seanan_mcguire: (sarah)
seanan_mcguire ([personal profile] seanan_mcguire) wrote2008-10-13 10:29 am

Book review: 'Bitten,' Kelley Armstrong.

Bitten, by Kelley Armstrong.
Plume, paperback
448 pages, dark urban fantasy/supernatural romance, werewolf-centric awesome
Currently in print

***

Kelley Armstrong is one of my favorite authors currently publishing (the others who dependably make that list are Stephen King and Terry Pratchett). With the latest entry in her Women of the Otherworld series coming out later this month, this seemed like an excellent time to go back and review the series from the beginning. Because yes, I am just that much of a fan. That being said, like every fan, I have opinions and biases relating to the series, and will try to mark them clearly.

Bitten was originally written as a stand-alone novel. Armstrong didn't know she'd be going back for a sequel, much less an entire series. Consequentially, when we meet Elena -- the world's only female werewolf, our cranky and critical heroine, and our first-person narrator for the first two volumes -- we meet her as a representative of the only supernatural species in the world. It's refreshingly straightforward. Me werewolf, you potentially dinner (except that good girls don't do that sort of thing). Elena grew up human, only to be betrayed and bitten by someone she trusted with her life, and has been fighting to adjust to life as a werewolf by...not adjusting. She's doing her damnedest to suppress all those pesky werewolf urges, which can be a bit of a problem when changing forms isn't just a choice, it's a physical need.

Trouble arises fairly shortly after the book begins, and Elena is summoned from her human life in Toronto back to Stonehaven, where the werewolf Pack has been waiting for her. Not just the Pack; her Alpha, who still refuses to acknowledge that she doesn't want to be a part of that world anymore, and worse yet, the man who bit her...

Elena is an interesting, engaging narrator, and brings a refreshing lack of bullshit to the table. Even when she's clearly wrong in her assumptions, they're clearly defined, and it's easy to see how she got from point A to point B. Despite this being a first novel, Armstrong doesn't over-complicate things or clutter up the scene with an excess of characters; if anything, her cast is smaller than I would have liked it to be at certain points. I would really have loved to see certain of Elena's relationships shown a little more clearly. At the same time, the pacing of the book is just about perfect, making that sort of extra material unnecessary.

Is there plot? Yes, and the plot is excellent. Is there porn? There are a few sex scenes, but they're short, plot-essential, and actually interesting to read. Armstrong is one of the few authors whose sex I greet with 'oh, cool, sex,' rather than 'dammit, not again.' This is a tribute both to the approachability of her characters, and to the quality of her writing.

If you're looking for a place to start reading the Women of the Otherworld, Bitten remains your best bet: it's the first book in the series, and provides a foundation that makes everything else all the more enjoyable. Plus? How often do you get werewolves with a Southern drawl? Comedy gold.

Eight re-reads, and my love remains undimmed.

[identity profile] seanan-mcguire.livejournal.com 2008-10-14 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't like Haunted much the first time, I think because Paige is my favorite, and that was the first non-Paige narrator (after she hit the scene, that is). Adored Jamie's book, didn't like Hope's as much (but then, I don't like Hope).

[identity profile] mirrorred-star.livejournal.com 2008-10-14 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
I've read the first couple of pages of No Humans Involved, and it sounds really awesome from that, but it's only the prologue...

I'd like to like Hope, the whole Chaos demon thing sounds really interesting. And that book has Lucas narrating as well, and his speaking voice is made of win.

[identity profile] seanan-mcguire.livejournal.com 2008-10-14 02:17 pm (UTC)(link)
The fact that Lucas is a narrator in that book absolutely saves it for me. I adore Lucas beyond all sense or reason.

Why haven't you read Personal Demon yet?