Personal Demon (Women of the Otherworld, Book 8) | 
enlarge | Author: Kelley Armstrong Creators: Laural Merlington, Todd Mclaren Publisher: Tantor Media Category: Book
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Avg. Customer Rating: 50 reviews Sales Rank: 1943050
Format: Audiobook, Cd, Mp3 Audio, Unabridged Media: MP3 CD Edition: MP3 Una Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
ISBN: 1400155517 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9781400155514 ASIN: 1400155517
Publication Date: March 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description Half-demon Hope Adams has inherited not only a gift for seeing the past but a hunger for chaos---along with a talent for finding it wherever she can. Naturally, when she's chosen by a very dangerous group for a very dangerous mission, she jumps at the chance. As it turns out, Hope is a little too good at this job, and she soon finds it necessary to unleash her most potent primal instincts---and open herself, mind and body, to everything she most fears...and desires.
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Personal Demon Review January 6, 2009 I am a big fan of Kelley Armstrong's Women of the Otherworld series so I was really looking forward to reading Personal Demon. I'm happy to say I was not disappointed.
For anyone unfamiliar with the series, each book is narrated by a female character who is some sort of supernatural. So far there has been a werewolf, a witch, a ghost witch, a necromancer, and now a half-demon. Each story is independent, although the characters do crossover and the books definitely follow a time line. Armstrong also produces online novellas and her characters appear in various short story anthologies.
Personal Demon is narrated by Hope Adams, a half-demon. She takes on an undercover assignment that forces her to face who she is and what she is capable of.
This book had two main differences from the previous books in the series. The first is that Hope is not the only narrator. Some of the chapters a narrated by Lucas, a sorcerer from a very powerful family and the husband of a witch. This is the first time one of the men has actually narrated portions of the novel. Armstrong makes it very clear who is narrating which portions with her chapter headings and I did not find it confusing at all.
The second difference in this book is the amount of sex. It is not an excessive amount by any means but previous books had little to no sex in them at all. I am anticipating that the sex is connected to Hope and not going to be a regular addition for all the characters.
Personal Demon was a great read and really kept me guessing up until the end. The clues were all there but it definitely took a while to put them all together. I liked it that I didn't feel that I was ahead of the characters in figuring out the situation (making them appear dumb) or way behind them in understanding (making me feel dumb). Armstrong also does a great job with wrapping up the story while leaving enough open ends to continue the overall conflict in future books.
5-Star Beginning/End, 2-Star Middle December 28, 2008 For some reason, Kelley Armstrong's editor took a long nap in the middle of what could have been the best of all the Women of the Otherworld books. The tautly paced first 200 pages feature Hope Adams as the primary focus and details her undercover assignment to infiltrate a cabal-gang (if you don't know what that is, please read previous books), and the book zips along like a knockback spell. The last 150 pages feature Lucas as the primary character, and those are also great. However, the middle 150 pages muddle along like listening to an older relative retell the same story for the 8th time during the same family gathering.
Overall, I recommend this, but also recommend you skim when you start nodding off.
Very Good Paranormal Series December 23, 2008 TitlePersonal Demon (Women of the Otherworld, Book 8) Author Kelley Armstrong Rating**** Tagsparanormal, fantasy, half-demons, series
Eighth in Armstrong's Women of the Otherworld series. The main character in this book is Hope Adams. Adams is a debutante with the exotic looks of her Indian mother. She learns as a young woman that she is a half-demon, and her power is detecting and feeding off of chaos (strong emotions). Not knowing how she was reading strong thoughts and being drawn to them earned her some time in a mental institution. Now she feeds the chaos as a tabloid reporter chasing down alien abduction stories and working for the interracial council of the supernatural races. She accepts an assignment that takes her to Miami to go undercover into a gang that wants to challenge the cabals. She is greatly attracted to one of the young gang members, Jaz, while still trying to deal with her strong feelings for the werewolf Karl.
After reading so many books in this terrific series, I've decided Armstrong should take as her motto, "Writing rationally about the irrational". Her plots are well thought out, and so are her characters, who mostly behave like, well, rational adults. They plan things out, yet act when they must, using all their intelligence, talents, and more. The supernatural characters all have powers, and there are consequences to those powers that are often difficult to deal with, and that shape the characters and their destinies.
The purpose of all creative writing, in my mind, is to define what it means to be human and explore its limits and strengths. Armstrong does this well in her series by showing the limits of power, and the choices that power forces on us. And along the way she is darned entertaining. Highly recommended.
PublicationSpectra (2008), Mass Market Paperback, 544 pages Publication date2008 ISBN0553588206 / 9780553588200
Tough paranormal gals December 22, 2008 Another good read in the series. Explores new areas while re-acquainting with familiar faces.
Success November 30, 2008 A good novel, as all of Armstrong's have been so far. I didn't like this one quite as much as I liked the others, but maybe that's because I've read too many.
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