nice. I highly recommend it.”



So good; Excellent pace, superbly smooth writing, the play on emotions is inch-perfect. It's not one with the best villain or the most complicated plot, but it's my top favorite in the series so far.

katyanaish's review against another edition

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5.0

I just don't even know what there is to say about this series anymore. If you're not reading it, you're missing out.

It remains my uncontested favorite series ever.

I love that the situation continues to evolve, that the dynamic and relationships between all the characters is constantly changing in each book. I love that Roland is so layered, and that his relationship with Kate is so complicated. I love that Kate and Curran may have taken awhile to find the sweet spot in their relationship, but now their faith in each other is unwavering.

It is thrilling to see the relationships with the secondary characters all adjust to Kate and Curran's retirement from the Pack. And I'm so excited to see where the next book takes them (and also am a little annoyed with myself for literally wolfing this book down, because now it is over). :(

Love this series. Love these characters. Seriously just can't get enough.

*happy sigh*

Re-read April 2017
This book is clearly a bridge book - Kate and Curran transitioning to life out of the Pack - but it's so good. There's a lot of emotion, drama, tension and of course, all the awesomeness you'd expect from this series.

I'm left with two questions.

1 - What is the deal with Nick?

Okay, sure, he's probably got some anxiety about Kate's lineage. But come on. He's worked with her before. She has helped him. She has worked for the Order and proven herself to be honorable again and again.

Nick doesn't seem to be hooked into the "Humans Only" mindset that we've seen in the Order - he pretty much says that directly to Bahir - so that's not his problem. And it isn't that she has done horrible things, because she quite frankly has NOT done horrible things. Going several years undercover with Hugh, Nick probably has done a mountain of horrible things, anyway, so he doesn't really have grounds to cast stones if he wants to quibble with her choices... because in the end, Kate chooses to help, to protect, above all else.

I have to assume it is one of two things (or probably a combo of them). Firstly, there may be some element to Greg's backstory that Kate doesn't know. Did her mother burn Greg, like she did Voron, so that Greg would also be a guardian to Kate? There's something there, I think. And then secondly, Nick probably has a bunch of baggage from his years in Roland's organization. And I'm crying for him, really, but he doesn't get to put that on Kate. Those were his choices, not hers.

2 - Does the Pack know why Kate and Curran left?

I don't know why they wouldn't know. Roland wants it to be known - that's really the whole point of the arrangement, he's making her step down in exchange for her defying him, demonstrating to people that their relationship is complicated - so it isn't a secret. But this book seems inconclusive.

On the one hand, Doolittle tries to argue that Kate doesn't need to worry about Roland, because they have an arrangement. So ... it seems to be a known thing, then, right?

But then on the other hand, Mahon outright says that Curran threw everything away because Kate hated living in the keep and nagged him endlessly about it, and Curran is just thinking with his dick. So ... Mahon doesn't seem to know.

Which doesn't make any sense. It feels like ... this is fucking critical info for the Pack Council. Roland literally just walked past their tripled guard and into the penthouse, escorted by a mesmerized Barrabas (in the last book). That's something they need to know, so they can try and find a solution (I have no idea what that would be, but they have to try). At minimum, they just need to know the Keep isn't secure. I get why they wouldn't necessarily tell the whole Pack - why scare the hell out of the general members when it isn't productive - but certainly the Council has to know.

I guess I'm mostly just tired of the Pack treating Kate and Curran badly. And so letting it be known that hey, we aren't fucking abandoning you. We made a choice between Roland - the guy who waltzed into the Keep as if it was a public park - obliterating the Pack (and the city), or stepping down. We stepped down. To PROTECT you ungrateful douchebags, not that we'll ever get an ounce of gratitude for it. You're fucking welcome.

Kate and Curran are the best allies that the Pack has. And I hate that it feels like they still don't accept that fact... and that they still have this ridiculous entitlement. The Pack pretty much interacts with them like this: "Hey, guys, we have a problem. Go fix it now please." -Kate and Curran stagger back later, covered in blood- "Thanks bunches, please fuck off now. We'll call you if we need you again later."

It is tiresome.

amsosa's review against another edition

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

3.0