Friday, December 14, 2007

This looks interesting .... Night Child by Jes Battis

I ran across a future release listing today on Amazon.com for a book called Night Child by Jes Battis, and I didn't recognize the author's name, so I googled him/her. It turned out to be a guy, who happens to be a professor, and here's his website: http://www.sfu.ca/~jbattis/.

And here's the blurb he has for the book that got me really interested: "What would a vampire courtroom look like? How do you test a demon's DNA? Tess Corday answers these questions as an OSI (Occult Special Investigator) working in the city of Vancouver. Using a mixture of cutting-edge forensics technology and old-fashioned magic, Tess solves all manner of violent crimes within the supernatural community. If someone unlawfully kills a goblin or a warlock (and there are plenty in the seedier districts of town), she gets the call. But when a routine murder investigation leads Tess to a thirteen-year-old girl named Mia Polanski, her life is plunged into chaos. Mia is trapped in the middle of a turf-war between vampires and necromancers, and as she struggles to protect the innocent girl, Tess finds herself getting closer each second to a conspiracy that could rock the mystical world. All she has to do is stay alive. But first she needs to unravel the mystery of the NIGHT CHILD."

I love paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and the variations of these genres that I've been reading for the last few years. But there's been a little too much repetition lately. This seems like it might be an interesting perspective. Here's to hoping it will be. It's released May 27, 2008 from Ace.

2 comments:

meljean brook said...

I hadn't heard of this one, either -- and it does sound like a different approach to familiar ground.

(And welcome back! I saw a comment by unicornsagain over at AAR, and I though -- could it be? It must!)

Beverly said...

Yes, that was me. I've been keeping an eye on things a little here and there online, but I'm only just now starting to get involved/commenting again, though I never really was a big commenter anyway. Thanks for the welcome back. And thanks for writing such great books. I have (of course) been reading all along.