September 21, 2024

Review: Winter Lost

Winter Lost Winter Lost by Patricia Briggs
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This fourteenth book in the Mercy Thompson urban fantasy series (and one of the few remaining since the urban fantasy boom is all but dead) is one of the better entries in the series, I think. Of course, if you haven't read at least the previous book, Soul Taken, and preferably two or three books further back than that, you will be a bit confused as to what is happening here. Especially since this book deals directly with the consequences of Mercy's battle with the Soul Taker artifact, which has ripped open her soul and damaged her magic. While I still wish the author would include a brief "the story so far" recap at the beginning of her books, at least for this book there is a prologue that, while not exactly an overall recap, does set the stage for this book's storyline.

One thing I do appreciate for this book is additional POV characters, particularly Mercy's husband, the werewolf and pack Alpha Adam Hauptman. Mercy is still our main protagonist, but in this book we into the heads of some of the other characters. There are a great many secondary characters that have built up over the course of the series, and it's nice to spend a little bit of time with some of them.

In this story we meet a couple of frost giants, one of which is working to bring about Ragnarok, the end of the world, by preventing a wedding that has to take place in order to reinforce the so-called Great Spell that prevents the apocalypse from dawning. Mercy's father, the trickster Coyote, sees an opportunity to cure her magical damage, and sets up an elaborate scheme that not only snares Mercy and Adam, but Mercy's half-brother Gary, another of Coyote's children--as well as Baba Yaga and Grandmother Spider, or Asibikaashi. (I must admit I'm a little leery of a white woman writing a Native deity, so I will insert a caveat that I have no idea if Grandmother Spider's depiction here is accurate.) Mercy and Adam end up trapped in a Montana hot springs lodge in the middle of a magic-inspired "storm of the century," and must find a magical lyre belonging to the frost giant Hrimnir. If they succeed, the wedding will proceed and the end of the world will be averted.

The highlight of this book is the relationship between Mercy and Adam. They are loving and supportive of each other, and have some delightful banter. (I also appreciate that Briggs, at least for this series, doesn't do long-drawn-out explicit sex scenes.) The dominant Alpha werewolf Adam is willing to be vulnerable for Mercy, his coyote shifter mate who is almost as easy to kill as a regular human, and has to survive by her speed and her wits.

The only knock I have against this book is that it is a bit slow to get going, and a couple of chapters are taken up by a long conversation between Mercy and another member of the werewolf pack, Mary Jo, about her relationship troubles. I suppose this is meant to tie into Mercy and Adam's situation, but it doesn't really seem to. In fact, the pacing of this entire book is more restrained and deliberate. This doesn't take away all that much from the overall effect in my estimation, but just be aware of it. This is a series where the cumulative effect is perhaps more than the worth of any individual book, but at any rate, I'm glad it's still around.

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