Title: Murder and Magic Among the Dwarves
Author:
Erik Bundy
MY REVIEW:
Andrea is psychic and lives next door
to dwarves. A female dwarf comes to her in the middle of the night
and asks for her help. Her dead husband's ghost tries comes to her to
try to warn her. And a demon is hunting her. This is a well-written,
fast paced story, full of magic and adventure. 4 stars.
Blurb:
Amanda
is used to living a life that is less than ordinary. Haunted nightly
by her late husband, she is a psychic living next door to a colony of
dwarves. Despite males normally taking on the task, the colony’s
females ask her to find a lost baby for them, and then hire her to
tell them who strangled their midwife with a diaper and cut out her
gossiping tongue.
She’s
thrilled at the honor, but Amanda must learn to tame her own unruly
psychic power. The shadowy side of her gift raises a demon that
attacks her, stalks her, and slashes her hand. When she
feels something live wriggle in her wound, she knows no one can fight
her battle for her. She must face her demon alone.
The
town’s sheriff asks Amanda to help him solve the disappearance of a
missing teenage girl. Her involvement in this case brings a
predator into her life, an enemy who allies himself with her demon.
To make matters worse, the midwife’s murderer comes after her,
too. Amanda, though, has no intention of becoming anyone’s
victim.
Death
is no longer her worst possible fate.
Author
Bio:
Erik
Bundy lives in the magical North Carolina woods where chocolate
is a semi-sweet vegetable, female chipmunks are called chipnuns, and
mice claiming to be cousins move in for the winter then take the bath
towels when they leave in spring. The federal government pays
him not to work in one of their offices. He is a graduate of
the Odyssey Fantasy Writing Workshop and a grand prize winner of the
Sidney Lanier Poetry Competition. He has published more than
thirty stories and poems.
Connect
with Erik:
http://www.erikbundy.com/
https://twitter.com/ErikBundy1
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4397965.Erik_Bundy
https://twitter.com/ErikBundy1
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4397965.Erik_Bundy
Links:
Amazon
US:
http://www.amazon.com/Magic-Murder-Among-Dwarves-Bundy-ebook/dp/B00J0NMFRE
Amazon Smart Url: http://bookShow.me/B00J0NMFRE
Goodreads- book link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20930528-magic-and-murder-among-the-dwarves
Amazon Smart Url: http://bookShow.me/B00J0NMFRE
Goodreads- book link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20930528-magic-and-murder-among-the-dwarves
Book
Trailer:
You
tube link: http://youtu.be/UObdj_79Ssw
Excerpt:
Fate
didn't announce itself by rapping its hard-luck knuckles against my
green cottage door. Nor did it bother to crawl in through my
cranked-open bathroom window. So I gave it no more attention than I
did the mountain air I breathed every day. That was my downfall, my
sin. Fate might forgive greed, gluttony, or even bloodlust, but it
never ignores being ignored. It punished my neglect with death and a
demon. It yoked guilt like a leprous shadow to my heels.
Fate's
wakeup call came to me one cool spring night after I had lived on
Crying Woman Lane for about a year. I was in bed, just skirting along
the edge of sleep, when a guttural, female voice called, "Amanda,"
through my window screen.
My
bedside clock, instead of displaying numbers, looked back at me with
a luminous green eye. Startled, I watched it, waiting to see if this
obvious sign would make its meaning known. The eye winked, and the
clock became normal again with the numbers 11:02 brightly displayed.
The numbers added up to four, the number of wholeness. It didn't
describe me at the moment.
Fully
awake, I rose up on one elbow, tucked a tuft of hair behind my right
ear, and listened. Beyond my open window, the tidal racket of
katydids rose and fell with the shrill anguish of self-centered
insects braying for sex. I stayed quiet, hoping the female would go
away but knowing I shouldn't let her leave. The sign indicated this
meeting was important. On the other hand, my body felt raw and
jangled with a restless need for sleep. She could come back.
A
second time she called my name from the tangle of darkness and
moonlight in the woods. At least it was not a ghost's voice. It had
breath in it. The throaty intonation, though, was not quite human,
the vowels veined in iron, the consonants ancient and startling.
"Not
tonight," I yelled back.
"Now,"
the female insisted.
I
punched my pillow. My eyes felt dry as dust, gritty, and probably
looked as though threaded with varicose veins. One consolation was
that they paid in gold, and come flood or parching drought, I was
going to make them pay me a bucketful of nuggets this time.
Peevish
as a cat sprayed with a garden hose, I delayed getting up and wished
mouth sores on the jolly, jowly realtor who had sold me this cottage
a year before.
Handing
me two sets of door keys, he had said, "There's one other little
thing you might want to know." His blue eyes twinkled. "Most
of your neighbors are a bit peculiar. They live in a colony and only
come above ground after dark."
I
knew about dwarves, of course. Everybody did, but I hadn't known my
newly bought property bordered the treaty land of one of their
colonies. The realtor had lied by saying nothing. He had conned me, a
young widow, and deserved the ulcerated mouth I wished on him now.
When
the realtor saw his late disclosure angered but didn't alarm me, he
threw his head back and yodeled laughter at a ceiling fan.
"They're
allergic to sunlight, see." His eyes widened with mock delight.
"It paralyzes them, turns them into granite statues." He
held up an open hand. "Scout's honor, petrifaction is their
preferred method of suicide. It's painless, see. It's clean and saves
their families the cost of a funeral pyre."
He
patted my arm as if to let me know I didn't need to thank him for the
favor of his settling me near these considerate suicides. Not amused,
I flinched away from his presumptive familiarity. Sourwood was a
valley village isolated by mountains, a place where everyone bumped
into everyone else often. He and I would meet again.
"Don't
expect a Christmas card from me," I told him and punched his
forearm.
All
the same, the realtor had been wrong, and I took childish
satisfaction in that. Tall Tristan, he with the precious green eyes,
and my closest human neighbor, had put the lie to that tale. The
suicidal dwarves didn't turn themselves into fossils to save their
heirs the price of a funeral pyre. No, they did it for revenge.
They
bequeathed a monumental problem to their daughters and sons. Where do
you put Uncle Steen after he has become a statue of himself? The
irascible Uncle Steens of the colony usually committed suicide
because they felt unwanted and ignored. On their granite faces after
death were the smirks of those who knew they now had their kinfolks'
full attention, even if only for long enough to find permanent
storage for them.
So
why would a female dwarf come calling on me? Did she want to use my
psychic power, my oddsense,
to find another killer? I had already solved two dwarf murders for
Brialdur, the colony's sheriff. He had been considerate enough,
though, to come calling just after sunset while I was still awake.
A
chesty cough for attention outside curtailed my reverie of
resentment. I was not being neighborly. I glanced at the clock and
saw only the time, no eye or other sign. Oh well, you couldn't ignore
a dwarf any more than you could the constant flush of a stuck toilet.
I
slipped out of my canopied bed and slid into a fuzzy white robe that
fit my body like a sock. The dwarf outside knew I had gotten out of
bed. She could hear a spider tickle along its web toward a struggling
fly.
I
baby-stepped through my dark living-room so as not to stub my toes
against furniture, wrenched open the cottage's reluctant front door,
and strutted outside onto the moonlit porch. There I knuckled my
fists into my hips and stood balanced on both feet, my back straight,
posed as if to wrestle any half-quart boogeyman that dared show up. I
was a modern young woman, fearless and capable (with mace spray in my
robe's right pocket), and I didn't care who knew it. Attitude was
everything when dealing with dwarves.
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