Author:
Format: Quality Paperback
Publisher: Ace Books
Published: Jun 2008
Genre: Fiction - Fantasy - General
Retail Price: $14.00
Pages: 368
Next in the series that's "part paranormal whodunit, part urban fantasy" (Publishers Weekly) by the author of Wraith.
Zoë Martinique has the extraordinary ability to travel outside her body at will. When she is drawn into an investigation of a series of bizarre murders, in which the victims are missing body parts, Zoë hopes to help her boyfriend, Atlanta homicide detective Daniel Frasier, stop the killer- one she's sure is from the darkest levels of the astral plane-without letting him find out about her special abilities.
Then danger strikes close to home when Zoë's mother disappears, and Zoë must use all the powers at her command to save her-even though Zoë knows that, in doing so, she may make herself into something no longer entirely human.
The Lightbringer Theodora Morgan knows she's a little strange. Her talent for healing has set her apart, marked her as different all her lifea...
ACROSS TWO EXTRAORDINARY WORLDS, TRUTH IS THE DEADLIEST MAGIC Gifted with an uncanny intuition, Lara Jansen nonetheless thinks there is nothing...
The newest in a series that's "part paranormal whodunit, part urban fantasy"(Publishers Weekly) by the author of Wraith and Spectre. Just...
First in an excitingly different and new paranormal series. Zo` Martinique has turned her unusual ability into a career. When she's traveling, she...
Clairvoyant Cassie Plamer has inherited new magical powers-including the ability to travel through time. But it's a whole lot of responsibility she'd...
These all-new paranormal romances from today's hottest authors feature a female werewolf who comes into her own; a Lord who crosses paths with a fiery...
Mercenary Kate Daniels cleans up urban problems of a paranormal kind. But her latest prey, a pack of undead warriors, presents her greatest challenge.
I also stopped reading past the first few pages of this book because of the narrator's complete lack of credibility. To believe that a woman could go from remembering a rape to complaining about her boyfriend's unwillingness to have sex within less than a page required more suspension of disbelief than I am capable of. And if I can't connect to the narrator, what's the point of reading the book?