Title | : | Storm Front (The Dresden Files, #1) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0451457811 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780451457813 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Mass Market Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 355 |
Publication | : | First published April 1, 2000 |
Awards | : | Compton Crook Award (2001) |
Lost Items Found. Paranormal Investigations. Consulting. Advice. Reasonable Rates. No Love Potions, Endless Purses, or Other Entertainment.
Harry Dresden is the best at what he does. Well, technically, he's the only at what he does. So when the Chicago P.D. has a case that transcends mortal creativity or capability, they come to him for answers. For the "everyday" world is actually full of strange and magical things—and most don't play well with humans. That's where Harry comes in. Takes a wizard to catch a—well, whatever. There's just one problem. Business, to put it mildly, stinks.
So when the police bring him in to consult on a grisly double murder committed with black magic, Harry's seeing dollar signs. But where there's black magic, there's a black mage behind it. And now that mage knows Harry's name. And that's when things start to get interesting.
Magic - it can get a guy killed.
Storm Front (The Dresden Files, #1) Reviews
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I'm not going to pull any punches. This book is a misogynistic piece of shit.
All I knew about it before I picked it up was the very basic premise—a wizard in modern-day Chicago, who works as a sort of detective—and that it had picked up quite a cult following. I was expecting to really like it, but before I got to the end of the first chapter, my eyebrows had risen to meet my hairline. I kept reading out of some misguided expectation that things would get better, that there couldn't possibly be such a sustained level of misogyny coming from both the character and the authorial voice. Oh, how wrong I was.
The main character, Harry Dresden, repeatedly tells us that he's a chauvinist, yes, and shows no signs of wanting to change that. It would have been difficult enough for me to get into a novel with such an unpalatable main character, but the level of narrative endorsement of his viewpoint nauseated me. The female characters in the book are there only to cry, seduce, and occasionally mother. Some of them are presented as having power of their own, but if you take a second glance at them, that power is always represented as secondary to male power, or a sham. Karrin Murphy is a hard-bitten homicide detective and Harry's friend, true; but she's undermined to constant references as to how "belligerent" she is, how small and lady-like her hands are, how she cries when he won't share information with her. Let me repeat that: cries. Bianca, the vampire—sorry, vampiress! must use appropriately gendered language!—is defeated because Dresden can see how she's truly ugly beneath all that fake beauty, and so she's humiliated and he can overpower her! All of them use their sexuality to get ahead—or try to, because clearly Harry is just too intelligent to fall for those silly women's wiles!
How about an explanation for the motive behind a murder:I gestured toward the room. "Because you can't do something that bad without a whole lot of hate," I said. "Women are better at hating than men. They can focus it better, let it go better. Hell, witches are just plainmeaner than wizards. This feels like feminine vengeance of some kind to me."
Or how about one prostitute talking about another:She shook her head. "No, no. Nothing like that. That wasn't her style. She was sweet. A lot of girls get like—They get pretty jaded, Mr. Dresden. But it never really touched her. She made people feel better about themselves somehow." She looked away. "I could never do that. All I did was get them off."
This isn't just Dresden being sexist. This isn't just showing us the thought processes of an un-reconstructed chauvinist. This isn't even just using noir tropes—because god knows there are a thousand and one ways of subverting those and reimagining them. This is holding up a clichéd, smug asshole of a main character as the kind of man every guy wants to be, and the kind of man every woman wants to fuck, as a mirror for how Butcher thinks. It's laden with sexist stereotypes that irritate me and in case you couldn't guess, it made me very, very angry.
The book also fails on pretty much every technical level I can think of: I have no idea why it's set in Chicago, or why the location was emphasised, because there's absolutely no sense of place to it. For all Butcher told us, it could all have been taking place in Seattle, or Denver, or Kansas City. The plot is silly, illogical, and by rights everyone should have been dead of Stupid within the first two chapters. The writing style displayed an absolute cloth ear for language. I'd imagine that he was trying to recreate the terse, staccato style of noir detective stories, but didn't realise that in order to do so, you need more than short, simplistic sentences. You need to be attuned to the rhythm of what you're writing, to know how to turn a handful of words to best effect, and Butcher neither knows how to do that, nor how to write realistic sounding dialogue at all.
I have not read such offensive drivel in a long, long time. Avoid. -
I never got around to reading these books until The Name of the Wind was published. And when I first did, I was a little pissed. First person point of view. Magic based on thermodynamics. Gritty, realistic world. Arrogant wizard who doesn't know when to keep his mouth shut. It struck rather close to home....
Some people say that the first few books of this series were kinda rough. But I didn't notice anything particularly untoward about them. In fact, I burned through the whole series (11 books at the time) in about two weeks.
As a side note, James Marsters reads the audiobooks. And while his first one was a little rough, all the rest are very enjoyable. -
Let me tell you how a wisecracking Chicago wizard-for-hire with the most rotten luck imaginable won a permanent spot in my heart, making me a devout Dresdenite.
'Twas a week before USMLE Step 1, the most important test for any medical school student as it pretty much determines which medical specialty you are supposedly smart enough to pursue. Basically, the stakes were high and the stress reached the previously unknown heights. By then my poor average-sized brain has been fully stuffed with all the medical trivia it was able to handle. Have you ever met an overcaffeinated, freaked out, sleep-deprived, shaky med student with bloodshot eyes and propensity to quote at you random basic medical science facts in a high-pitched shaky voice? If so, it was probably before Step 1, and this is an honest representation of what my friends and I looked like:
Lovely, no?
Anyway, physically unable to study any more, I stumbled upon this book on my Kindle app. And this is how Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden, he of the magical staff and a black leather duster, entered my life. Suddenly the anxiety was gone, and instead of omg-it's-test-time-and-I-did-not-study-enough customary nightmares I dreamed about Chicago magical world that night. In the week that followed, I got through most of the series - 11 books at that point in time. The stress was gone with the help of Harry Dresden's adventures - and on the test day I beat my goal score by one whopping point! :D“A man's magic demonstrates what sort of person he is, what is held most deeply inside of him. There is no truer gauge of a man's character than the way in which he employs his strength, his power. I was not a murderer [...] I was Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. I was a wizard. Wizards control their power. They don't let it control them. And wizards don't use magic to kill people. They use it to discover, to protect, to mend, to help. Not to destroy.”
I loved this book despite all its imperfections. Harry Dresden, a wisecracking, self-deprecating, Star Wars-references-dropping, never-knowing-when-to-shut-up, and unwaveringly good guy with a penchant for attracting trouble was someone I'd love to be friends with. I even forgave him the annoying and eyeroll-inducing case of old-fashioned chivalry towards women. Plus, his assistant is an erotica-obsessed formerly-evil spirit living in a skull - how can anyone not love that?“Harry," Bob drawled, his eye lights flickering smugly, "what you know about women, I could juggle.”
This book is a quick and delightfully pulpy read, modeling Harry's personality and adventures on the hardboiled crime noir detective stories with a generous helping of humor set against the paranormal background. It does not aspire to be life-changing or profound, it does not try to be the capital-L literature (that was an excuse to use my favorite Pratchett quote: "Susan hated Literature. She'd much prefer to read a good book."). All it does is take you on a fun and exciting ride, and that's what I love about it. Yes, sometimes it falls flat, or tries too hard, or gets a bit full of itself, but the feeling of sheer fun that Jim Butcher must have had while writing this story is palpable on each page, and it's awesome!“Paranoid? Probably. But just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face.”
This is a "freshman" book, and is not perfect, but it is nevertheless really good. Jim Butcher's narrative voice gets more confident and more polished as the series progresses, especially beginning with book 4. But it was enough to keep me completely engrossed in Harry Dresden's world and read eleven books of the series in a little over a week. I love the Chicago mystical world, I love the characters, I love the fast, even breakneck pace, I love the detective noir touch, I love Butcher's take on mythologies. I absolutely adore the wisecracking - to me, it never felt annoying, maybe because it's a big part of my own (I assume, completely charming) personality.““You don't go walking into the proverbial lion's den lightly. You start with a good breakfast.”
For all of that, I easily give it four stars. (I'd be tempted to call Harry Dresden my literary boyfriend, but as I learned from the sequels, nothing good can possibly come out of that).“I don't want to live in a world where the strong rule and the weak cower. I'd rather make a place where things are a little quieter. Where trolls stay the hell under their bridges and where elves don't come swooping out to snatch children from their cradles. Where vampires respect the limits, and where the faeries mind their p's and q's. My name is Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. Conjure by it at your own risk. When things get strange, when what goes bump in the night flicks on the lights, when no one else can help you, give me a call. I'm in the book.”
————
2020 reread:
Listened to it on audio with my better half — his introduction to Dresden. It’s been a decade since I first read it now. Flaws definitely became more apparent this time, and Harry’s attitude towards women (that “chivalry” theme) is indeed annoying, and that noir feel sometimes is actually funny. But overall I still liked it. It’s interesting seeing Harry Dresden’s humbler beginnings, as I’m used to him being the magical powerhouse of the later installments. Anyway, I’m not as enamored by it this time, but magic still holds. -
You know, the premise of this book actually sounded good. A wizard P.I., sure why not. I like wizards and I like P.I.s, so what could be the problem. The problem was I over estimated this author's abilities.
The main character is like some kind of emotionally retarded uber-geek's idealized life. He lives in a basement and subbasement. He ALWAYS wears a black duster and cowboy boots (even when he's wearing sweats and a t-shirt). He has an abnormally large alley cat that likes to drink coke and doesn't get violently ill from the caffeine. He can't get anywhere with women, for no real reason at all. The first woman that broke his heart, he actually killed (but for good reasons, I mean she was evil). I could go on and on. The protagonist of this story is an immature weiner. He is a walking dorky cliche, that feels like he is some kind of Peter Parker wizard. Constantly bemoaning the weight of the world on his shoulders, even when its actually not on his shoulders. Add to this the characters inability to have basic levels of trust for his friends/allies, lack of common sense, and a very low level of intelligence for someone that relies on brains and willpower for their strengths. And you end up with a guy that is very annoying to read in most any situation.
Now throw that character into a Noir Detective style situation. This is not a confident man, nor is he a physically tough man, and he lacks much in the way of street or even book smarts. I find it highly unlikely that this guy should have survived past the first 100 pages, let alone through all the other blunders he makes through the entire book. Take a gander back to the beginnings of the Noir Detective genre, and you'd be ashamed that this man besmirches the genre's good traditions. Sam Spade has no magic what so ever, but he could quite easily have out smarted and out fought this guy with his bare fists.
Don't even get me started on how annoying magic is in this book. Not since the magic of Terry Brooks' Shanara books have I felt magic meant little to nothing. This guy is constantly like, oh shit I don't have my wand or staff or special ring, so if I do my magic now I'll kill everyone. What the fricking good is magic that can't be used unless you've got your stick of power. If magic is going to be used the way it is in this book, as basically a crutch to hold the rest of the weak aspects of the book up (as it is in most non-awesome fantasy); then at least have it around to do its job and make cool things happen.
So to close, this book is immature and not fun to read. There was a time in my life when I would have found this book awesome, when I was going through that phase of life where you're 13, emotionally retarded, and just discovered AD&D 2nd edition. Which there is nothing wrong with, that's a phase that me and most other nerds went through. Then we grew out of it, because we matured in to adults. But this book isn't be lauded to me as "great writing" by 13 year old nerds and geeks, its being held up as a "Great Book" by adults, and that's who its marketed to. Look if you like this book and you're in Junior high then fine (though I could recommend better things for you to read that are aimed at your age group), but not adults. If your an adult and you think this is even just "good" writing (and again I'll state that most tell me its "great" writing) then I think you need to try reading some other stuff by much better authors. Go find and read Neil Gaiman, Joe Hill, Joe R. Lansdale, Walter Mosley, Warren Ellis, or Charles Stross. These are all writers that have written either modern fantasy/Horror or Noir and/or Crime fiction, so they are working on some similar concepts. Then if you don't find those to be far better book written by actual good writers, well then I'm just going to have to say that you and I may be from different planets or something.
This book is not fun to read. Its poorly constructed. The plot is about as complex as 6th grade math, and less original than that. The characters are 2 dimensional at best. Magic is used a focal point of the story rather than something to enhanced the flavor of original and real feeling plots and characters. At one point the author describes someone by saying he looks like Sean Connery's character from the Highlander, instead of I don't know just describing the dude as having a pony tale (since that was where those two character's physical similarities ended). Most of his other descriptions of characters are like police descriptions of people being given to me by the narrator which completely takes you out of the narrative. The author at one point even wrote "I was a wizard" when his point of view character is lamenting about going into a house or building to solve a problem and I was thinking "wait did you stop being a wizard at some point?". If you're going to write in the first person perspective then learn to write in the present. Of course one would expect a decent editor could have fixed this, but I'm going to assume that decent editors get assigned to decent writers. Look, its not a good book. I didn't make it a bad book, it just is. I'm told that the book get much better after or on book three (so some day I hope to get a copy of his second book for free and see, though I have my doubts since I've read enough bad authors in my day to know they don't usually start becoming good authors, just more experienced bad authors) but that's a really spurious argument since I need ALL book I read to be good if not great right away. I'm not going to recommend an author to someone because his first work was really awful but if you just read two more books by him he gets good. Well then perhaps he should have just started with book three and spared us the bad books. Its bad and I don't recommend it to anyone who's not reading it as a goof to lampoon it in there own head. End of statement. -
3.75
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3.5/5 stars
Storm Front is an introductory and page-turning installment to a beloved urban fantasy series.
I am not much of an expert on urban fantasy sub-genre, I certainly haven’t read as much urban fantasy compared to high fantasy, and almost all of the majority of urban fantasy series I’ve thoroughly loved has been UF series that took place in a fictional world rather than ours; The Green Bone Saga by Fonda Lee and The Divine Cities trilogy by Robert Jackson Bennett are a great example of this. Many trusted readers and friends of mine who understands my reading taste, however, have convinced me that if there’s one urban fantasy series—with a contemporary setting—that I would end up loving, it’s The Dresden Files by Jim Bucher. Well, here I am, I’m officially starting my journey with this series.
“There is no truer gauge of a man's character than the way in which he employs his strength, his power.”
Storm Front is the first book in The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher, and we follow Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden—the only Private Investigator that’s also a Wizard in town. If I'm not mistaken, this series is planned to be 23 or 24 books long. Storm Front is without a doubt an introductory installment to a long series. Many huge fans of the series have warned me that it takes three or four books for the greatness of the series to truly “begin.” I honestly expected this book to be much worse because of this, but as it turns out, I actually thought that Storm Front was very enjoyable to read.
“I don't want to live in a world where the strong rule and the weak cower. I'd rather make a place where things are a little quieter.
Many readers have voiced criticisms that the first three books are very typical and formulaic by today’s story standard, and yes, that is true. I haven’t read the next books yet, but at least as far as the first book goes, I can’t deny their claim. But, we do need to go back a bit and put some things in perspective here. Storm Front was first published twenty years ago.
Let that sink in for a while.
I wasn’t even in middle school yet when this book was first published! Now I’m reading this in a time of a pandemic. Maybe instead of calling the first three books to be unoriginal because of the formulaic story structure, it would be more apt to say that Storm Front and The Dresden Files series to be—at least one of—the perpetrator responsible for popularizing that formula within the sub-genre in the first place.
“Where instinct fails, intellect must venture."
I’m not saying that this book isn’t without its issue, it will not blow your mind, but even putting modern storytelling standards into account, I can’t deny that I had a great time reading this short book. Storm Front is a fun and quick read that introduces Harry Dresden, the characters, the magic, and the world-building within a compelling murder mystery plot nicely. Oddly, I didn’t click with Butcher’s Codex Alera series; I haven’t continued the series past the first two books, which is odd because Codex Alera is a high fantasy series—my favorite sub-genre to read. As for The Dresden Files, if Storm Front is indeed the weakest book of the entire series, it seems like we’re going to have a lot of fun adventures together, Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden.
Picture: Storm Front by Vincent Chong
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Reread for challenge
This is the first time I have read a Harry Dresden book and I love it! I'm so glad for my friends at goodreads for bringing me into his world.
I had no idea Harry was so freaking funny! And the cast of characters in this book were great. The bad guys sucked of course. I loved Mac, the bartender. He made me think of a quiet-ish Andre the Giant :) I loved Toot-Toot, the funny little faerie. I wish he was in the book more but hopefully I will get to see him in more books. I could just order a pizza and he might show up :) Mister is a no brainer because I love animals and he's a cool cat! Then there is Bob, who could not resist Bob the talking skull :) I'm not sure what kind of creature lived inside, I may have missed that part but once in awhile Harry would let him out, but not so much because he seemed to like to hang out at the sorority's and cause trouble!
So, someone is going around killing people with black magic and Harry must find out who is doing this because so many people are blaming him for it.
The story is really good and didn't drag for me at any point. There is too much craziness and action going on for that. I look forward to reading the other books in the series at some point.
Mel 🖤🐶🐺🐾 -
The Dresden Files is one of those books that's intimidating to approach. It has a hard-core fan group that will scream its praises from the top of the roof. Usually, I would approach with extreme caution. I rarely read a series when I've been assured that it gets good after six books. When people tell me that, I simply quietly encourage them to read the Fever Series and avert eye contact.
However, after a discussion regarding male readers and writers of the Urban Fantasy genre, I felt I should give this series a go since the UF male demographic tends to be on the small side.
The Dresden Files has an immersive, interesting world. It's magical lore is possibly the only original thing about it. Which doesn't say that much for the book.
It's exactly the same half-assed compliment you'd give to Meyers...
Don't get me wrong. Harry is a solid, interesting character and the mystery and action in this book was great. There were plenty of tense moments, laugh-out-loud moments, and clever, witty escapes.
But that doesn't mean that anything in this book was actually original.
Paranormal private eye? If there ever was a cliche in this genre - there it is. Can't they ever have a different occupation? If you have some magical ability is this your only career choice? Honestly. I think Anita Blake, Rachel Morgan and Harry Dresden would make GREAT pizza deliverers!
[image error] -
This book was terrible. The kind of terrible where I had to force myself to read the last half in a day just so I could be done reading it. The kind of terrible that made me reevaluate all the ratings of books I have previously given because I remembered what type of book I save one star ratings for. The kind of terrible where I roll my eyes at least once per page. The kind of terrible where I literally throw the book across the room when I'm done both out of frustration and out of the primitive impulse that I needed to get it the hell away from me as fast as possible. That kind of terrible.
There was not a single aspect of this book that I felt was done well. It tried to be a fantasy/detective story (which I believe is an intriguing concept), but it kinda failed at being both. It certainly wasn't a great fantasy story; the whole appeal of this type of fantasy is seeing how magic is performed and, more importantly, how it interacts with our world. But while the rules of Butcher's magic system were somewhat well explained when they were actually brought up, I never really felt like the system as a whole was clearly defined, and because of this, I was never entirely sure what was and wasn't possible. Sometimes rules would be established, only to be ignored later. And I swear that in just about every situation in which Harry had to use magic (and there weren't as many as I thought there would be considering this is a book about a wizard) he would say/think something along the lines of "I'm too exhausted/wounded to produce enough energy for magic." Yet he would still somehow manage to create magic. Every. Time. It got to the point where I really had no idea what his limits actually were or where he was pulling this energy from. , I had to read under the assumption that wizards can just pull some hidden reserve of energy out of their ass whenever they are in trouble, which both destroys the tension in these situations and completely confuses me as to what wizards are and aren't capable of doing. The magic that was produced in this book wasn't even that innovative or inspired: fireballs, protective walls, demon summoning, a couple of objects thrown around, etc, but nothing was used in a way I hadn't seen done somewhere else (and usually executed better). Besides that, the magic just felt unoriginal and poorly defined.
This book wasn't a particularly good mystery either, in my opinion. For starters, I found myself actually bored more often than not, which I think should be pretty hard to pull off considering we are following the exploits of a wizard who is solving murders. How do you make that boring? Beats the hell out of me, but Butcher managed it. There were only really three or four scenes that I would label as action/fight sequences. In 352 pages. Okay; I kinda expected more out of a wizard story, but whatever. Maybe the story is about all the exciting detectiving he gets to do? No. He does little in the way of detective work besides make phone calls (the man makes a lot of frickin' phone calls), which is, you know, obviously what I was excited to read about going in. Not interrogating people or finding clues. Just phone calls. Other than that, he just kinda muddles around until a piece of the puzzle falls in his lap, which leads to point two: the revelations in this mystery were either blatantly obvious to everyone but the protagonist or the evidence and background information leading up to it were so vague that I have no idea how anyone could realistically have connected the pieces. Their reasoning felt forced and contrived, and I'm not sure how I could ever have reasoned that out on my own, which I think is bad mystery. When pieces are fit together, it should make sense with the background information given. We should go "I can't believe I missed that!" instead of "Oh. Alrighty then." The puzzle pieces shouldn't have to be forcefully rammed together.
But while not accomplishing either of the things it tried to be certainly didn't help this book's cause, the real reason I couldn't make myself like it is that fact that I really couldn't stand a single character. There were only a couple of characters, in my opinion, that even had the hint of a personality. Besides Murphy and Dresden himself (and possiblely Bob the Skull, who was the only character I didn't want to punch in the mouth), the characters were either boring clichés (Carmichael, Mac, et al.) or sexist clichés (every single female character including, to a lesser degree, Murphy herself). But while Murphy was sometimes badass/a strong female character, her good qualities were vastly overwhelmed by her stereotypical ones and the fact she was a bully more often than not. Almost every time she interacted with Harry she either insulted, threatened, or physically abused him. Harry acted like it wasn't a big deal and that she was really a good friend even though she's aggressive, but I don't buy into that.
And now for the man himself: Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. Wizard extraordinaire and perhaps one of the most unlikeable characters I have ever encountered. He was (mostly) a competent wizard, but he was not a competent human being. The numerous aspects of his personality that I could not stand are perhaps best organized into a list.
1)His freaking chauvinism- I had heard about this going in, and I told myself I wouldn't let it bother me because that was just an aspect of this particular character. But it did bother me. A LOT. Part of my problem is that I expected deliberate chauvinism, chauvinism that was fictional. I mean, there were a few instances of a character pointing out Harry's tendency toward this, but most of the chauvinism was very subtle, and if Butcher's otherwise blunt, straightforward writing in this book is any indication of his skill, then I honestly don’t believe he was capable of deliberately making the chauvinism this subtle. For example, almost every time a woman was described, the adjective "feminine" was used. "With a feminine pout..." or "with a movement that oozed feminine grace" or "she wore a look that made her seem more feminine." Every time he had an interaction with a woman. EVERY TIME. I'm pretty sure there was not a single female character that wasn't described as being overly feminine in some way. Another example would be how every woman was described almost exclusively by her looks, which were usually very "feminine": "Her delicate little lady's hands…" and so on, and they were all beautiful or drop dead sexy in one way or another. Besides Murphy, none of them had anything but the shadow of a personality beyond their looks besides the usual tropes: hooker with a heart of gold, timid housewife, etc. So I guess all of the female characters existed for the sole purpose of being sexy. There was even a scene where Harry had "accidentally" invited two women over at the same time; he was going out on a date with one, and the other was going to give him information on the case. It would seem logical enough that you would explain the situation to the one you are going out on a date with (who arrived first), especially seeing as how you weren't intending to go out with both of them. But Harry didn't tell her! He just ran around trying to get ready thinking "Boy, things are going to get catty in here." Because, you know, every woman reacts to these situations with a cat-fight. And the whole circumstance was not only chauvinistic, but it reeked of some sort of sexual fantasy. It kinda felt like the opposite of that female teenage love triangle bullshit. Two women are about to have a catfight over me! Well, I see you aren't taking any steps whatsoever to prevent it, either. Don't flatter yourself, asshole. God, these situations and examples just didn't feel all that fictional to me. Whether deliberate or not, though, they annoyed the hell out of me. It is hard to like a character who constantly views themselves as superior than the opposite sex.
2)He was a tool- Sorry, but it's true. Passive characters also tend to annoy the hell out of me, and Harry Dresden was one of them. Every character ordered him around in one way or another, and he usually just took it. , and he barely puts up any resistance. "Doing this will probably get me killed, but okay." You aren't going to at least try to explain that you have very legitimate reasons not to do this? "She is probably just going out with me to get information, but okay." STOP BEING A TOOL! "I can't say no to a damsel in distress." First of all, this brings us back to the chauvinism complaint. Second, stop letting people walk all over you! It is hard to respect a character who is an active doormat.
3)His "snarky wisecracks"- These were sort of a hit and miss for me; sometimes they were hilarious, but more often they were annoying as hell. The problem was he did them ALL. THE. TIME. And because Harry was the first-person narrator, these "witticisms" weren't limited to dialogue. We had the joy of riding inside his head where we were able to listen to his snark 24-7. It just didn't work for me. It was partly because most of the time these wisecracks were not funny or charming. He's almost like a comic relief character without the serious foil character to balance him out, and comic relief characters by themselves are often more annoying than charming. Look at the fourth Pirates movie On Stranger Tides. Jack Sparrow crossed the line from witty, charming, and funny to annoying as all shit. That was because having comic relief characters without their foil DOES. NOT. WORK. Listening to it constantly isn't funny; it's annoying. Shut up. Most of his humor was also very juvenile and immature, and he would sometimes wisecrack at rather inappropriate times. First of all, that isn't even funny. Not even a little. That is elementary school "You have cooties!" level humor. This is a book for freaking adults. It contains mature themes, swear words, and a dark tone and is marketed for adults. So do you seriously expect your audience to laugh at "You're gross!" playground humor? Second, Very telling of Harry's character. And I don't likes what I sees.
4)His strange combination of self-deprecation and arrogance-
Okay. On the one hand, he would constantly put himself down and feel bad for stupid reasons. For example, he was getting vital information out of this one woman; talking about that topic made her upset, and she started crying. And he kept thinking about how horrible a person he was. You are not a horrible person for getting information that will save countless lives including your own. It wasn't like he was beating it out of her or anything; it was just a hard subject for her to talk about. You aren't a monster; get over it. Or when he felt bad for making another woman cry (there are a lot of crying women. Aaaand back to the chauvinism) because he had revealed something about her while defending himself from her murder attempt. Again he felt like a horrible person. STOP IT! Why do you feel bad? You did what you had to do to stop her from killing you. If someone tried to stab me and then started crying when they failed, I doubt I would feel that sympathetic. For a badass wizard, he was pretty oversensitive.
But then on the other hand, bafflingly, he would show extreme circumstances of narcissism. He would feel bad for stupid reasons, but whenever he did something good or even slightly heroic, he couldn't seem to do so without acting like he was a martyr. "Did you guys see what I just did? Wasn't that heroic of me?" He couldn't seem to do anything vaguely laudable without giving himself a giant pat on the back for doing it. Ugh. Harry Dresden is just not the type of person I would like or respect, which is kind of a problem considering this is a series following his exploits.
To make a long, rambling rant short, I felt an extreme abhorrence for this book. It wasn't a groundbreaking fantasy, an exciting mystery, or a tale about a character I care to follow. I have multiple other issues with this book (like the writing style, featuring such gems as "I stood there in silence for a moment, but said nothing."), but I've covered the ones that well and truly broke the story for me. I've heard that the series gets "really good" about four books in, but I don't think I will be finding out. Unless Harry gets a complete personality overhaul, I just don't see it happening. I'm not sitting through any more of Butcher's unoriginality or misogyny, thank you very much. -
Urban fantasy is a sub-genre that I have been very much enjoying for a few of years and Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden series usually tops the lists of readers’ favorites and it has proven wildly popular.
For good reason.
Butcher first published Storm Front in 2000 and it was in this first edition that Butcher introduced readers to Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden, Wizard.
Butcher describes his protagonist as a kind of occult private investigator, being chiefly active in the Chicago area. Dresden’s advertisement is as follows:
WIZARD
Lost items found. Paranormal Investigations.
Consulting. Advice. Reasonable Rates.
No Love Potions, Endless Purses, or Other Entertainment.
Butcher’s talent was in creating a charismatic, cool urban fantasy character and then placing him (and the stories) in the category of mystery / thriller. This provides an almost endless assortment of possible magical / occult / fantasy settings for Harry to explore and Scooby Doo mysteries to solve.
Butcher’s prose is evenly paced and his world building and magic rules forming skills are in good form. -
The first volume in the Dresden Files series introduces us to our hero, Harry Dresden, a wizard who is also a private investigator and police consultant. It is written in a breezy, colloquial style that makes you want to keep reading, but except for a few interesting magical twists on the private dick genre (e.g., Harry's tipster is a faery, lured with a bowl of milk and honey and confined within a magic circle until Harry gets the information he needs), the book is thin on plot, lacking in wit and deficient in interesting characters.
Maybe they get better. I might read the second volume sometime.
Then again, I might not. -
Actually, I started with the TV series, for once. And it was a rather atmospheric show with the exception of that charred body too naturalistically (for my liking!) shown, which I managed to watch during my lunch. Totally ruined that freaking lunch! Offputting, that's what it was. And it put me off for, like, 5 years in reading the series. But now I still am here, ready to enjoy this installment to my everlasting paranormal reading addiction.
And from the very start this novel feels superb. I think I'll stay with this series for the long run. -
2/7/18 - ON SALE for $2.99:
http://amzn.to/2yOviAo
Reviewed by:
Rabid Reads
3.5 stars
Lover of Urban Fantasy that I am, it may come as a surprise that before now . . . I have never actually . . . read Jim Butcher . . .
I KNOW. I'm such a poser.
In my defense, I haven't had much luck with male authors in the genre, and come on . . . we're up to what? FIFTEEN installments, with the SIXTEENTH already in the works, so yeah--DAUNTING. Cut me some slack. And besides, better late than never, right?
Also, I'm holding all of you partially to blame, b/c someone should have told me that around book 3 or 4 the series becomes seriously FAE oriented. So what's up with that, huh? I've said more than once that Fae are my FAEvorite, and based on the PUNS in Storm Front alone, I'm the one who should be feeling betrayed, not you.
*snickers*
Okay. I have adequately blame-shifted, so moving on.
I knew going into this that I'd be entering a longterm relationship with Harry Dresden. I was willing, but skeptical. Even with the image of
Paul Blackthorne firmly planted in my subconscious, I knew from experience that commitment requires more than a pretty face.
Little did I know how right I was.
You see . . . longterm relationships are WORK. And often, the things you love the most about another person are the same things that enable that person to drive you NUTS.
I love how realistically flawed Harry is.
I hate how realistically flawed Harry is.
He gets himself into a tight spot, so he rationalizes:"It wasn't as though I was actually going to be doing any black magic, I told myself. I was just going to be figuring out how it was done. There was a difference. I was helping the police in an investigation, nothing more."
But then he immediately calls his own bluff:"Yeah, right. And maybe one of these days I'd go to an art museum and become well rounded."
He's also incredibly self-aware. He knows his weaknesses as well as his strengths, and he presents both sides very matter-of-factly. It was refreshing. There was no false modesty or self-deprecation. No melancholy search for affirmation. Harry Dresden just lays it all out in plain site, do with it what you will.
But that same openness allows you to see (over and over again) how hapless he is when it comes to the fairer sex . . .
You know . . . for a self-proclaimed, socially awkward wizard with very little relationship experience, Harry Dresden finds himself surrounded by beautiful, flirtatious women with uncommon frequency . . . *rolls eyes*
But then he gleefully reveals his boyish, mischievous side by the sheer delight he takes at pulling one over on someone who has underestimated him. *rolls eyes again, but this time while grinning*
One second I wanted to smack him on the back of the head, and the next, I wanted to ruffle his hair and kiss him on the cheek.
So that's Harry.
There's also Bob the (peeping) Skull, Toot the pizza-loving faery, Mister the cat, Mac the surly pubkeep, Murphy the hard case female cop, and glimpses into possible future interactions with a literal faery godmother and the mysteriously intimidating White Council.
The plot was . . . eh . . . *shrugs* I'm giving it a pass this time, b/c I'm pretty sure a lot of groundwork was laid for future installments, and while this was a fairly entertaining read, it was also fairly predictable, and Bad Guy was just a stock power hungry Bad Guy.
On the world-building front, we were given a lot of hints, but nothing substantial, but that was okay, b/c so far, we've only been in the real world, so as much as I'd like to know more about the Nevernever (RIGHT NOW), there's plenty of time for that when we get there.
Overall, I definitely see this series being worth it (and not just b/c if I read this one, I will have read every, single one of the Big Deal UF series . . . which may or may not be a personal goal . . . *shrugs noncommittally*). Harry Dresden is a realistically likable character who I have a suspicion will turn out to be quite formidable, and Butcher lays a promising foundation with this first installment. Will it live up to my expectations? Only one way to find out . . .
My other reviews for this series:
Fool Moon (The Dresden Files, #2)
Grave Peril (The Dresden Files, #3)
Summer Knight (The Dresden Files, #4) by Jim Butcher -
Both the most boring and misogynistic fantasy book I've ever read. Not a great combo!
This is my first urban fantasy book I've read, and I had a lot of hope about it being a good series. I've heard great things about it from a variety of people, and also have been told that the first book is the weakest in the series. Unfortunately, I don't think I was adequately prepared for just how bad this first book was.
The opening premise of the book is an intriguing one. You have a modern day cynical wizard detective . I like wizards, I like detectives, and I like cynical characters. What a great combination!
Unfortunately, the main character is so misogynistic throughout the entire book that it's hard to do anything other than cringe when he talks. It's not funny, it's not interesting, and it's just hard to read. And even worse than this, but the rest of the book doesn't make up for this fault because it's incredibly boring. The pacing is slow, the scope of the story is very small, the world somehow doesn't feel very well built (which is shocking given that it's taking place in a real city), and the ending doesn't feel rewarding.
I'm left scratching my head, wondering why people love this series. While I know this book is considered the weakest entry, unless this series takes a dramatic turn for the better, I'm just flat out missing something.
Check out my new youtube channel where I show my instant reactions to reading fantasy books seconds after I finish the book. -
July 2022:
FIVE TIMES! I’VE READ THIS BOOK FIVE GODDAMNED TIMES!!! Insert obligatory comment about how this will be the time I actually continue the series.
March 2021:
Oh my God... I read/listened to this book on a recent trip, and I just realized it’s the fourth time I’ve read it. I don’t think I’ve ever read anything four times. I haven’t read anything twice, with a handful of exceptions. Oh my God, I’m going crazy. I don’t know if I should be cool with this or If I’ve reached a new low. I almost gave the book four stars this time, too. Jesus, who even am I? Next, I’m probably going to tell you how I’m actually gonna read my way past the third book in this stupid series. I’m probably going to make some big, bold declaration about my commitment level, and it’s all going to be a lie. I’ll probably start Fool Moon and then drop kick the book I’ve already checked out from the library across the room. I’ll remember I hate books with werewolves, and remind myself I’ll never get over the hump with this series. Four times. Good Lord.
March 2017 Review:
This is now my third time through Storm Front, and while my rating is holding tight at three stars, I enjoyed it more this time thanks to Spike from Buffy and Angel reading it to me. That guy nails Harry Dresden's character and breathes new life into him. His carefree "whatever yeah here I'm reading the book, alright?" tone was awesome. It made the story so much better.
It also made me realize how one of the only adjectives Butcher knows is the word "naked". Everything and everyone in the book is naked at some point. Harry walks outside with naked feet. A room is illuminated with naked color. Lots of naked people. He just really seems to like the word. I felt like it showed up at least a dozen times and stood out because at times another adjective would have worked better. But I digress...
This is a good book to just get lost in and not think too much. Don't overthink the magic or the spells or weird characters. Just let the story play out and you'll be fine. It feels like a weird episode of the X-Files in book form, or like I said two years ago, it's like a Goosebumps book for adults.
I'm gonna try a different approach and not be overly critical as I read through these first few books. I'm having a good time, and I hear things only get better as the series progresses. I kind of enjoy the pulpy writing style with a mix of crime and fantasy genres. I'm not crazy about Harry being all macho but then stepping aside to remind us all how old fashioned he is. He just likes opening doors for women and bringing flowers to dates, alright? Leave him alone. Not sure why he keeps bringing that up and then goes back into tough guy mode.
I've read the next two books before and then quit. I promised myself I was done, but I've never been good at keeping promises to myself. I should really stop doing that. Anyway, I hope I enjoy those s little more this time around and plow through the other books. Looking forward to seeing what happens. Third time is a charm... right?
Previous review from January 2015:
Second time through, and I feel about the same way. It's like Goosebumps for adults. it just needs a more clever title. Here are my contributions:
"Thunderbolts and Lightning, Very Very Frightening"
"Say Cheese and Die with ThreeEye"
"The Wizarding World of Harry Dresden" -
"I heard the mailman approach my office door, half an hour earlier than usual."
The first book in the Dresden Files series, I found this quite exciting. It felt like being picked up by a slightly crazy person, and pulled through a labyrinth by your shirt; all the while having not one creature, but many, trying to kill the person dragging you along with them. You're in for some ride, and the main character is definitely a man without a plan.
Our main character is the wizard extraordinaire, Harry Dresden. He does freelance detective work, but also consults with the Chicago P.D., and he has a doozy of a case. He seems like a decent guy; however he's not the most organized, or prepared. He has a bad habit of underestimating the situations he finds himself in, so you never know what he's going to pull off to stay alive. It makes for great fun and an interesting story. You're never lacking for either suspense or intrigue, and boy, oh boy, the segues from drama to action are nonexistent. One minute you're trying to figure something out, solve the mystery, and the next, someone's trying to kill Harry. It changes that quickly, so you simply never know what's about to happen.
I'm really looking forward to book two. I'm curious as to how Harry's character evolves from here and what adventure is next. What's the next crime scene going to be like? What dangerous situations will he barely escape next? Will he be more prepared? Does he get a second date with the reporter or does he get burned? I think I'm going to go read Fool Moon and find out.
"I'm in the book." -
Solid. A good introduction to the world, the character and the magic. It finished up the main plot nicely and left some very interesting threads dangling that are undoubtedly pursued in later books. Several people told me that this was one of the 'weaker' Dresden books. I'll take that to mean that they just get better and better, as I found nothing weak here to complain about.
-
Okay, some who have looked at my other reviews will immediately note I gave this book 5 stars which I noted earlier I save for very special books. I plan to give the Dresden books (so far anyway) 5 stars. Why? Well while they are not Dumas or Dickens (but then again...I'm not sure I'd regularly be giving Dickens 5 stars, how much Dickens can we all really take anyway???) these are wonderful absorbing reads. Special Books.
I won't be giving a long synopsis of each book... I will say they are an original idea in what is rapidly becoming a glutted genre. That would be "Urban Fantasy". So far I've found a lot of Urban Fantasy I like, and a lot more I'd pitch on the discard pile of literary history.
Dresden is a wizard...he maintains a downtown office and advertises in the yellow pages (no parties please). He has problems with the Sidhe (pronounced "Shee" ) (some would say "fairy" but that is insulting to the very powerful Sidhe royalty...like calling Queen Elizabeth a "babe" or worse). It seems his mother had some sort of dealings with the Sidhe and left him a sort of Sidhe godmother (Bad fairy godmother????)... And that's only the tip of the iceberg.
No spoilers...but in Storm Front Dresden will meet a sorcerer who has some extremely violent and nasty tendencies, magic drugs, biased superiors, and....... well, anymore and I might give a spoiler...read the book, you'll love it!
If your only exposure to Dresden has been the short lived TV series then you have a great surprise in store and a whole list of great books to look forward to (in a way I envy you). While the TV series wasn't awful and I too mourned it's demise (there is so little on the idiot box that actually makes it to a decent standard of "watchability" [made up word, I know:]) it doesn't come close to the books...
This/these are wonderful books. Definitely 5 Stars. -
Storm Front (The Dresden Files #1), Jim Butcher
Storm Front is a 2000 fantasy novel by American writer Jim Butcher. It is the first novel in The Dresden Files, his first published series, and it follows the character of Harry Dresden, professional wizard. Dresden is hired by a woman to find her husband Victor Sells, an amateur magician who has been acting oddly. Later that day, he gets a call from Lieutenant Karrin Murphy, director of the Special Investigations (SI) Unit of the Chicago Police Department.
Murphy's partner shows him the bodies of two people, who die by having their hearts ripped out, apparently by magic. Dresden realizes that he is the chief suspect for these magical murders. Eventually, despite encounters with vampires, the unknown warlock, and the ever-suspicious Warden Morgan, Dresden learns that the affair centers around the drug "ThreeEye", which allows normal humans to temporarily acquire Wizards Sight, which eventually drives them insane.
Victor Sells has been manufacturing ThreeEye to edge out mob boss Johnny Marcone. Using the energy of thunder storms and the orgies held at his home, he powered the spells to remove his enemies, namely Marcone's men and anyone else threatening his operation, in order to gradually bring down Marcone and corner the drug trade. Dresden interrupts Victor's spell casting and attacks him, "brains versus muscle", eventually burning down Victor's house while Victor is still inside grappling with monster scorpions and a demon he had summoned to kill Dresden. Dresden survives, but is himself trapped on the balcony of the burning house until Morgan steps in to rescue him. Morgan had witnessed the fight with Victor and, knowing now that Dresden is innocent, reluctantly testifies on Dresden's behalf to the White Council.
تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز دوازدهم ماه سپتامبر سال2015میلادی
عنوان: جدال با طوفان؛ نویسنده: جیم بوچر؛ مترجم: مهنام عبادی؛ ویراستار: نیما کهندانی؛ تهران، نشر آذرباد، سال1393؛ در344ص؛ فروست: مجموعه پرونده های درسدن کتاب نخست؛ شابک9786006225494؛ موضوع: داستانهای نویسندگان ایالات متحده آمریکا - سده21م
پرونده های درسدن، اثری کارآگاهی است، که نقش نخست آن را کارآگاه خصوصی- جادوگری با نام «هری درسدن» ایفا میکند؛ در هر جلد از این سری، رخدادی جداگانه رخ میدهد، که «هری درسدن» باید با آن روبرو شود؛ هنر «جیم بوچر» در پیوند دادن رویداهای گوناگون ماورایی، و دنیای واقعی است
نقل نمونه متن: (فصل یک: شنیدم که پستچی به در دفترم نزدیک میشود، نیم ساعت زودتر از معمول؛ حالش خوب به نظر نمیرسید؛ گامهایش سنگینتر و لاقیدتر شده بودند و سوت میزد؛ فردی جدید؛ در طول مسیرش به در دفترم سوت میزد، سپس برای لحظه ای ساکت شد؛ آنگاه زیر خنده زد؛ بعد به در کوبید؛ اخم کردم؛ نامه های من معمولاً از طریق شیار مخصوص نامه به دستم میرسند، مگر اینکه سفارشی باشند
من تعداد معدودی پست سفارشی دریافت میکنم، که هیچگاه حاوی خبرهای خوبی نیستند؛ از روی صندلی دفترم بلند شدم، و در را باز کردم؛ پستچی جدید که شبیه توپ بسکتبالی بود که دست و پا و سَری آفتاب سوخته و کچل داشته باشد، با دهان بسته به تابلوی روی شیشه ی در میخندید؛ به من نگاهی انداخت و انگشتش را سمت تابلو گرفت: «شوخی میکنی دیگه؟»؛ نوشته ی روی تابلو را خواندم -مردم گهگداری آن را تغییر میدادند- و سرم را تکان دادم؛ «نه جدی میگم؛ میشه لطفاً نامه ام رو بدید؟» - خُب، آه...؛ مثل مهمونیها، نمایشها و این جور چیزا؟ به پشت سرم نگاه کرد، انگار انتظار داشت که ببری سفید، یا احتمالاً دستیارانی با لباسهایی کم و کوتاه را ببیند، که در دفتر یک اتاقه ام جست وخیز میکنند؛ من که حس و حال این را نداشتم که دوباره مورد تمسخر قرار بگیرم، آه کشیدم و دستم را برای گرفتن نامه ای که در دستش نگاه داشته بود، پیش بردم؛ «نه، نه اینطوری، توی مهمونیها اجرا نمیکنم.»؛ او دست بردار نبود، سرش کنجکاوانه کج شده بود؛ «پس چطوری؟ یه جور طالعبین؟ با ورق و گویهای کریستالی و این چیزا؟»؛ به او گفتم «نه، من واسطه نیستم.»؛ پاکت نامه را کشیدم، رهایش نکرد، «پس چی هستی؟» - تابلوی روی در چی میگه؟ - میگه «هری درسدن، جادوگر»؛
تایید کردم: «خودم هستم.» او که به پهنای صورتش میخندید، انگار که باید لطیفه ای را برایش تفسیر کنم، پرسید «یه جادوگر واقعی؟ افسونها و معجونها؟ شیاطین و طلسمها؟ زبر و زرنگ و زود جوش بیار؟»؛ - «نه به اون زبر و زرنگی.»؛ نامه را از دستش بیرون کشیدم و نگاهی معنادار به تخته ی زیردستیش انداختم؛ «میشه برای نامه ام امضا کنم؟»؛ خنده از صورت پستچی جدید ناپدید و با اخمی جایگزین شد؛ تخته ی زیردستیش را رد کرد تا اجازه دهد برای دریافت نامه امضا کنم -اخطار دیگری از جانب صاحبخانه ام-؛ و گفت: «شما دیوونه اید؛ این چیزیه که هستید.»؛
تخته اش را پس گرفت و گفت «روز خوبی داشته باشید، آقا.»؛ رفتنش را مشاهده کردم؛ زیر لب گفتم «مثل همیشه.»، و در را بستم؛ اسم من «هری بلک استون کاپرفیلد درسدن» است؛ با گردن گرفتن خطراتش، میتوانید آن را فراخوانید، من یک جادوگرم؛ در دفتری در مرکز شیکاگو کار میکنم؛ تا جاییکه میدانم من تنها کسی در کشور هستم که آشکارا مشغول جادوگری حرفه ای است؛ میتوانید در صفحه ی آگهیهای روزنامه، تحت عنوان «جادوگران» پیدایم کنید
باور بفرمایید یا نه من تنها جادوگر آنجا هستم؛ آگهیم به این صورت است «هری درسدن - جادوگر»؛ پیدا کردن اجسام مفقود شده؛ تحقیقات ماوراء الطبیعه؛ مشاوره - رایزنی - با هزینه مناسب؛ از ارائه ی معجون عشق، کیف پولهای همیشه پر، اجرا در مهمانیها یا دیگر مراسم تفریحی معذوریم؛ اگر بدانید چند نفر زنگ میزنند، فقط برای آنکه بدانند جدی هستم یا نه، متعجب خواهید شد؛ اما از طرفی، اگر چیزهایی را که من دیده ام، دیده بودید؛ اگر نصف چیزهایی را که من میدانستم، میدانستید از این تعجب میکردید که چطور کسی میتواند فکر کند که من جدی نیستم؛
پایان سده بیستم میلادی و آغاز هزاره ی جدید به نوعی رنسانسی را در آگاهی جمعی نسبت به مسائل فراطبیعی به خود دیده بود؛ واسطه ها، تسخیرگران، خون آشام - هرچه اسمش را بگذارید؛ مردم هنوز هم آنها را جدی نمیگرفتند، اما تمام چیزهایی را که علم قولش را به ما داده بود، از بین نرفته بودند؛ بیماری هنوز یک مشکل بود؛ گرسنگی هنوز یک مشکل بود؛ خشونت، جنایت و جنگ هنوز جزو مشکلات بودند؛ با وجود پیشرفت تکنولوژی، مسائل آنگونه که همه امید داشتند و فکرش را میکردند، تغییر نکرده بود؛ علم، بزرگترین آیین سده ی بیستم میلادی، به نوعی توسط تصاویری از فضاپیماهای منفجرشده، کودکان از ریخت افتاده در اثر مصرف کراک مادرشان و نسل تن پروری از آمریکاییهایی که اجازه میدادند، تلویزیون بچه هایشان را بزرگ کند، لکه دار گشته بود؛ مردم در جستجوی چیزی بودند؛ من فکر میکنم که فقط نمیدانستند دنبال چه هستند؛ و با وجود اینکه دوباره شروع به گشودن چشمانشان به روی دنیای سحر و جادو، و محرمانه ای کرده بودند، که در تمام این مدت در کنارشان وجود داشت، هنوز هم فکر میکردند که من یکجور لطیفه هستم؛
به هر حال، ماه کسالتباری بود؛ در حقیقت دو ماه کسالتبار؛ اجاره ی فوریه ام تا دهم مارس پرداخت نشده بود، و به نظر میرسید که شاید بیشتر از این هم طول بکشد، تا وقتیکه برای این ماه دستم جایی بند شود؛ تنها کار واقعی ام هفته ی گذشته بود، وقتی که به «برانسونِ میسوری» رفتم، تا خانه ی شاید تسخیرشده ی یک خواننده ی کانتری را، بازرسی کنم؛ تسخیر نشده بود؛ مشتری ام از شنیدن پاسخ خوشحال نشد، و وقتی پیشنهاد دادم مصرف هرگونه ماده ی مخدر، و نوشیدنی الکلی را متوقف نماید، سعی کند کمی ورزش کند، و بخوابد، و ببیند اگر اینکار بیشتر از جنگیری به مشکلات سروسامان نداد، خوشحالیش کمتر هم شد؛
مخارج سفر به علاوه ی مزد یک ساعت را دریافت کردم، و با این حس که کاری صادقانه، پرهیزکارانه و نشدنی را به انجام رسانده ام، از آنجا رفتم؛ بعداً شنیدم که او واسطه ای دغلباز را استخدام کرده است، تا بیاید و مراسمی را با بخور زیاد و چراغهای سیاه اجرا نماید؛ از دست بعضی از آدمها!؛ کتابم را تمام کردم و آن را در جعبه ی «تمام شده ها» انداختم؛
کپه ای از کتابهای خوانده و دور ریخته شده، درون جعبه ای مقوایی، در کنار میزم قرار داشت، کتابهایی که محل اتصال کاغذهایشان خم، و صفحاتشان پاره پوره شده بود؛ من به طرز وحشتناکی نسبت به کتابها خشونت نشان میدهم؛ داشتم به دسته ی کتابهای خوانده نشده نگاه میکردم، با توجه به اینکه کاری واقعی برای انجام نداشتم، به این میاندیشیدم که کدامیک را شروع کنم که تلفن زنگ زد؛ با ترشرویی به آن زل زدم؛ ما جادوگرها وحشتناک در فکرهایمان فرو میرویم؛ بعد از سومین زنگ، وقتی فکر میکردم ک�� خیلی مشتاق به نظر نمیآیم، گوشی را برداشتم و گفتم «درسدن.»؛ «اوه شما، اومم، هری درسدن هستید؟ همون، آه جادوگر؟»؛ لحن صدایش عذرخواهانه بود، گویی به شدت میترسید به من توهین کرده باشد؛
پیش خود فکر کردم: نه. من «هری درسدن» همون آه، داروگرم؛ هریِ جادوگر، طبقه پایینه؛ این حق جادوگرهاست که بداخلاق باشند؛ گرچه مشاوران غیردولتی که پرداخت اجاره شان هم تاخیر دارد، چنین حقی ندارند؛ بنابراین به جای اینکه حرفی زیرکانه بزنم به خانم پشت تلفن گفتم: «بله خانم، چه کمکی از دست من ساخته ست؟»؛
گفت: «من. اوم مطمئن نیستم، چیزی گم کرده ام، و فکر میکنم شما بتونید کمکم کنید.»؛ گفتم: «یافتن اشیای گمشده خودش یک تخصصه، باید دنبال چی بگردم؟»؛ وقفه ای اضطراب آلود به وجود آمد؛ گفت: «همسرم.»؛
صدایش کمی خش داشت، مانند تشویق کننده ای که در مسابقه ای طولانی فعالیت کرده باشد اما از طرفی، به قدر کافی بار سالهای زندگی در آن شنیده میشد، که بتوان او را به عنوان بزرگ سال در نظر گرفت؛ ابروهایم بالا رفتند؛ «خانم، من حقیقتاً متخصص افراد گمشده نیستم؛ با پلیس ��ا کاراگاه خصوصی تماس گرفتید؟»؛ سریع گفت: «نه، نه اونا نمیتونن؛ یعنی تماس نگرفته ام؛ خدای من، این خیلی پیچیده است؛ چیزی نیست که بشه با تلفن درباره اش حرف زد؛ متاسفم که وقتتون را گرفتم آقای درسدن.»؛
سریع گفتم: «قطع نکنید، ببخشید، اسمتون رو به من نگفتید.»؛ دوباره همان مکث مضطرب برقرار شد، انگار که پیش از پاسخ دادن برگه ای از یادداشتهای نوشته شده را بررسی کند؛ «به من بگید مونیکا»؛ کسانیکه تنها قدر ارزنی راجع به جادوگرها اطلاع دارند، دوست ندارند اسمهایشان را به ما بگویند؛ آنها متقاعد شده اند که اگر جادوگری اسمشان را از زبان خودشان بشنود، میتواند از آن ��ر ضدشان استفاده کند؛ بخواهیم منصف باشیم، حق با آنهاست؛ میبایست تا جاییکه میتوانستم مودب و بی آزار باشم؛ هر آن ممکن بود از روی تردید و دودلی محض، قطع کند، و من به اینکار احتیاج داشتم؛ اگر رویش کار میکردم احتمالاً میتوانستم همسرش را ظاهر کنم؛ در حالیکه سعی داشتم تا جاییکه میتوانم دلپذیر و دوستانه به نظر برسم، به او گفتم «بسیار خُب مونیکا، اگه حس میکنی که شرایطت طبیعت حساسی داره، شاید بهتر باشه بیای به دفترم، و درباره اش صحبت کنی؛ اگه معلوم شد که من بیش از همه میتونم کمکت کنم، که اینکار را خواهم کرد، و اگر نه، آن وقت میتونم به کسی که فکر میکنم کار بیشتری از دستش برمیآد، معرفیتون کنم»؛
دندانهایم را به هم ساییدم و تظاهر کردم دارم لبخند میزنم؛ «رایگان.»؛ باید تاثیر کلمه ی «رایگان» بوده باشد؛ که موفقیت حاصل شد؛ قبول کرد که مستقیم به دفتر بیاید و به من گفت یک ساعت دیگر اینجا خواهد بود؛ اینگونه زمان تخمینی رسیدنش حدود دو و نیم میشد؛ وقت کافی برای بیرون رفتن، گرفتن ناهار و برگشتن به دفتر جهت ملاقات با او وجود داشت؛ تقریباً در همان لحظه، که گوشی را سرجایش گذاشتم، تلفن دوباره زنگ خورد و مرا از جا پراند؛ با دقت به آن نگریستم؛ من به وسایل الکترونیکی اعتمادی ندارم؛ هر چیزی که بعد از دهه ی چهل ساخته شده مشکوک است، و به نظر نمیآید که زیاد میانه ی خوبی با من داشته باشد؛
هر چه شما اسمش را ببرید: ماشین، رادیو، تلفن، تلویزیون، دستگاه پخش فیلم، هیچکدامشان برای من درست کار نمیکنند؛ من حتی دوست ندارم از مدادهای اتوماتیک استفاده کنم؛ با همان لحن شاد دروغینی که برای مونیکای شوهر گمشده فراخوانده بودم، تلفن را جواب دادم؛ «درسدن هستم. میتونم کمکتون کنم؟»؛ - هری، میخوام که تا ده دقیقه ی دیگه مدیسون باشی؛ میتونی بیای اونجا؟ صدای آنسوی خط بازهم متعلق به یک زن بود، خونسرد، سرزنده و باکفایت؛ من که سرشار از نمک شده بودم، سیل کلمات را جاری کردم: «چرا ستوان مورفی؛ منم از شنیدن صداتون خوشحال شدم؛ خیلی وقته خبری ازتون نیست؛ اوه، اونا هم خوبن، خوب؛ خانواده شما چطورن؟»؛ - این حرفا رو ول کن هری؛ اینجا یه جفت جسد دارم و میخوام تو یه نگاهی به دور و اطراف بندازی؛ فوراً هشیار شدم؛
کرین مورفی، رئیس تحقیقات ویژه خارج از مرکز شهر شیکاگو بود، در واقع کمیسر منتخب پلیس، برای تحقیق در مورد هر جرمی که برچسب غیرعادی به آن میخورد؛ حملات خونآشام، غارت و چپاول از جانب غولها و ربودن کودکان توسط جنها و پریان نمیتوانست در گزارش پلیس درست جا بیافتد، اما در عین حال به مردم حمله میشد، کودکان ربوده میشدند، املاک خسارت میدیدند یا تخریب میگشتند؛ و شخصی باید مسئله را پیگیری میکرد؛ در شیکاگو، یا در واقع در هر کجای ایالت شیکاگو، این شخص کرین مورفی بود؛ من کتابخانه ی متحرک او در مسائل ماورایی و مشاور حقوقبگیر اداره پلیس بودم؛ اما دو تا جسد؟ دو مرگ توسط عوامل ناشناخته؟ پیش از این هیچگاه با چنین چیزی به خاطر او سروکار نداشتم
از او پرسیدم: «کجا هستی؟» - هتل مدیسون توی خیابون دهم؛ طبقه هفتم؛ گفتم: «پیاده از دفتر من، فقط ربع ساعت راهه.»؛ - پس ربع ساعت دیگه اینجایی؛ خوبه؟
گفتم: «اومم.» به ساعت نگریستم؛ مونیکای بدون نام خانوادگی کمتر از چهل و پنج دقیقه ی دیگر اینجا بود؛ «من قرار دارم.»؛ - درسدن، من یک جفت جسد دارم، بدون هیچ سرنخی، و هیچ مظنونی، و یک قاتل که برای خودش آزاد میچرخه؛ ق��ارت میتونه صبر کنه؛ جوش آوردم؛ معمولاً اینطوری میشد؛
گفتم: «حقیقتش، نمیشه، من یک سر میآم اونجا و نگاهی به دور و بر میاندازم و به موقع برای قرارم برمیگردم اینجا.»؛ او پرسید: «ناهار خوردی؟» - چی؟ئ سوالش را تکرار کرد؛ گفتم: «نه.»؛ «نخور.»؛ مکثی به وجود آمد، و وقتی دوباره صحبت کرد، در لحنش حالت دل به هم خوردگی شنیده میشد؛ «اوضاع نابسامان.»؛ - مورف، درباره ی چقدر نابسامانی داریم حرف میزنیم؟
لحنش نرم و ملایم شد، و این بیش از هر تصویری، از خون لخته شده و مرگ خشونتبار مرا ترساند؛ مورفی اصولاً دختری خشن بود، و به خود افتخار میکرد، که هیچوقت ضعف نشان نمیدهد؛ «بَده هری، لطفاً طولش نده، سازمان جنایات ویژه دارن، تلاش میکنن تا این پرونده رو دست بگیرن و میدونم که تو خوشت نمیآد کسی قبل از اینکه نگاهی به اطراف بندازی، به صحنه جرم دست بزنه.»؛ در حالیکه ایستاده بودم و کتم را میپوشیدم، به او گفتم «توی راهم.»؛
به من یادآوری کرد: «طبقه ی هفتم؛ اونجا میبینمت.» - باشه؛ چراغهای دفترم را خاموش کردم، از در بیرون رفتم و با اخمی آن را پشت سرم قفل کردم؛ اطمینان نداشتم که بازرسی صحنه ی جرم «مورفی» چقدر به طول میانجامد، و نمیخواستم فرصت صحبت با مونیکای از - من - هیچی - نپرس را از دست بدهم؛ بنابراین دوباره در را باز کردم، تکه کاغذ و پونزی برداشتم و نوشتم: «مدت کوتاهی بیرون هستم؛ ساعت دو و نیم برای قرار برمیگردم؛ درسدن»؛ با اتمام آنکار، شروع به پایین رفتن از پله ها کردم؛ با وجود آنکه در طبقه ی پنجم هستم، به ندرت از آسانسور استفاده میکنم؛ همانطور که گفتم به ماشینها اعتماد ندارم؛ همیشه، درست وقتی احتیاجشان دارم، خراب میشوند؛ به علاوه اگر من کسی بودم که با استفاده از جادو دو نفر را همزمان در این شهر میکشتم و نمیخواستم که گیر بیافتم، اطمینان حاصل میکردم که تنها جادوگری را که اداره ی پلیس در استخدام داشت، از میان بردارم؛ عجایبی را که در راه پله برایم اتفاق میافتاد، خیلی بیشتر از فضای محبوس و گرفته آسانسور دوست داشتم؛ خیالاتی شدم؟ احتمالاً؛ اما فقط چونکه شما خیالاتی هستید، دلیل نمیشود که شیطانی مخفی وجود نداشته باشد، که بخواهد دخلتان را بیاورد.)؛ پایان نقل
تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 17/04/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 01/03/1401هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی -
99c Kindle sale, Oct. 19, 2019. 3.5 stars for this somewhat gritty mix of urban fantasy and the noir detective genre, the first book in the long running Dresden Files series.
Review first posted on
Fantasy Literature:
Harry Dresden is a down-on-his-luck wizard trying to make a living as a magical private investigator, in a version of our world where magic has recently become more open and powerful. He’s an occasional consultant to the police on crimes with a paranormal aspect, and this latest job they call him in on ― a mobster and a call girl violently murdered by magical means in the middle of the act ― is a doozy. Unfortunately, several key players think Harry did it! It’s highly inconvenient when you’re one of the only people who have the magical ability to carry out a particular murder. Harry’s only got a limited time to prove them wrong … especially since several people would find it extremely convenient if Harry were dead.
Storm Front was on my TBR list for ages, but I dawdled in picking it up, given the many disappointed to mildly encouraging reviews for this book. A lot of fans of this series say it really only picks up with the 4th book,
Summer Knight, but I'm here to say that you need to start at the beginning. I tried reading Summer Knight out of order last year, and doing that didn’t really pan out for me - I was missing too much backstory and connection with the characters. Apparently you have to live and grow with this series, along with Jim Butcher’s writing skills.
I thought Storm Front was reasonably good for an urban fantasy and a series starter, though I suspect my lowered expectations had to do with my ending the book feeling pleasantly surprised. The subplots, including a Chicago mobster intent on keeping Harry out of the case, a woman with a missing husband who may be teaching himself black magic, Harry’s troubles with the wizardly White Council, and more, were well integrated into the overall mystery. I appreciated that Jim Butcher creates an unusually interesting backstory around Harry Dresden, fleshing out his world without feeling the need to fully reveal all yet.
Don’t expect a whole lot ― just a fun, if sometimes quite dark, paranormal mystery with which to while away a couple of hours ― and I think you won’t be disappointed. Sometime I'm going to continue with the series, though it’s not my highest reading priority.
Content notes: violence and some sexual content. -
A Good Beginning.
The first novel in the series and gives a great deal of necessary background to help you understand what is going on and why things are happening.
Harry Dresden is a wizard and he is called upon by his detective friend to help investigate a double murder.
Harry believes that magic has been used but he doesn’t know how or who, and his investigation may put his life in danger, as well as the lives of others.
But he is definitely not going to give up the investigation and he can only die once. Right?
Four fantastic stars. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ -
Unexpected BR with
Robin &
Shelly. And some other people. But I have no idea who they are. I'm sure they're lovely. Then again they might not be. Oh well. It wouldn't make any difference if they were. I'm a total BR slut anyway.
→ Robin wants it known that she didn't recommend this to me. I wonder why.
►► Pointless review #2586 coming right up! ◄◄
Ladies & gentlemen... Introducing… Harry Dresden, aka Book Boyfriend #8462! BAM! Kidnapped!
Before I go any further, let me set the record straight: a lovely girl named
Heather will have you believe Harry is hers. Don't take take anything she might say too seriously: 1-She has a great sense of humour and 2-Delightful as she may be she is also slightly delusional.
♥♥ Why I feel in love with Harry Dresden even though he isn't a total, complete, utter aggravating asshole ♥♥
① He's male. Oh don't you laugh you silly people and let me finish what I was about to say will you? Thank you. So. He's male. As in OMG-finally-at last-I had given up all hope of ever coming across a male UF mc! YES! I love my kick-ass girls but some good old testosteroneis always welcomecan really be refreshing once in a while.
② He's a wizard. Which is pretty cool in itself. I may have a thing for rawrs and claws (yummy) but magic is my other UF drug of choice. And, in case you're wondering, I'm not talking about pulling fluffy bunnies out of hats here *eyeroll* Psst, this story is so cool that there's even sex-generated magic involved. Loved that part. Obviously.
→ Harry's pretty good at potion making (sometimes the potions kind of get mixed up but that's not really poor Harry's fault). If he mixes his drinks the way he mixes his potions I'm pretty sure he'll make mean mojitos. But I digress.
→ Harry's pretty good at summoning stuff and doing wizardly things. Yeah, I know, this is pretty useless as information goes but I'm trying to keep you in suspense here. Yes, this is me being considerate so get over it.
→ Harry's pretty good at doing exciting things with his staff. Excuse me? What? Oh no you don't! Stop it right there. I know what you're thinking. Well you're wrong. I am ACTUALLY talking about an ACTUAL staff. You know, something like this:
►► I'll have you know I am notalwaysdirty minded. Nuh-huh, not me. Never me.
③ He's as antiheroic as it gets. And the world is usually up against him. And everything that could possibly go wrong usually does. And it certainly doesn't help that:
→ Heiscan be a total dork. Especially when it comes to women. A prolonged stay in my harem will do him a world of good. There are quite a few things I want to teach him. Am I digressing again? Right. Moving on. Where were we? Oh yes. Dork. Clueless when it comes to women. And I have to say, as cataclysmic dates go, Harry Dresden just can't be beaten: multiple contenders, unintentional nakedness, badass toad-demon, potions gone very wrong, out of control libido… The guy really knows how to show a girl a good time. I can't wait.
→ He has no fashion sense: a beat-up duster that also doubles up as Batman-like cloak? Sweatpants and cowboy boots? Oh dear. You really need me in your life Harry.
④ He has the coolest pets/acquaitances:
→ A sneaker-loving, steak-sandwich eating cat so enormous he is bigger than most dogs.
→ An aggravating, talking skull named Bob I'd gladly snatch for my harem had he a body.
→ A pizza-loving faerie/pixie with a bad temper.
So. Simple maths time:
① + ② + ③ + ④ = Harry Dresden. I'm in love.
►► Let's wrap this up shall we? ◄ ◄
▧ One of the most irresistible male mcs ever. Yum.
▧ Very cool secondary characters.
▧ Very cool world building.
▧ Lots of humour.
▧ Great potential for development.
BOOM. I'm addicted.
✎ Book 2:
Fool Moon ★★★★
✎ Book 3:
Grave Peril ★★ -
What makes this series unique is Butchers´ highly professional style, earned in long years of writing and study of creative writing and the wit, dynamic, immense density of tropes, quick cuts, cliffhangers and a general ultra coolness of the main protagonist.
Like a history of the horror and suspense genre, as much as possible is included in as less space as necessary to culminate in the unique, quick and sometimes even philosophical new interpretation of the fantasy, werewolf, vampire, monster, etc. genre.
Another great example that crossover hybrids of popular genres are part of the future of writing because the restriction to just one genre with it´s unwritten rules is something that can reduce the potential for future super reads like that one.
Just as I can highly recommend the Codex Alera series, which has reinterpreted and reinvented parts of the fantasy genre, this series is a unique reading pleasure. Butcher seems to be amazing in crossing borders lines and creating new subgenres each time he writes a new series.
The evolution of genres is very interesting in this case, because out of Douglas Adams´ metaphysical Dirk Gently grew variations like Flavia de Luce by Alan Bradley, Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer, The Atrocity Archives by Charles Stross, Thursday Next by Jasper Ffjorde, etc.
Many horror and extreme horror novels deal with the crossover mix and I would put Rick and Morty in this row too. The mixture is always great, no matter if for kids or adults like me with, ahem, special reading interests.
Tropes show how literature is conceived and which mixture of elements makes works and genres unique:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.ph... -
"My name is Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. Conjure by it at your own risk. I'm a wizard. I work out of an office in midtown Chicago. As far as I know, I'm the only openly practicing professional wizard in the country. You can find me in the yellow pages, under 'Wizards.' Believe it or not, I'm the only one there."
Harry Dresden is Chicago’s only wizard. One day he is contacted by a nervous woman who wants him to investigate the mysterious disappearance of her husband, whom she thinks has dabbled in the forbidden arts of magic. Shortly afterwards, Harry’s contacts in the police summon him to a scene where a couple has been brutally and horribly murdered without any trace of the killer. The investigation takes him all across Chicago and its underworld, to encounters with crime lords and supernatural beings, all the while being observed by the watchful eyes of the White Council, who think that Harry himself is behind it all...
Harry Dresden is quite an interesting protagonist. Despite being a wizard, he’s incredibly... well, normal, and he lives and acts just like any other guy would. He has his good sides and bad sides and plenty of flaws, and despite that he’s not particularly complex, it’s refreshing to read a book from the viewpoint of a guy like this. Sadly, Harry is the only real character in the book. All the others are completely shallow and one-dimensional. Most of them are stereotypical and simplistic, and the female characters in particular are badly portrayed. And while some of these characters are really interesting despite all that, it’s just not enough.
Storm Front is a book which attempts to do quite a lot and falls a bit short in almost every area. It’s straightforward and predictable, lacks an organised plot, and contains whole chapters that are unfortunately quite boring. As a murder mystery, it lacks both style and suspense. As an fantasy novel, it’s not much better.
But of course, there are positive things to say as well. It seems I spent two paragraphs mostly slaughtering the book, and that won’t do at all. Because it was an enjoyable book to read. Despite its obvious issues, it was certainly entertaining. Sometimes it can even be a real page-turner. But like any expansion novel or any form of pulp fiction, it’s primarily just mindless entertainment. It’s not particularly complex, it’s not particularly well-written and it’s not particularly exciting. But if the opinion of the general public is correct and this is one of the weakest books in the series, then I am definitely looking forward to reading the others.
Of course, I should mention that urban fantasy is a long, long way from being my favourite genre. It's been a genre I've been skeptical to for quite some time, yet I still find it enjoyable occasionally. So if you're normally a fan of urban fantasy, I would recommend this book. If not, I'd say skip it. -
“My name is Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. Conjure by it at your own risk. When things get strange, when what goes bump in the night flicks on the lights, when no one else can help you, give me a call. I’m in the book.”
Well, that was fun as hell! I have read some great books this year, but I believe this was one of the best as far as entertainment level. I was glued to this book from the opening chapter to the final page. The mix of detective work and magic were well done. It had an old style investigative feel to it as the story is solely told from Harry’s point of view. The reader gets his internal monologue along with his conversations and interactions with other characters. So, he is telling the story just as much as living it.
Harry is quite adept and getting himself into trouble. Whether it be with dark wizards, demons, vampires, or even the Chicago PD. He seems to always be in the wrong place at the right time. Or in his case, I guess it would be the right place at the wrong time. Since he is actually looking for the bad guys or things.“Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean that there isn’t an invisible demon about to eat your face.”
The side characters were also well done. My favorite has to be Bob the skull. He and Harry’s conversations were comedic gold. I can see Bob causing major trouble in future books if Harry doesn’t keep him on a tight leash. I doubt that will happen, and I can’t wait to see what kind of difficulty he creates for Harry.
There is no shortage of action, and Harry tends to take as much punishment as deal it out. This along with the detective work gave the story a really good pace. There is always something going on and that really helped me stay engaged the entire book. I seriously read this book in 2 days. I never do that. But I made time for this book, because I just couldn’t wait to read what happened next."A man’s magic demonstrates what sort of person he is, what is held most deeply inside of him. There is no truer gauge of a man’s character than the way in which he employs his strength, his power.”
All in all this was one of the best urban fantasy books I’ve read. Not that I have read a ton in this genre, but I don’t see how it can get much better. Apparently it does though, because I have been told by numerous people the series keeps improving. I don’t plan on waiting to find out, and intend to begin book 2 later today. If you’re in need of a detective story with magic, humor, action, and good pace, look no further. This one checks all the boxes.
Actual Rating: 4 stars ****
-
“Paranoid? Probably. But just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face.”
― Jim Butcher, Storm Front
🌟3.75/5🌟
So I heard that this series gets better after each release, i guess we shall see :)!! -
Check out my
video review for more details and examples.
In the middle of reading this book, I took to social media to complain about what an unpleasant time I was having. Someone responded that if you can just ignore that the main character is the worst, you can really enjoy it for the plot. Um... I beg to differ.
Here are all the ways this didn't work for me.
1. The plot: I love procedurals and mysteries and a good investigation of any sort. This is probably my least favorite kind, however. I love when our investigators get out there and hunt down clues, question subjects, research and connect the dots in ways that also feels satisfying for the reader. STORM FRONT relied too heavily on things just kind of falling into place for Harry. At one point, he picks up a conveniently placed newspaper that has a headline with a new connection into his investigation we hadn't heard about yet. It was something like "hmmm, wow, look at this headline. I wonder if it's connected."I got pretty sick of things landing in his lap that way, because if they weren't, he was making a phone that went wonky and that seemed to be the majority of the plot.
The remaining portion of the plot was Harry getting into bad situations and telling us for paragraphs and paragraphs all the ways this was a hopeless situation and he was most definitely going to die. And then he would realize or remember something in the nick of time and some how get out of it. This became so repetitive that I stopped believing Harry every time he said "wow, there was no way out of this." Sure. Whatever you say, bro.
Ultimately, I found I didn't care about the mystery. It felt very clear to me which direction we were heading and there weren't any satisfying moments of things coming together or misdirection moments. Harry was begrudgingly involved, it seemed, and that spread to me as a reader. I wanted to be involved even less than Harry did.
I can't tell you one thing about this plot that would make it good enough to WANT to ignore blatant sexism for.
2. The World building: I expect with the first book in a long running urban fantasy series that I'll only get a taste of the world and magic. One of the things that I love about long running series is indeed how the world expands and magic builds on itself. So, I don't expect that book 1 will give me all the details. It should, however, paint a clear enough picture that I'm able to understand the basic. It also shouldn't contradict itself. All of the world-building and magic felt half-assed and hand wavy.
Harry would tell us things about his magic and then just contradict that stuff with his actions. Again, we are told how many times he's on the edge of death, completely unable to do any more magic... and then he would just do more magic. In this world, magic is tied to energy, but we have absolutely no sense of what that means or what the limits are because he just keeps doing magic and surviving.
Also this was set in Chicago, but it couldn't been literally any city, real or made up, because there wasn't a great sense of place. Each setting felt generic and without personality, from his dingy bottom-feeder basement to the generic magic pub.
3. I didn't enjoy any of the supporting characters. The women are shallow and objectified, from the reporter to the client to the vampire we meet. They are all the least interesting versions of what they could be, which is no surprise when they are seen through the lens of a chauvinist. Murphy becomes insufferable towards the end of the book, jumping to conclusions and just behaving in a way that made her impossible to root for. Bob is disgusting. Who was I supposed to like in this book?
4. Certainly not Harry MF Dresden. What a god damn tool. It was painful to be in his head. It was all either woe is me sighing and complaining or I'M THE BEST MOST TRAINED AND POWERFUL! with absolutely no in between. Not a single redeeming quality to be found. He has no connections or relationship to soften him. There was no emotional entry point to sympathize with him. He wasn't particularly good or heroic and often ended up doing right so begrudgingly that it barely count.
And on top of all of that, have I mentioned he's a chauvinist pig? This book is dripping in sexism and misogyny and it isn't just contained to Harry's flaw because it leaks into his point of view. Everything is colored by his sexism and we can't go a single chapter with some observation or description that reminds us that he doesn't entirely get that women are people.
The thing with even calling it a "flaw" is that we as the readers might be able to read it that way, but Harry doesn't view it that way and he doesn't need to. The most he gets is called a chauvinist but then the conversation (which entailed him guessing the killer was a woman because women are more hateful and it was a brutal murder) just continues as if that wasn't the stupidest god damn thing a paid consultant for a police department could possibly say.
Harry describes every woman in the grossest ways, whether that woman was recently brutally murdered (he describes the outline of the dead woman's breast as being lovely, even though her chest was blown open with magic), or she's a "friend" (he continually compares Murphy to a cheerleader or a teenager and often casually refers to how she might look under her clothes), or she's a colleague (the one dark skinned woman is described as having "lazy appeal" in her eyes and is magically roofied by a love potion), or a magical creature (the one vampire he meet is obsessed with beauty and we see her transfer to her disgusting monster self, it involves detailed descriptions of her breasts going flabby, because what's more monstrous than flabby beasts, you know?).
It was incessant and I don't understand how you can ignore it or enjoy it.
Sex was also used in odd ways in the story, from the first murder we encounter being between a man and a sex worker, killed mid-sex-act, or orgy magic, or of course, the magic potion that is made with tequila to "lower her inhibitions" that is accidentally taken by a woman who then spends a scene trying to have sex with Harry while a demon is after them.
Truly sickeningly terrible.
5. Finally, I listened to this on audiobook. It's narrated by James Marsters, which was pretty exciting to see and then also went the way of everything about this book and became terrible. Marsters SIGHED most of the performance. He just kept sighing and sort of mumbling the lines. It also brought into into a cadence that was driving me bonkers. I mean... it was fitting for Harry, because he also drove me bonkers, but it wasn't pleasant.
IF I even thought of continuing this series it would be to see why exactly some people swore to me it got better because color me skeptical. -
“Paranoid? Probably. But just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face.”
I'd read one other Dresden Files book (Changes #12), but decided I should go back and start from the beginning with Jim Butcher's Storm Front. I like the Harry Dresden character and the world Butcher created in which Dresden works as a detective of the supernatural (or wizard for hire). It reminded me of the detective noir of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett; however, there is another world evoked that Butcher only begins to explore in this debut novel in the series. I'm not sure if the series will ever be one of my favorites, but Storm Front was an entertaining read. 3.75 stars -
Harry Dresden is a wizard for hire. His advert even says so. Enter a very interesting character in the urban fantasy genre. Having grown up in the Chicago area, it's very cool to see this fine city through the eyes of an interesting guy like Harry. In some respects, he's a very normal guy. However he truly is a wizard. He inherited his magical abilities from his deceased mother, and makes a living at it. Helping people. He also works for the Police Department solving crimes of an unusual nature.
This is like most starter books in a series, it doesn't exactly get off the ground running. But that's okay. We get to enjoy the experience of getting to know Harry. Things I liked about him that endeared him to me: He doesn't date much. He says himself he doesn't have much luck with women. He's a catlover. He has a big, huge kitty named Mister that eats better than he does. He's got a great sense of humor. This book is in the first person, so you are treated to Harry's very wry but perceptive view of the world. We are not on the same page about Christianity, but I don't hold that against him. How could I when he's such an ethical, caring person. Harry's a bit of a soft touch, going out of his way to help people, even to his detriment. Some readers might get annoyed at how often Harry gets hurt. I like that about the series. He's not invulnerable. His magic can help him, but he can die just as easy as another human, and he almost does many times. That raises the stakes, because Harry can't seem to stay out of trouble. I love watching Harry get dressed for battle: fedora hat, cloak, oak staff, pentacle pendant from his mom, and her ring. The latter are his magical accoutrements used to focus the natural magic that flows through him and is in the environment. Let's not forget his .45 gun for extra insurance. It's like watching Batman put on his suit and all his gadgets (yes my not-so inner geek is coming out).
The world that Harry inhabits is much like the one we live in, but magic and creatures we consider mythical actually exist. There is a White Council (They are the governing body over wizards to prevent them practicing black magic or using magic to harm people) who is holding the Doom of Damocles over Harry's head for killing his uncle (done in self-defense, although few would argue that he didn't deserve killing). So we see Harry trying to stay one step ahead of the very intimidating magical enforcer, Morgan. We also see Harry deal with a fairy who loves pizza to get information, while trying to avoid his godmother who really is a Fairy, the Queen in fact, and to whom he owes a favor. And Harry has to deal with the very shadowy Red Vampire Court, not to mention a very nasty demon assassin that interrupts the first date that Harry's had in a very long time. Try having a love life around all of this. Then there's the fire spirit Bob, who's beholden to Harry, helps him work his spellcraft, and lives in a skull.
These books are pure fun, but there are moments of tension and thrills, as well as moments that will stir poignancy in you. If you like the genre of occult detective novels, this book is the start of a series that you must add to your collection. I must say I love the later books more because the introductory stuff is out of the way, but this was a solid entry and a grand introduction to the wonderful, endearing Harry Dresden, Wizard for Hire. -
Sale Alert Books 1-6 together for $7.99 on 29Nov17 on
Amazon
The buddy with a few of my friends at Buddies Books and Baubles
Harry Dresden is not your sauvé hero type, he has trouble with money, women, demons and keeping his clothing on. But he does have actual business cards.
Actually the clothing problem seemed almost worse then than some of his other dilemmas. You try fighting evil naked or in sweats and cowboy boots and see how well you fair. He does seem to have a few wizard tricks up his sleeve and a pretty cool lab equipped with an awesome helper trapped in a skull named Bob.
I really didn’t expect much from this book as it is the first in the series and really just an introduction to the world. That is all you get a simple intro. Much of the story is plot driven and a few things are expanded on along the way but most things are really just touched on briefly so that I was never overwhelmed but information. I’m fine with that as long and I can understand what is going on in the story and I definitely could.
Harry is helping the police discover who with supernatural powers killed a mob henchman and an escort in a compromising position. Harry has about three days to figure it out since the magical community is pretty sure he is the primary suspect. I guess wizards get a bad wrap.
The beginning starts a little slow but after about the 40% mark all the fun really starts and it is a pretty solid ride to the end. Enough hints are dropped about Harry and his past to make him pretty interesting and so I’m looking forward to seeing how that starts to play out throughout the series.
All and all a pretty good start and better than I expected because rumor has it that the series doesn’t really pick up until book 3 or 4. What I do know for sure is
Audio Note James Marsters (Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer) does the audio and he was fantastic. It made my listening experience even better.