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Title: Red Iron Nights
Series: Garrett, PI #6
Author: Glen Cook
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 304
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Garrett, PI #6
Author: Glen Cook
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 304
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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Garrett has been
coasting on the success of the last several cases but the money is
getting low. Dean moves in full time to escape all of his nieces and
bugs Garrett every day. Even the Deadman gets in on the action,
taking a job and handing it off to Garrett.
Then the Watch
hires Garrett. Against his will. Young women, from The Hill (where
the rich and aristocratic live), have been slumming it down with the
plebes and something has been ritually kidnapping them and then
eviscerating them, on a downward spiraling time cycle. Garrett
figures out that the killer is going after a certain “type” of
woman, ie, black hair in a certain style with a certain body type.
They catch the killer, only to have him die and the process start all
over again. Garrett realizes a curse is involved and does some
digging to get to the origins of it all.
At the same time,
the daughter of the local Crime Lord is on the run from the 2 cronies
who are her father's head men. The Crime Lord is being used as a
puppet by the Head Men (as they tried to kill him in the last book
and didn't quite succeed) and they want to get the daughter out of
the way. Said daughter also fits the bill for the type of woman the
curse is seeking. Garrett helps the daughter meet many of the rich
and influential while “protecting” her and she makes a power play
of her own. She takes over, ousts the 2 Head Men and ends up doing
the same exact thing as them.
Garrett and the
Deadman finally figure out what the curse resides in and tell the
Watch. They capture the latest carrier of the curse and lock the
cursed object away for wizards to study when they all come back from
the Cantard.
Speaking of the
Cantard. Glory Mooncalled makes a huge push and partially succeeds.
This cripples the ability of one of the two kingdoms fighting over
the region (for the silver mines. Silver is essential for magic
users). Things are looking good for Mooncalled's Republic until the
Kingdom that Garrett belongs to begins using aerial recon. This gives
them such a huge advantage that everyone is talking about the war
ending in a year or less. The Deadman is heartbroken, as Glory
Mooncalled is his hero and Garrett realizes that things are going to
change in TunFaire if all the soldiers suddenly return home.
During the process
of catching the Cursed Object, the Watch begins to function like it
is supposed to. However, one of it's more zealous members initiates a
new group within the watch, a nascent secret police. It is super
successful and Garett and the Deadman realize that social changes are
about to happen to TunFaire as well.
The book ends with
Garrett having a lot of money, no woman and with the realization that
the whole world is about to change and not necessarily for the
better.
My
Thoughts:
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Once again, I thoroughly enjoyed this story. There is nothing
spectacular that I can point to and say “THIS is what I like about
the Garrett, PI books” but so far, every book I have read I simply
enjoy a lot. Cook is a solid author and he knows his stuff. This is
no work of art, but at the same time neither is it some grade school
finger painting.
The whole thing with the Cantard and the possible changes to the city
of TunFaire makes me wonder if Cook is going to go down the “Social
Changes Propel the Plot” route. The whole economy of TunFaire is
based on a war footing and a sudden change in that will almost
literally shake the town up. Throw in the Secret Police and people
not being real happy with the Nobles, well, stories with those
elements can almost write themselves. Personally, I liked the Glory
Mooncalled aspect, how it is revealed through dispatches and with
talks between the Deadman and others. I'd be sorry to see that
disappear.
I don't ever plan on re-reading these books, hence the overly long
synopsis. But if all my 3 ½ star rated books were this enjoyable,
I'd be a very happy camper.
★★★☆½
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