Friday, December 6, 2024

Moon Called

Patricia Briggs
Completed 11/30/2024 Reviewed 11/30/24
3 Stars

This is the first book in the Mercy Thompson series.  Mercy is an auto mechanic in the Tri-Cities area of Washington.  She’s a rough and tumble woman.  She’s also a shapeshifter.  She can change her shape into a coyote.  She was raised by a werewolf clan, and not just any, but the clan whose alpha is the alpha of all North American clans.  She also knows a vampire and a gremlin.  This book is kind of standard fare supernatural mystery.  But it’s pretty fun.  There were times when the book dragged, but overall, it was a nice break from the some of the heavy works I’ve been reading.

Mercy has a good sense of smell.  One day, a young man named Mac approaches her for a job at her auto repair shop.  She can smell he’s a werewolf.  She’s also pretty sure he’s homeless and possibly in trouble.  She brings him the alpha of her area, Adam, who happens to be her neighbor.  It’s customary for new werewolves in an area to meet the alpha to become a member of the clan, or at least be acknowledged.  A day or two later, Mac’s body appears on her front stairs.  She runs to Adam’s place where she finds Adam near death, three or four dead werewolves, and Adam’s daughter Jesse missing.  Suddenly she’s on a desperate mission to save Adam and rescue Jesse.  Her journey has her cross paths with multiple werewolf clans, including the ones who raised her, the vampire mistress of the pacific northwest, and mysterious humans who use tranquilizer darts laced with silver.

I have to say, I liked all the characters.  Mercy is a good protagonist.  Briggs avoids the Mary Sue issues by making Mercy vulnerable and fallible.  Briggs does a good job of creating the rules for each supernatural being and sticking with them, including the rules for Mercy.  She has heightened sense of smell and can outrun a werewolf, but not outfight one.  I also liked her relationship with vampires.  She generally stays away from them, except for one with whom she trades the mob-like protection fee for free auto repair.  And I liked Zee, the gremlin from whom she bought the car shop.  As you would guess, gremlin’s like to see how mechanical things work by taking them apart, but not necessarily putting them back together.

The world building was good, as is evident by some of the supernatural rules and descriptions above.  There was a touch of romance in the story, but nothing obnoxious.  There was more about the claiming of mates and the submissive roles of females in the clan.  There was even one gay werewolf, which was done very well.  And all of this was explained quite well in the context of wolf-like behavior.  Fortunately, Mercy not being wolf-kind, gets to be more of a kick-ass and exert some influence over the werewolves.

I give this book three stars out of five.  I’ve heard that the later stories in the series are better.  This book spent a lot of time with character background and setting that kind of dragged.  And the politics within and without the clans was a little tedious.  Lastly, the ending was okay.  This was a book club read.  I probably won’t actively seek out more of her books, but I’d wouldn’t be against reading another one.


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