Going Under Review
Going
Under review by Harriet Klausner
Males are a pain in her metallic butt so special agent Lila Black thinks, but
women even ones with robotic gizmos inside her body needs these blackguards
though she is not sure why at the moment. Still Lila wonders if two spouses is
one, two or three too many as she and her mates Zal the elf-lord and Teazle the
demon argue with her; while inside her chest resides whatever is mentally left
of the deceased elven necromancer Tath also bickering with her.
Dispatching the assassins as a side activity, Lila and her horde travel to
the land of the fae on what she assumes is a simple mission though anything
involving fairies is by definition convoluted. She soon finds herself digging
deep past the best beer in the world into the ooze of the realm where only
hideous blood thirsty charlatans reside. To complete her mission and escape
alive, she must navigate the ruses and pranks of those who abet her by trying to
kill her and her retinue.
Although the heroine’s whining about males causing her hemorrhoids (does
prove artificially intelligent beings understand men) is overly extended, fans
of the third Quantum Gravity saga (see KEEPING IT REAL and SELLING OUT) will
enjoy Lila’s latest escapades. The story line picks up about a third of the way
in when the lead protagonist begins her quest into a realm no one escapes from.
Readers will relish the twisted mission as the fairy glamor realm gives way to a
dark despairing repulsiveness.
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