Showing posts with label Riley Blackthorne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riley Blackthorne. Show all posts

12.06.2012

Foretold by Jana Oliver, a bittersweet goodbye



FORETOLD
Demon Trappers Daughter, Book Four
by Jana Oliver
Coming 12/11/12
ISBN-13: 978-1447216063
Publisher: St. Martin's Press, 416 pages.
Find it on: Amazon, B&NGoodreads
-----------------
Stand by as Riley prepares to kick some serious demon butt for the last time in this thrilling, dramatic and sexy conclusion toThe Demon Trappers series.

Riley’s always known that Beck had a chequered history, but she’s not prepared for what it actually means to be in love with a guy with this many dark secrets. Now that he’s finally admitted to himself that he’s in love with her too, there’s no more hiding the truth about his past. And as it turns out, fending off a demon apocalypse is nothing compared to what’s to come...

No review of this book would make any sense without you dear readers having read the first three books. Having to say goodbye to backwoods boy, Riley, and all the cast was hard... too hard. I have to pray that one day we will meet our intrepid friends later on in their journey. I hate the idea of never reading them again.

3.13.2012

Forgiven by Jana Oliver

03/27/12
Forgiven
Demon Trappers Daughter Quadrilogy, Book Three
by Jana Oliver
ISBN-13: 978-0312614805
St. Martin's Griffin, 368 pages
.
Amazon, B&N, Goodreads


Jana Oliver's third spellbinding Demon Trappers novel - following The Demon Trapper's Daughter and Soul Thief- brings all new thrills, as Riley Blackthorne takes on demons, love... and the future of the human race.

The days are growing darker for 17-year-old demon trapper Riley Blackthorne. With her father’s reanimated body back safely, Beck barely speaking to her because of a certain hunky Fallen angel, and a freshly-made deal with Lucifer, she has enough on her hands to last a normal teenage lifetime. Though she bargained with Heaven to save his life, her ex-boyfriend Simon has told the Vatican’s Demon Hunters that she’s working with Hell. So now she’s in hiding, at the top of everyone’s most-wanted list.

But it’s becoming clear that this is bigger than Riley, and rapidly getting out of control: something sinister is happening in Atlanta… or someone. The demons are working together for the first time ever and refusing to die, putting civilians in harm’s way. Riley thinks she might know who’s behind it all, but who’s going to believe her? Caught between her bargain with Heaven and her promise to Lucifer, Riley fears the final war is coming – and it may be closer than anyone thinks…

IB T's Review

Mysteries that have been brewing for the first two books get answered in Forgiven, feelings that were complicated and seemingly too broken to repair have fireworks of hope. Riley is finally growing up (grudgingly), Beck lets down his guard (temporarily), and we the reader get some satisfaction! 

One of the things I love best about this series is that nothing is ever what it seems, a villain can be despicable in one book, can redeem himself in the next, and so the hero can always falter as well. Jana Oliver is excellent at keeping her readers on their toes. And as we've come to look forward to, we still get the classic cliffhanger to keep us biting our nails until Foretold, book 4, is published in August.

8.30.2011

OUT TODAY! Soul Thief by Jana Oliver- Review & Interview!

US Edition

SOUL THIEF

Demon Trapper's Daughter, Book Two by Jana Oliver
Available August 30, 2011
------------------------------
Riley Blackthorne is beginning to learn that there are worse things than death by demon. And love is just one of them…


Seventeen-year-old Riley has about had it up to here. After the devastating battle at the Tabernacle, trappers are dead and injured, her boyfriend Simon is gravely injured, and now her beloved late father’s been illegally poached from his grave by a very powerful necromancer. As if that’s not enough, there's Ori, one sizzling hot freelance demon hunter who’s made himself Riley’s unofficial body guard, and Beck, a super over-protective “friend” who acts more like a grouchy granddad. With all the hassles, Riley’s almost ready to leave Atlanta altogether.
UK Edition

But as Atlanta’s demon count increases, the Vatican finally sends its own Demon Hunters to take care of the city’s “little” problem, and pandemonium breaks loose. Only Riley knows that she might be the center of Hell’s attention: an extremely powerful Grade 5 demon is stalking her, and her luck can't last forever…


IB Teen REview:


We find ourselves at a crossroads by the end of Soul Thief. Our beloved characters need to deal with some rash and very tough decisions they've made. The lines between Good and Evil are blurry, that same line in the sand between them is so unevenly divided, and people find themselves on the wrong side of that line all over the place. While Soul Thief feels more like connective tissue for Books One and Three there's so much has happened, and much that is yet to be explained, and huge new questions are introduced- it is still essential reading.

Soul Thief- and Demon Trappers Daughter- read more adult than YA. If Riley weren't seventeen, this book would be found in a different section of your bookstore or library. It's mature, it's brutal, it's raw- and that's just the language and the emotional drama. Layering in a stupendously fantastic urban fantasy steeped in demons, angels, necromancers, witches... and who knows what else. All of that set against a near futuristic crumbling dystopian south.

The series and its unique mythology is incredibly well thought out, all the details are intricately constructed. Atlanta, a bankrupt city of five million souls, where even death cannot save you or your family from your debts. For example, if you die before having settled with your creditors, they can have a necromancer raise you as a zombie and then sell you as a slave to the rich. Also, gas is so outrageously expensive that people resort to any form of transportation- from Rollerblades to shopping carts, horses, and if you're able to afford it; the rare car or truck. Metal is stolen from everywhere to be sold- even the streetlights are poached. And the schools were sold off, went bankrupt, and then forced to be held in abandoned buildings like old Starbucks or grocery stores. In this world Jana Oliver has created, America has gone to hell in a hand basket.

And while Riley and Beck- the two narrators of the series- don't get much face time together, their scenes are the most intense and turbulent. These two characters are at their best and their worst all in the same conversation. They go from defensive, to emotionally naked, to reaching DEF CON 4 levels of confusion, hurt, and anger. Like when Beck 
calls her Girl or Kid to keep his distance, it drives Riley crazy feeling that he doesn't respect her. But when he's just being real, it's Riley, and when he's real she seems to feel untethered. She's put up blinders to any good intentions in anything Beck does for her. She's always waiting for the verbal assault or deep cut and lashes out, swinging wildly. She won't let herself recognize that so much of what she does and feels is in direct reaction to Beck or in anticipation of Beck's reaction.


Beck and Riley have had the harshest of wake up calls as the Soul Thief draws to a close. Riley can no longer avoid dealing, consequences are upon her on a biblical scale. And Beck must realize that his treatment of her has NEVER done any good! The best of his intentions have the worst of reactions and consequences for Riley. He's made a career of pushing Riley away with brutal shoves, and it always backfires in ways he never sees coming. While Riley doesn't see that her knee-jerk reactions are hurting him just as much as she's hurting herself.


When I interviewed Jana Oliver for Demon Trapper's Daughter I asked her what her favorite type of hero was, and re-reading her answer gave me a deeper understanding of their dysfunction.
JO:The flawed one. The one who has to face his/her own personal insecurities, overcome them and then do what has to be done no matter the personal cost. The hero can be either male or female. The bottom line is that they face something they fear. I’m also fond of “unintended consequences.” A hero makes a decision and it ripples out into the world in ways he/she never thought possible. This is a variant on the old adage: “No good deed goes unpunished.” 
Book 3, Coming in 2012

In DTD, Riley seemed like a much younger girl; naive, stubborn, but so determined to find love and a future with Simon- AKA, Mr. Right- who also happens to be the complete personality opposite of Beck. DTD beats Riley up emotionally- and by Soul Thief, she's tired, battle weary, and desperate.

I love Riley because she  won't ever back down against heavy opposition, even when the chips are stacked against her. She loves big, fights big, ans walks some seriously scary streets on her own. She will put it all on the line to keep her word. And I love that she can live in a grey area, that her character is not burdened by a "good girl".

I love Beck because he's a protector, and despite a brash, cocky, and extremely tough facade- is very damaged and is his own worst enemy. He will sacrifice himself for others, and he tries so hard to become a better man. I love that he tries to care for Riley despite not knowing the first thing about how to go about it. In book one, Riley basically tells him that she wishes Beck were dead instead of her father. Despite the cut Beck still shows up the next morning to make her breakfast. He makes sure she isn't alone, that her bills are paid, and that she doesn't kill herself through sheer recklessness. He stays outwardly strong so that Riley can fall apart after her fathers death despite the fact that Paul Blackthorn was his father figure, mentor, and best friend.

I love Riley and Beck because they are a hot mess, and their hot mess is more real to me than any perfect love story. I love Riley and Beck because they don't pull any punches, they go for the jugular, they bleed all over the pages. The characters are so far apart, and they've miles to go before they can even really reach each other. If only Riley knew what Beck was really thinking, maybe she wouldn't hurt herself so much. If only Beck could believe he was worth a damn, he might actually get the girl he loves. How often can two people go to war against each other before there's nothing left to blow up?


I can relate to both of their struggles. There is something completely relateable in fucking up relationships, of forcing intimacy with others who are intrinsically wrong for you and telling yourself that they're what you want. That doing this is some twisted self defense mechanism you're using trying to hurt the one you really want. But you end up crying because you've hurt yourself instead.

I can understand what it is trying to forget in someone elses arms. Both Riley and Beck fight so hard to keep their distance, and they are tearing themselves apart in doing so.
I look forward and hope for redemption in book three, Forgiven, they've gone through the fire and I know- or at least hope- they will inevitably come out singed around the edges, but victorious. 


ib teen grills jana oliver:

IBT: First and foremost, is Demon Trappers a Trilogy or exactly how many books are planned?

JO: The initial contract was for three books, but I have envisioned five to tell the whole story. That would allow for a satisfactory resolution to most of the characters’ personal issues along with the bigger subplots. Whether there will be five books depends on my publisher, of course.

IBT: In Soul Thief things are much less black and white, grey seems to permeate all aspects and characters that once seemed pretty clear-cut. What's the progression for each book for you?

JO: I like writing characters who evolve as the story plays out, allowing the readers to see deeper into their motivations, defenses and dreams. A good example is Master Harper. In Demon Trapper’s Daughter he’s just downright horrible to Riley and Simon, so bad that some readers have asked why the Guild just doesn’t toss him out. In Soul Thief we begin to learn why he’s that way and what events have led him to the bottle. And in so doing, we realize why the Guild hasn’t shown him the door. Characters who are clearly one thing or another bore me. I like to peel away those layers and see what’s behind those defenses. Because of that sometimes those characters become murkier and harder to pin down. 

IBT: Is the Vatican's interest in Riley purely as a scapegoat because she's not just a young apprentice, but a woman as well, or is there a larger plan in play?

JO: Tempting as it was to play the Vatican as the bad guys, I’ll leave that to Dan Brown. ::laughs:: The Catholic Church is as much a pawn in the game between Heaven and Hell as are Riley and the others. Certainly they have issues with Riley being female, but they also have deep concerns about the Demon Trappers Guild as a whole. There is a long-standing rivalry between the hunters and the trappers and Riley is caught in the middle.

IBT: It feels as though Grand Master Stewart is still keeping things close to the vest. Is he just another in the line of criminally bad communicators or are you trying to kill us with all the drama it causes? 


JO: ::Laughs:: Angus Stewart is a wily and secretive dude for a good reason. As the series plays out we learn more about what being a Grand Master entails and a few of the many secrets his kind keep “close to the vest” as you put it. His depth of knowledge is dribbled out when he feels it will be best received and by whom. 


IBT: Does Riley not see how much she still cares for Beck and how so many of her actions and reactions revolve around him. Or is her view of him prejudiced because Beck is the closest link to her father? Could it be that she is still holding a massive resentment towards Beck for not only rejecting her but then spending so much time trapping with her Father while Riley got to spend so little time with her dad?

JO: By the time she realizes how much she cares for him, a lot of damage is done. In many ways she doesn’t see that her life revolves around him because she has the fear of being hurt again. With all the hassles, any other guy she’d probably just tell to hit the road (for example Allan the ex-boyfriend). But there is a deep connection with Beck that refuses to be broken or shoved aside that easily. Part of it was his closeness to her dad and most of it is the fact she really cares for him.

IBT: Writing scenes with Riley and Beck must be the absolute funniest thing ever. Both characters are prone to explosive defensive reactions just and throwing in jabs while waiting for the next verbal blow to land.

JO: I really do enjoy most writing their scenes. They just play off each other’s emotions so beautifully. Some of the scenes make me very sad because often they’re so busy guarding their hearts they’re missing the bigger picture. But if I don’t let them work through their own issues at their own pace, the story won’t be right. Sometimes I grit my teeth and write the scene they dictate to me.

IBT: Am I correct in thinking that Beck pushes hard against a relationship he wants and doesn't feel he deserves so he chooses meaningless encounters. And Riley seems to throw herself headfirst into relationships with guys she sees to have traits opposite of Beck's, overlooking some seriously alarming red flags from them.

JO: You’ve got it exactly – Beck’s core issue is that he doesn’t feel he’s worthy of a girl as good as Riley (or anyone like her for that matter.) Despite his cocky behavior, he’s deeply insecure. Riley is a hot reactor–when someone hurts her she rebounds like a tennis ball and loses her heart too easily. For there to be a happy ending for them, she has to be willing to trust him with her heart (again) and he has to learn he’s worthy of love.


IBT: This last isn't so much a question, it's more of a thank you. I am thankful that there is a YA series that is heavy and mature and unflinching while being funny, and times very touching.

JO: Thank you! It’s been a challenge to write, but I really wanted to do something different. I enjoy writing gritty stories, but the cool thing about us humans is that we can find humor even when the world is melting down around us.

IBT:That's all I've got, thank you for your time. Demon Trappers series in so unique, it is definitely one of the few that are the class of the urban fantasy genre.

CONTEST DETAILS:                                                        
  • A copy of both Demon Trapper's Daughter and Soul Thief  by Jana Oliver

  • And a copy of Worst Case Scenario Survival Handbook: PARANORMAL: 
  • On hit TV shows, in best-selling books, blockbuster films, video games, and comics, pop culture has been overrun by hordes of vampires, zombies, werewolves, ghosts, wizards, and other paranormal creatures. Luckily, the authors of the Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook series are back with all-new, expert advice designed to help readers fend off the furry, fanged, freaky, and frightful. This classic handbook format is packed with new illustrated instructions for crucial scenarios ranging from the domestic (How to Host a Cocktail Party When Your House is Haunted) to the scary (How to Survive a Zombie Attack in the First Day, First Week, and Long Term) to the practical (How to Break Up with a Vampire).
    It's perfect for the modern-day trapper in all of us!

TO ENTER:                                                                      
  • Comment on this post
  • For 1 extra entry: start Following this Blog (Followers automatically get an extra entry)
  • For 1 extra entry: post about this contest on your blog, twitter, Facebook, or any other site (add the link in the comments please)
  • For 1 extra entry: Follow the IB Bookmarked Blog (companion to IB Teen Blog)
  • THIS CONTEST HAS ENDED.  Thanks to all who entered!                     

    4.25.2011

    Contest Reminder: Demon Trapper's Daughter & Author Interview

    THE DEMON TRAPPER'S DAUGHTER
    Demon Trappers Book 1
    by Jana Oliver
    Available Now!
    (US Cover & Title)
    ---------------------------
    Riley Blackthorne just needs a chance to prove herself – and that’s exactly what the demons are counting on…



    Seventeen-year-old Riley, the only daughter of legendary Demon Trapper, Paul Blackthorne, has always dreamed of following in her father's footsteps. The good news is, with human society seriously disrupted by economic upheaval and Lucifer increasing the number of demons in all major cities, Atlanta’s local Trappers’ Guild needs all the help they can get – even from a girl. When she’s not keeping up with her homework or trying to manage her growing crush on fellow apprentice, Simon, Riley’s out saving distressed citizens from foul-mouthed little devils – Grade One Hellspawn only, of course, per the strict rules of the Guild. Life’s about as normal as can be for the average demon-trapping teen.


    But then a Grade Five Geo-Fiend crashes Riley’s routine assignment at a library, jeopardizing her life and her chosen livelihood. And, as if that wasn’t bad enough, sudden tragedy strikes the Trappers’ Guild, spinning Riley down a more dangerous path than she ever could have imagined. As her whole world crashes down around her, who can Riley trust with her heart – and her life?

    REVIEW

    From the onset Demon Trappers Daughter held me attention, I felt like it grabbed me by the lapel and shook me until I was hooked. Riley Blackthorne is one tough chick who has a fantastic mix of attitude, self deprecating humor, and a fierce desire to prove herself worthy of the Blackthorne family name. Mix in an adorably fiendish demon that pisses florescent green on you, curses up a storm, flips you the bird, can wreck a library in seconds flat, and tries to bargain his way out of trouble ("Boon I grant thee!") means that you are crazy if you don't fall instantly in love with this book. Reading from Riley's point of view you will laugh love and despair with her, cry with her, and you will always be her on.

    Then there's Beck, older, tough, worldly, and a pain in Riley's ass. The story goes that she had a serious crush on him but as he's her father's apprentice, ex-military, and there's an age gap that was a problem. So Beck lets Riley know that there's is no chance in hell he'd ever consider dating her. From that humiliating point on Riley thinks of Beck as the enemy. The guy who humiliated her and then the one who, as she sees it, takes up all of her father's time. Their bickering, grudging respect, secretly still attracted, resentful relationship is like an onion, there are a lot of layers and they go through the ringer and into the deep fryer because because of each other. Beck has always had to fight for and with everything and he's hard on himself. Through Beck we witness Riley go from having a hard life of her own in this dystopian version of Atlanta, to her have to grow up and cope with an impossible situation. Beck journey isn't easy, but as he watches someone he considers his responsibility push him away and fall for someone else, I was completely with him and rooting for him every step of the way.

    Don't get confused by the US and UK versions, they have different titles and covers (see the UK version, Forsaken, pictured left), but it's the same ridiculously awesome book.

    Urban fantasy is a genre that's rich but crowded, it's difficult to read one that feels fresh, enticing, dangerous, and deliciously familiar all at once. Blending urban fantasy with a gritty dystopian backdrop Demon Trapper's Daughter is the first in a series that will make you sit up and take notice. This is one of those novels that transcends the YA classification, any fan of this genre will fall head over heels for this story. If you are like me and follow religiously the cults of Jim Butcher, Kelley Armstrong, Patty Briggs, and Rob Thurman (just to name the tip of the iceberg) then trust me that this is a series for you.

    IB Teen Blog Interview with Jana Oliver

    IBT: Who was easier to write, Riley or Beck?



    JO: To start with, Beck was the easier of the two. I “heard” him right off, Southern drawl and all. I knew his background, his hopes and fears, all of it. Riley was definitely more of a challenge and took longer for me because she was seventeen. I wanted to ensure she was a realistic young adult in terms of emotions, speech and actions. Since it’s been some years since I was that age, it took longer to achieve “Riley-ness”.


    IBT:  What are your key ingredients to a good story?


    JO: I love a story that grabs onto me and doesn’t let go. I want multi-layered characters, a pretty complex plot and unforeseen outcomes. I love to be surprised. Stories that plod, have one-dimensional characters or an author who doesn’t bother to build a believable world, don’t get finished. Life is too short for boring books. You know, I think that should be a bumper sticker (LOL).


    IBT: There's a wealth of urban fantasy yet Demon Trader's Daughter is exceedingly unique. How challenging is it to pave your own path when making new mythologies or world building?


    JO: It’s was a big challenge. I’m always afraid I’m unconsciously borrowing stuff from other authors, which all of us do to some extent or another. I always enjoy a story where the setting/environment is a character in itself, and that requires pre-planning. I started with where Atlanta is today and then made it worse. Lots of “what if this happened?” questions led to outcomes such as a bankrupt school system where the students attend class in abandoned buildings or where the price of gas ($10/gallon) has required the city to retrofit some of the parking places as “retail shopping opportunities”. My alternate Atlanta isn’t dystopian, but it’s getting there.


    As for the demons, they’re a mashup of Christian, Jewish and Islamic sources. I borrowed a little from here and there to craft my world with just enough “reality” to make it plausible, though fortunately we are not plagued by Hellspawn at present.


    IBT: What is your favorite type of hero?


    JO: The flawed one. The one who has to face his/her own personal insecurities, overcome them and then do what has to be done no matter the personal cost. The hero can be either male or female. The bottom line is that they face something they fear. I’m also fond of “unintended consequences.” A hero makes a decision and it ripples out into the world in ways he/she never thought possible. This is a variant on the old adage: “No good deed goes unpunished.”


    IBT: Will we ever hear the story of the Blackthorne house fire? Was a Pyro demon involved? Or is it back story and ultimately not essential to the bigger picture?


    JO: I might end up writing about the condo fire one of these days. I’m guessing there was a Pyro-Fiend in the mix and I think that might be fun to write about. They are so…incendiary. I’d love to write about Beck’s capture in the Marta station that required a Hazmat team. I can only imagine what led to that disaster.


    IBT: "Boon I grant thee..." coming from a three inch tiny demon with major attitude problem or a tiny bling obsessed ninja-clad demon (with a bad rap in my opinion) are well, precious. How or where did you come up with the little fiends?


    JO: I decided it was going to be easier for the readers if I graded the Hellspawn according to cunning and lethality, Grade One through Five. At the bottom end of the scale are fiends that are annoying, but not necessarily lethal. The Biblio-Fiend (book hating demon) seemed a logical pest for libraries and bookstores and a rather nasty fellow at that. The Klepto-Fiend (aka Magpie because of their obsessive love of shiny objects) explains why we can never find stuff in our house. Like the ring that went missing in my bedroom that showed up underneath the carpet runner in our downstairs hallway. Rather than blame that weirdness on fairies, I figured there had to be a demon involved. Since they’re small, they have mega attitude. Somehow that fits the little guys.


    IBT: As an author how do you respond to those who think censorship is a necessary evil?


    JO: There are certain books I know aren’t my thing, but that doesn’t give me the right to tell someone else they shouldn’t read them. I have no issues with parents auditing what their children read, but deciding what they find offensive should apply to the rest of the world is, to be blunt, rather arrogant. Each child and adult is unique. We read different material and we process that material differently. So yes, censorship is evil, but not necessary.


    IBT: Reading Demon Trapper's Daughter I felt as if you didn't pull any punches, but did you find that you censored yourself knowing that what you were writing was intended primarily for a younger audience?


    JO: I didn’t rein myself in as much as I might have. Now when I look back at some of the scenes I go “Whoa!” But then young adults have been exposed to more of the real world than I was at that age. They are plugged in, they are aware of the bigger issues, the fact that sometimes there isn’t a happy ending. Some have lost their parents or a sibling to illness or war. I felt that if I pulled those punches, not shown the risks inherent to Riley’s profession, it would be sending the wrong message. I’d be telling my younger readers they were too immature to handle the tough stuff, when in fact they face that tough stuff every day of their lives.


    IBT: The short story Retro Demonology is an inspired way to get readers thirsty for more. I love that author/publishers are now offering these free little jewels up to tempt readers. Will there be any others in the future?


    JO: I thought it was a great idea when my publisher asked me to write Retro Demonology. One scene I’d love to tell is Beck’s nightmare capture of a Pyro in a rush hour MARTA station (which I mention in Demon Trapper’s Daughter). I just have to figure out why it was such a disaster (LOL).


    IBT: I'm curious, if you could have dinner with any three people (living, imaginary, or dead), who would they be and why?


    JO: Edgar Allan Poe (providing he was sober). Inspector George Abberline (he was in charge of the Jack the Ripper investigation). Queen Elizabeth the First since I’d love to have her tell me how she kept those English nobles dancing to her tune all those years.

    Jana thank you so much for the interview. You all should check out the Demon Trappers Bonus Short Story that you can find free online!

    CONTEST INFORMATION:

    -The winner will get a copy of The Demon Trapper's Daughter!
    -To enter you must comment on this post
    -For 1 extra entry start Following the Blog (Followers will automatically get an extra entry)
    -For 1 extra entry: post about this contest on your blog, twitter, or any other site (add the link in the comments please)
    -For 1 extra entry Follow the IB Bookmarked Blog (companion to IB Teen Blog)
    -Contest is open to all, including international readers

    CONTEST ENDS 04/30/11 at 11:59 pm.                                                                       



    4.18.2011

    Soul Thief Cover Art Revealed!

    SOUL THIEF
    Demon Trappers Book Two
    Available 08/30/11
    -----------
    Riley Blackthorne’s adventures continue in the second spellbinding Demon Trappers novel, as she battles demons… and a love that could destroy her.

    At the start of the second thrilling installment of the Demon Trappers series, 17-year-old Riley Blackthorne has about had it up to here. After the devastating battle at the Tabernacle, trappers are dead and injured, her sweet boyfriend Simon is gravely injured, and now her beloved late father’s been illegally poached from his grave by a very powerful necromancer. Add to the mix: Ori, one sizzling hot freelance demon hunter who’s made himself Riley’s unofficial body guard, and Beck, a super over-protective “friend” who acts more like a grouchy granddad, and Riley’s almost ready to leave Atlanta altogether.

    But as the demon count in Atlanta increases, the already crippled Trappers Guild has its hands full, and, when the Vatican finally sends its own Demon Hunters to take care of the city’s “little” problem, pandemonium breaks loose. Only Riley knows that she might be the center of Hell’s attention: an extremely powerful Grade 5 demon is stalking her, and her luck can't last forever. As Riley’s life becomes a dangerous balancing act, will she be strong enough not to tip? And who will be there to catch her if she falls?
    (UK Edition pictured right)

    I am going crazy waiting for this book. I love love love this series!