Grave Peril

  • ISBN13: 9780451462343
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

$16.29



Product Description
Now in hardcover from the New York Times bestselling author of The Dresden Files.

Harry Dresden’s faced some pretty terrifying foes during his career. Giant scorpions. Oversexed vampires. Psychotic werewolves. All par for the course for Chicago’s only professional wizard.

But in all of Harry’s years of supernatural sleuthing, he’s never faced anything like this: the spirit world’s gone postal. All over Chicago, ghosts are causing trouble—and not just of the door-slamming, ‘boo’- shouting variety. These ghosts are tormented, violent, and deadly.

Someone—or something—is stirring them up to wreak unearthly havoc. But why? And why do so many of the victims have ties to Harry? If Harry doesn’t figure it out soon, he could wind up a ghost himself.

Recent Comments
  1. Marc Ruby™ @ 2:57 pm

    It should come as no surprise to the followers of Harry Dresden, freelance wizard and general dogooder, that Harry starts out the third volume of this series in every bit as much trouble as he ended the last. After all, Harry’s natural state is jumping out of frying pans and into fires. Except when he is looking for another frying pan to fall out of. This time the book opens with Harry and a new friend, Michael (a Knight of the Sword and even a bigger dogooder than Harry) racing to stop Agatha the ghost, who has a bit too much affection for infants. Without fail, Harry fumbles the attack and Michael and he must pursue Agatha into the Nevernever. In the process of putting Agatha away Harry has a run in with his dysfunctional fairy godmother and barely manages to escape with all his body parts.

    Michael and Harry have been chasing down disgruntled ghosts for weeks now, and finally Harry has come to believe that this isn’t just a series of coincidences. Instead, someone is deliberately stirring the ectoplasm with evil intentions. But Harry barely has time to discover this when he is visited by two vampires, who go out of their way to irritate him while delivering a formal invitation to the elevation of Bianca St. Claire to the position of Margravine of the Vampire Court. You may remember Bianca from “Fool Moon.” She was the vampiress Harry managed to make a deadly enemy of in the first 15 minutes of their meeting. Harry may be slow witted, but even he knows that Bianca’s plans include making Dresden au gratin.

    So he refuses the invitation, right? Well, not quite. A wild series of ghostly attacks, bespelled friends, and damsels in distress ensue. Harry, a class act as usual, manages to lose Michael’s magic sword, fail the damsels, and barely keep his friend’s alive. It is only a matter of time before the ever-widening swath of disasters leads Harry straight to Bianca’s soiree and Harry-splatting party. And does Harry get splatted? You bet. It is characteristic of this story that the question Harry gets asked most often is “What happened to you?” And these are just the highlights of the quiet part of the novel.

    Jim Butcher has once again concocted a unique mix of comedy and horror, In doing so he has created an entirely new genre, which I call ‘noir vaudeville.’ Bad things keep happening, and the life-span of one of Harry’s friends seems to be about a week, but you can’t help snickering and moaning. Perhaps because Harry generally deserves everything that happens to him. But you do have to feel sorry for Michael and his wife, Harry’s girlfriend Susan, and most of the Chicago police force. And don’t forget poor Bob the sex-fiend in a skull, who gets a serious workout this time and no fun. Butcher ends “Grave Peril” on a ‘to be continued’ note, which means we can look forward to even more misadventures from the career of the most hapless wizard in the Midwest. Let’s hope Harry has good medical insurance.

    Star Comment Trackback
  2. Liberty Rose @ 4:26 pm

    This is my first review on Amazon, so that should say something about how much I really loved this book and this series. This is the series that I think “Anita Blake” started out to be. The universe (present day Chicago wherein magic and the supernatural are there if one knows where to look) is deftly and wittily drawn. The protagonist, Harry Dresden, professional wizard, is smartly wise-cracking without (quite) becoming annoying. He’s engagingly flawed and fallible, and if I have one gripe with his adventures, it is that in every book he seems to get SO beaten up so often that his endurance begins to strain credibility (and patience: “What? On Death’s Door again?”), even for a wizard.

    Mr. Butcher peppers his books with engaging and believable allies and adversaries — multi-layered, varied and believable, both as foils for Dresden and as characters in their own right.”Grave Peril” is no exception in the strength of the secondary characters. Michael, the True Knight, was just a marvelous ally, part straight man, part Tower of Strength.

    This third book in the series pushes a little farther on the sex and violence front. If “Storm Front” was PG or PG-13, “Grave Peril” is definately ‘R’. However, Mr. Butcher has yet to go over the top; his descriptions are done with finesse, innuendo where appropriate, and evocative language that is never crass.

    I do recommend this series: part Film Noir Private Eye, part Vampire Hunter (though much more ‘Angel’ than ‘Buffy’, right down to the flowing black coat), with maybe a little sword and sorcerer thrown in the mix. Lots of mystery and plenty of action, likable characters and a nicely textured urban fantasy world. “Grave Peril” is grittier than the first book, but evocative and with a sense of real peril and emotional jeapordy for the protagonist and his allies. A wonderful read.

    Star Comment Trackback
  3. Monica Gaudio @ 6:41 pm

    Grave Peril is a funny, witty, rip-roaring, seat-of-your-pants, stay-up-and-read-it-in-one-night kind of book. Once again, Wizard Harry Dresden is up to his elbows in trouble, this time he’s assisted by the ever stalwart and faithful co-hort, Michael — a Knight of the Cross. The streets of Chicago have become a battle ground for terrozing ghosts and other otherworldly problems. All in all, a fine read, lots of fun. Grave Peril flows easily like an excellent mystery novel, keeping you on the edge of your seat, wondering what is going to happen next. It’s filled with wit and sarcasm from Harry’s point of view. 5 stars. This is a must read.

    Star Comment Trackback
  4. Arthur W. Jordin @ 7:10 pm

    Grave Peril (2001) is the third urban fantasy in the Dresden Files series, following Fool Moon. In the previous volume, the renegade FBI agents were all killed and the hexanwolf belts were burned by Harry and Murphy. Susan’s film of the death of the loup-garou went on the morning news and was shown for two days afterward before it vanished.

    Tera was badly injured, but recovered when she converted to human form. The Alphas suffered few injuries and were soon ready for Harry to lead them on another crusade. Nonetheless, the whole situation left Dresden wondering whether some wizard was working in the shadows to cause these problems.

    In this novel, Michael Carpenter and Harry have been responding to visitations by some rather powerful ghosts during the past two weeks. Michael is a Knight of the Cross, a Fist of God, carrying the blessed sword Amorachius. Tonight they banish the ghost of Agatha Hagglethorn from the Cook County Hospital nursery and the babies breathe easily again.

    After this banishment, the police arrest both Harry and Michael for disturbing the peace and trespress and they impound the Blue Beetle. After an hour or so, Harry and Michael are released on bail. Charity Carpenter is less than pleased with Harry for getting her husband in trouble, but Susan Rodriguez just wants to know about the story.

    It has been a long night, but the vampires are waiting when Harry and Susan reach his basement abode. Luckily, Kyle and Kelly Hamilton are delivering an invitation for Harry and guest to attend a reception of the Red Court for Bianca St. John. As the local representative of the White Council, Harry would be find it difficult to follow his own inclinations and skip the vampire affair entirely.

    Then Michael shows up just before dawn. The day before, Harry had sent a client calling herself Lydia to Father Forthill at Saint Mary of the Angels to protect her from a life threatening situation. During the night, a very strong spirit had appeared and demanded that the girl come out. When she remained inside, the spirit had torn up the roses outside the door and trashed the vehicles parked in the lot. Sometime during the night, however, Lydia had unlocked the back door and left the church.

    Later, Harry finds the girl in a late model van parked in an abandoned storefront. Then Kyle and Kelly show up and Dresden calls fire upon the vampires, accidentally cutting the support beams and setting the building on fire. The vampires get away with the girl and Harry barely gets out before the whole front of the building collapses.

    In this story, Harry attends the Red Court reception, taking Michael with him in full knightly regalia. The invitation didn’t say that he had to bring a guest of the other sex. One of the vampire attendees admires Michael’s costume and touches it; the resulting shock sends him into convulsions. Thereafter, the vampires look, but don’t touch.

    The other outsider invitees are an odd lot. One is a Black vampire, one is a White vampire, and another is a dragon. Unhappily, Susan is also there, having forged a copy of Harry’s invitation. She learns more than she wants to know about Red vampires at the affair.

    This story puts Harry in a bind. He has to let the Red Court hurt his friends or start a war between the vampires and the White Council. Of course, Dresden does it the hard way.

    Harry finds out who has been agitating the wall between the real world and Nevernever, letting spirits slip over and cause trouble. He helps Murphy by removing a nasty spell from a disabled veteran of Special Investigations. He also meets a spirit who is posing as himself and discovers the true identity of Lydia. Some nights it just doesn’t pay to get out of bed.

    As usual, Harry loses sleep, barely escapes death and worries about his friends. He chastises himself for not doing more, not being everywhere and other improbabilities. Dresden is really into self-blame.

    Highly recommended for Butcher fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of powerful ghosts, vampire parties, and overworked wizards.

    -Arthur W. Jordin

    Star Comment Trackback
  5. Rodney Powell @ 9:21 pm

    Harry Dresden, Jim Butcher’s wise-cracking wizard gumshoe returns in this gripping adventure! This time Harry finds himself a reluctant ghostbuster who must discover who have stirred up the ghosts of the spirit world who are going on a terror spree in Chicago.Harry’s adventures will take from escaping from seductive but manipulative fairy godmother who seeks to enslave him, to battle blood-thirsty vampires and finally to a terrifying ghost of a demon he has slain!Harry Dresden series is entertaining blend of magic mystery, mirth and mayhem as you watch Harry get himself into and of of trouble and who’s sense of honor is written in stone.The characters again come alive in this series like Harry’s friend,michael a real knight who juggles saving the world with his responsiblities of his family.
    Bianca, the sinister head of the vampires in town and her equally menacing vampire hench people:Kyle and Kelly. Susan Rodriguez, Harry’s on again off again reporter girlfriend. I love this series and you will to. So if you want excitement.Who you gonna call? Harry Dresden of course!

    Star Comment Trackback

What Is Your Comment?

You must be logged in to post a comment.