Come The Night Review
Come
The Night review by Harriet Klausner
In 1927 Ethan Warbrick comes from England to New York City to warn fired and
disgraced former NYPD cop Ross Kavanaugh of a visitor he will soon receive.
During the war, Ross met and fell in love with English werewolf Gillian
Maitland, but though she reciprocated her prejudicial dictatorial father
declared him unfit as only a purebred was acceptable. Fearing her abusive dad
would harm or kill her beloved Yank, Gillian ended their relationship and she
became Mrs. Delvaux to insure the family line remained purebred.
However, she was too late and now her son Tobias who assumes Ross is his sire
is coming to meet him. Gillian, whose husband died in the war, follows her
offspring to New York to bring him back to Cambria before his paternal
grandfather does something despicable to them; which means mother and son must
be home to attend the upcoming werewolf convocation. When his preadolescent son
followed by Gilliam arrives, Ross, a quarter-werewolf, knows he wants both of
them as his beloved family. He follows them to England in time for a serial
killer to begin a murderous campaign that leaves the ex American cop as the
prime suspect.
This cross Atlantic paranormal romantic historical suspense works on all
levels because the audience will believe that in 1927 Anglo-America the werewolf
hierarchy is based on racism depending on the amount of “impurities” in one’s
blood. The story line is fast-paced from the moment Ross has the visitor
followed by his police pal calling him to tell him an eleven year old English
lad claims him as his father. The tale never slows down from there even as the
lead trio (and readers) crosses the ocean. Susan Krinard provides a strong
paranormal private investigative 1920s thriller.
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