Hunters Player Review
Hunter's
Player review by Harriet Klausner
Jill Kismet is a hunter; a human who kills the creatures of the nightside;
evilbeings who wish to destroy mankind. The local police are not equipped to
deal with such beasts so they hire her when it looks like the supernatural
committed a heinous crime.
She is called in to examine a body of a prostitute in which all the internal
organs are gone and it looks like someone took out chunks of the victim to eat.
Jill learns that others were found in the same condition. In between looking at
dead bodies and trying to figure who or what killed them, Father Guillermo calls
her to do an exorcism on seminary student Oscar. She is successful in pulling
the demon of his body, but she later learns he is a Sorrow; a human who worships
the Chaldean Elder Gods. If Sorrows are in Kismet’s city, she is prepared to
deal with them because she uses a hellbreed’s mark, which gives her powers that
originate in Hell. Jill discovers an old enemy is in town; the Sorrow who killed
her mentor and she learns that a rebel Sorrow is performing a ritual that will
allow the Nameless, Destroyer of Babies and Eaters of Worlds God to cross into
our real unless she can locate and stop the evocation.
As usual, Lilith Saintcrow writes an entertaining, action-packed urban fantasy
loaded with strange dark and evil monsters. Her Hunter world is grim yet hopeful
as creatures of myths, legend and the night roam the earth. The heroine uses
evil powers to fight for the better good and protect the innocent in a sort of
fight fire with fire manner. Jill’s romantic feelings for a were-cougar
embellish an enjoyable paranormal thriller.
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