Sunday, July 26, 2009

Six Cool Things about Mark of the Demon

While I was reading Mark of the Demon by Diana Rowland, I remember thinking how much I love all the creativity and just plain old excellence in the urban fantasy genre these days. This book in particular was so entertaining and fascinating, I was quite pleased to have it to read on my trip - and I was bummed when it was over and I was still on a plane.

Yeah, I had other books to read, but you know how it is when you finish a book you're really rocking on, and no other book will do?

Charlaine Harris describes Mark of the Demon as a cross between a police procedural and an urban fantasy, and I think that's apt description. Main character Kara Gillian is a newbie police detective by day, reclusive demon summoner on certain nights. Much to the dismay of the other detectives, she's been assigned to lead big case--a serial killer!

Cool thing #1: Interesting & realistic details
I enjoy learning new things and getting nerdy little details in books. Rowland spent time as a cop, a crime scene investigator and even in forensics, so she really delivers--not on the dry details, but the way real people behave in that world.

I loved getting the view of a smart, sensitive woman making it in a male dominated profession, how the different people work a crime scene, the way the cops kid each other, the little things they know about each other, autopsy room biz and more.

#2 The odd involvement of a comic book artist and his work in the plot
I won't say much about this, except it was cool. And whenever I thought I had the relationship of the comic and the comic artist to the plot figured out, I was wrong.

#3 Excellent hero/subtle romance balance
Hmm, I better not say anything here, either! Whoa, what kind of review is this, huh? Maybe I'll say this: some people found this book to be a love triangle, some feel it's clearly not a love triangle, and I'm in the not a love triangle category. I felt there was one appropriate hero, and he's evolved through the book in a way that really satisfies me, and also makes me look forward to more from this pair.

Cool thing #4: Demon world details
The whole demon thing was well thought out, but not overly labored. One little detail I thought was so charming - Rhysel, a minor, part-animal demon Kara frequently summons, enjoys Barq's root beer as an offering.

#5: Use of Clothes
I love the way clothes make Kara feel real and even vulnerable. For example, one time cops come to her home and see her in her demon summoning outfit, and they think she's in her pajamas, and actually, her summoning outfit is sort of like simple silk pajamas. (She doesn't get into the "whole flowing robes thing.")

At another point Kara is feeling vulnerable about the investigation and getting all this push-back from male detectives and handsome Fed Ryan, so she puts on a spiffy-looking detective outfit instead of going with her usual casual look. The highly professional suit is a kind of armor against the flak she's getting, but she also looks good in it. These are not "bang you over the head" clothes details, they are just simple, perfect details.

#6 Villain backstory
There's a whole villain backstory, and I rather enjoyed how it made sense when you got to the end. I enjoyed thinking about the plot in retrospect, ruminating on how past events in the villain's timeline intersected with the morality/amorality of the demon world.

Diana Rowland's next book, Blood of the Demon comes out spring 2010. I am SO there!

Images: Demon portrait: Français : Vitrail néogothique dans l'église Saint-Martin de Florac: Saint Michel et le Démon, détail by Vassil, Police photo, both from Wikimedia.org.

13 comments:

Mandi said...

I liked the comic artist as well! I am with you the no love triangle, and I do like where she is going with the hero. I thought she did a great job balancing the details of the crime scene and investigation yet still made it a paranormal book. Really looking forward to the next one.

Donna said...

I love the ending. It was perfect! I'm with you, I can't wait for Blood of the Demon, want to know more about Ryan. I'm so curious about him. Kara is a character I felt really in tuned to, she was someone I could relate to, excluding the summoning demon parts.

Love how you did you review! Enjoyed it. I love when I finish a really good book and the feeling it leaves with you but it stinks too because it's hard to find a follow up book to read after reading such a good one.

Shaymless Aymless said...

I picked this up at RWA this year! Will have to move it up in the stack... somewhere *sigh* Too many books, too little time!

Lea said...

Hey CJ:

I love the way you share thoughts about the books you read!

I won this one from Donna at "Fantasy Dreamer", and can't wait to sink my "teeth", into it.

I hope you had a great vacation!

Best
L

Blodeuedd said...

Oh the book sounds good. And I am so intrigued by that cover than I never really even looked up what the book is about ;)

KT Grant said...

I am so excited for Diana and how well this book has been received. I had no idea who the killer was. Sneaky wench surprised me!

Karen W. said...

I loved MARK OF THE DEMON and only wish we didn't have to wait so long for the next book! :::sigh:::

Sarah said...

This sounds like a very cool book and I love the whole nerdy detail thing. Sounds like me!!! Although am now apparently banned from discussing forensic anthropology with bloke after Kathy Reichs. He is so squeamish!

Chris said...

Oh, I know just what you mean about finishing a good book and having a hard time picking the next book.

orannia said...

What Chris said :) You're on this huge high while reading a good book, then you finish it and everything goes flat...and no other book will do :)

Am looking forward to reading Mark of the Demon at some point :)

Ladytink_534 said...

Urban fantasy sure has come a long way hasn't it? I haven't picked this up yet but I have heard tons of great things about it and I plan to one day soon.

Christine said...

Cool list. Your points have definitely piqued my interest in this book, so much so that I'm finally putting it on my wish list. You know, you're so sly with your non-review commentary. Seriously... you're often more convincing than a five star review! Of course, all of those supportive comments above mine help, too!

Joanna Chambers said...

I've just been reading a Nora Roberts with a comic book artist with a nerdy edge (Tribute) and liked all the little details about his job.