Reviews

The Otherworld by Holly Lisle, Mercedes Lackey, Mark Shepherd

jessmahler's review

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4.0

First off, this book gets trigger warnings for child abuse.
Misty normally does not write books about 'issues,' and in the two stories in this book she manages (in my opinion) to tackle the very difficult topic of child abuse while keeping the story central and not turning preachy. That said, anyone unfamiliar with the realities of child abuse can learn a fair bit from these stories. For her handling that that alone, this book would get high marks from me.

Otherworld is set in Misty's urban elves world. This particular book is the only one that really focuses on elves as the main characters. In Wheels of Fire, Alinor is travelling the wilds of the human world, doing test runs on the first cast aluminum engine block Fairgrove has sent out to the Real World. He has a human partner, Bob, both to help with the engine and keep him out of trouble. Being Alinor, he finds trouble anyway.

When the Bough Breaks has MacLynn, who's been dodging his responsibilities to the Court and burying himself in the human world ever since the woman he loved died 200 years ago. His quest to ditch his duties eternally takes a wrong turn when the student of his current human lover unintentionally becomes a threat to his home court while trying to escape her abusive father.

Both stories are well written, and give readers an inside look at what life is like for elves living in a world run by humans. I have a slight preference fro Wheels of Fire, partly because it ties into the stories about the human mage Tannim, who is one of my favorite Misty characters, partly because I really enjoy Alinor, and partly because When the Bough Breaks hits on some stuff that does trigger me.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys Misty, elves, race cars, people who stand up to do the right thing, and unusual urban fantasy.

Shelving note: I've tagged this book as romance, but it is not your typical romance. While both stories do have HEA,
in Wheels of Fire the HEA is for Bob, not the main character Alinor, and in When the Bough Breaks, Maclynn gets a HEA with another elf, and the book ends when he has to say good by to his human lover
. Not your typical romance ending, but I rather like the way it turns the expected cliches awry while still giving HEA. Others may not consider this book a romance, and the romance plot is definitely not the main plot of either story.
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