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Loading... Greywalker (edition 2006)by Kat Richardson
Work InformationGreywalker by Kat Richardson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Not what I expected after all the hype. Wasn't crazy about the writing style, almost put it down but wanted to see what happened. http://whatsonthebookshelf.blogspot.com/2010/11/grey-gray-whatever.html I liked this book enough to pick up the second one. but I am just not sure how I feel about it as a whole. I like the main character and I like the premise. I can't quite put my finger on what I didn't like, for now chalking it up to being a first book by a new author. going to give the second book a go. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesGreywalker (1)
Kat Richardson excels at creating vivid, fast-moving novels that blend urban fantasy with paranormal mystery. In Greywalker, Seattle P.I. Harper Blaine is viciously attacked and murdered-but after exactly two minutes, somehow she returns to life. Now she's seeing strange things all around her-dark visions from the shadow world-and living a normal life may no longer be possible no matter how hard she tries. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Harper is...different. She doesn't take things on face value and she can multi-task really well. Her death, because she did truly die for a bit there, opened her up to a whole new level of life that she probably wished stayed hidden, but that she deals with admirably. The 'Grey' is our reality, but not quite. Like The Outer Limits or Twilight Zone, the Grey happens all around us, but for the most part no one has any idea about it. And how people are tuned into the Grey differs from person to person, talent to talent. About halfway through the book I was feeling as sick as Harper anytime she slipped through the Grey quite honestly.
The cast of characters surrounding Harper are equally intriguing--from Quinton (freelance troubleshooter) to Will (antiques auctioneer), they manage to balance out Harper's bluntness. The Danzigers--Ben and Mara--were the most interesting to me. They're in similar fields of study, that is of the paranormal, but have entirely different approaches to it. Ben is more about the science of the unexplained, getting to know the grit and details of what makes the Grey work so to speak. Mara is a witch, she's got firsthand experience with the Grey and what it can do if you're not careful. They butt heads on occasion throughout the book, with a culminating heated discussion near the end involving just how differently they view things.
Harper handles 2 primary cases--the disappearance of college kid Cameron and finding a lost heirloom for a mysterious client. At first both seem pretty routine, but as they unfold it becomes obvious that its just as well that Harper is becoming acclimated to the Grey. Her transition isn't easy, she doesn't just accept that suddenly hey ghosts and vampires and witches really exist; she fights it. She fights it until it makes her sick and then keeps trying to fight it some more. She never wanted to be 'special', she was happy with an ordinary life.
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