Friday, August 14, 2020

Book Review: Motherducking Magic by Michelle Fox

 


Motherducking Magic

by Michelle Fox

I first heard about this series recently in a paranormal reading page on Facebook. Someone raised the question of what tropes in the genre had begun to bother us? I said, the fact that everyone has to be a big badass – a fantastic fighter or awesome magic user. They all have these exceptional skills, they just aren’t recognized.

A couple people chimed in with series that they claimed did not follow this trope and they loved them anyway. I immediately went and bought the first book in each series.

Motherducking Magic (Bad Magic Bounty Hunter Series) was the first book I chose to read. I finished it and promptly bought the next book. I’m halfway through the second.

They are very, very funny.

Now, to be clear, the main witch, Sylvie Orion, is a very, very good bounty hunter. The problem is she’s a very, very bad witch. There’s no juice to her juju. And when you’re a witch without magic, you are an outsider looking in on society. It’s like people think it will catch, like you might drain their magic away. No one wanted to be her friend in school, she didn’t get invited to anything or asked out, ever.

The first case we’re introduced to Sylvie on is trying to bring in one of her former classmates, one of the “mean girls” from high school – Lydia Pettie. She’s one of those people who doesn’t believe the rules apply to her. She’s above them. Well, when we first meet her, she’s sitting on a ten-foot high metal shelving unit in a warehouse. She’s actually filming the situation for social media.

“Hey everyone, remember Sylvie Orion? She sucks just as much as ever. Let’s teach her not to cross her betters.” She pulled a wand out of her cleavage, and sill holding the phone in one hand, she began an incantation.

Sylvia soon finds herself embroiled in an even bigger pile of doggie doo-doo. One of her bounties skipped out on his appointed court time and she has to get him back, or she loses major bucks.

Seems like anything that can go wrong, does go wrong, with Sylvie, but we love her anyway. She has a good sense of humor, and she keeps on trucking.

I enjoyed how the story incorporated magical explanations into everyday items and uses of phrases. (There’s a reason why she says “Motherducking” and those little blue pills we hear about aren’t just pharmaceuticals.)

It reminds me a bit of a cross between Kim Harrison’s Hollows series with its magical urban setting full of witches, vampires, and shifters, and the movie Ella Enchanted, with the mean girls and the sense of humor. A perfect combination to me.

There’s lots of fun sexual tension but no seriously graphic sex scenes.

The bounty who skipped, a shifter named Sheridan, turns out to play a much bigger role in the stories than I would have guessed. I can’t help but wonder if that isn’t because the author didn’t know when she started writing either? She says in some comments at the end of the book that she likes her stories to grow organically. Maybe we can be surprised because she was surprised and didn’t inadvertently telegraph the intent.

Whatever the reason, I’m finding the series surprising, fun, and funny. I hope she’ll be writing more.


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