Grave Peril
Jim Butcher
Roc, 378 pages
Order this book
Authors of continuing series face a special challenge--they must not only come up with exciting plots for each
volume, but find ways to keep the series protagonist(s) fresh. This can be difficult: the recognizability of the
protagonist is central to retaining reader loyalty, so he can't change too much--but if he doesn't change at all,
if his personal life doesn't shift and develop, readers will become bored and stop coming back. Some writers aren't
able to master this delicate balancing act--S.L. Viehl's Stardoc series, for instance, which has become
a caricature of itself three books on. Jim Butcher, on the other hand, is doing just fine with The Dresden Files.
Harry Dresden, wizard for hire, is up to his neck in ghosts. All over his hometown of Chicago, angry apparitions
are making trouble--more of them than Harry's ever seen before. Even with the help of Michael Carpenter (a.k.a.
the Fist of God, bearer of one of only three God-given swords dedicated to the fight of good against evil), Harry
has been run ragged trying to send the spooks back to the Nevernever where they belong.
When an encounter with a particularly powerful spirit reveals that it has been driven mad by a deadly, painful
spell wrapped around its ectoplasmic flesh like a strand of barbed wire, Harry begins to suspect that there's method
behind all the creepy madness. Someone is attempting to destabilize the veil that divides the ordinary world from
the Nevernever, making it easier to pass through. Is there a connection to the ritual sorcerer Harry and Michael
took down a few months ago, with the help of Harry's friend, police officer Karrin Murphy? Or does it have something
to do with the invitation Harry's just received, summoning him to witness the accession of vampire madam Bianca
St. Claire (whose undying enmity Harry earned in the first volume of the series) to the Vampire Court? One thing's
for sure: Harry won't rest until he finds out. But this investigation won't just risk his life--it may take his
soul.
The plot of Grave Peril is the most complicated yet in this series, with multiple story-strands involving
ghosts, vampires, revenants, and Lea, Harry's exquisitely malicious faerie godmother, who is looking to collect
on a promise Harry's been trying for years to dodge. There's also Harry's personal life--specifically, his relationship
with ace supernatural reporter Susan Rodriguez, to whom he can't quite bring himself to make a full emotional commitment.
Butcher adroitly weaves these threads together, creating an engrossing tale whose many twists and turns are occasionally
dizzying, but always well-grounded. If it doesn't have the compelling darkness of the previous novel, Grave
Peril offers more flash and a greater variety of characters and settings; there's also plenty of grue and gore
(what else would you expect, with vampires?).
Harry's dark side has been touched upon in the other volumes, but he confronts it more explicitly here, brought
face to face (through Lea) with his youthful mistakes, and ultimately drawn by danger and desperation into re-enacting
a version of the terrible deed that ended his apprenticeship. He also breaks through a crucial barrier with Susan,
which should move their relationship to a new level--but by the time he does, Susan herself has moved on, in a
way Harry couldn't have predicted. Throughout, Harry remains his wry, wisecracking self, a stubborn champion of
Doing the Right Thing under any circumstances, and a sucker for ladies in distress. It's a good balance between
change and permanence, adding depth to Harry's character while retaining the basic qualities that make him such
an appealing series protagonist.
The next installment, Summer Knight, should be out sometime in 2002. I'll be looking forward to it.
Copyright © 2001 Victoria Strauss
Top of Page
|