Gamer. Nerd. Sorceress.
Jade Crow lives a quiet life running her comic book and game store in Wylde, Idaho. After twenty-five years fleeing from a powerful sorcerer who wants to eat her heart and take her powers, quiet suits her just fine. Surrounded by friends who are even less human than she is, Jade figures she’s finally safe.
As long as she doesn’t use her magic.
When dark powers threaten her friends’ lives, a sexy shape-shifter enforcer shows up. He’s the shifter world’s judge, jury, and executioner rolled into one, and he thinks Jade is to blame. To clear her name, save her friends, and stop the villain, she’ll have to use her wits… and her sorceress powers.
Except Jade knows that as soon as she does, a far deadlier nemesis awaits.
Justice Calling is the first book in The Twenty-Sided Sorceress urban fantasy series. Readers who enjoyed The Dresden Files or The Iron Druid Chronicles will likely enjoy this series.
Fabulous Ideas, but, undeveloped in the main The author had some great ideas, but, she failed over and over again at actually using them. The book is very short–mainly because she did not expand on her very good ideas. For example, the comic book store gets barely mentioned and the same with the Leprechaun’s antique store next door. Frankly, the book reads like an outline with a few paragraphs for each bullet point. She needed to write chapters rather than mere paragraphs.
Worth the read! A sorceress on the run from an ex boyfriend/sorcerer intending on eating her heart and obtaining her power. She finds a new place, new friends, and the possibility of a new love among a town of shifters.
The Next “Dresden Files”? I was looking for something to read while waiting for the next “Dresden Files” book, and stumbled across “Justice Calling.”