Storm Front

  • ISBN13: 9780451457813
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

$4.06



Product Description
Harry Dresden–Wizard
Lost items found. Paranormal investigations.
Consulting. Advice. Reasonable rates.
No Love Potions, Endless Purses, Parties, or Other Entertainment.

Harry Dresden is the best at what he does. Well, technically, he’s the only at what he does. So when the Chicago P.D. has a case that transcends mortal creativity or capability, they come to him for answers. For the “everyday” world is actually full of strange and magical things–and most of them don’t play too well with humans. That’s where Harry comes in. Takes a wizard to catch a–well, whatever.

There’s just one problem. Business, to put it mildly, stinks. So when the police bring him in to consult on a grisly double murder committed with black magic, Harry’s seeing dollar signs. But where there’s magic, there’s a black mage behind it. And now that mage knows Harry’s name. And that’s when things start to get… interesting.

Magic. It can get a guy killed.

Recent Comments
  1. MARTINA E BALINT @ 3:31 pm

    Take traditional hardboiled fiction, give it a mind bending preternatural twist and you have Storm Front, the first book in a new series with the potential to send author Jim Butcher to the top of the gumshoe sub-genre of horror/fantasy fiction.

    Harry Dresden, the series’ protagonist, is everything that’s great about the hardboiled anti-hero, with a twist: He’s a wizard trying to make a living working practical magic in a modern world that’s foolishly rejected the supernatural in favor of science and technology. Part average guy, part renaissance man, Harry’s got a dark side, a wicked sense of humor and a deeply rooted, personal code of honor that drives him to risk everything to fight the supernatural forces preying on his clients, an attitude that puts him at constant, dangerous odds with both the bad guys and the authorities alike.

    In Storm Front, when a routine murder investigation turns out to be anything but routine, the police reluctantly turn to Harry for help. But a case that started as a way to pay the rent soon gets complicated for Harry when he’s forced to cross paths with the Chicago mob and a mysterious figure known as the Shadowman, drawing Harry into a web of black magic and danger.

    Already under the Doom of Damocles (a form of probation placed on him by the White Council who oversee the ethical use of magic in the world of the mundane) Harry himself falls under suspicion and is forced to risk execution to solve the mystery and stop the Shadowman, before the killer takes another victim.

    Storm Front is a riveting, action packed roller coaster of a novel, a damn good mystery with compelling characters set in a rich alternate reality universe where anything can happen. There’s a little something for just about everyone here from black magic and the Chicago mob to vampire madams, demons and the fey.

    I enjoyed this novel immensely and am looking forward to the next in the series.

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  2. Marc Ruby™ @ 6:24 pm

    This is the first volume in a recent series that has a bit of an unusual premise. Harry Dresden, the ‘anti-hero’ of the book is a detective who is also a licensed wizard. Unlike Randall Garrett’s Lord Darcy, however, Harry is more of a gumshoe than an aesthete. He’s like a combination of Phillip Marlowe and Glen Cook’s Garrett, P.I. Think of him as a magic wand with an attitude. A thirty pound cat with half a tail and an oversexed skull in his basement don’t help his image either. He makes a thin living finding the lost and helping the police, despite being the only wizard listed in the Chicago Yellow Pages.

    Dresden, broke as usual, answers a police call for assistance, and discovers a gruesome double murder. The two victims, caught in flagrante delicto, have had their hearts blown out through their rib cages. Detective Karrin Murphy wants answers fast, but Crime boss Johnny Marcone wants Dresden out of the case. Dresden’s other case is searching for a missing husband who seems to have had an unhealthy interest in magic. And the last complication is the White Council, who think that Harry Dresden just might be dipping a little to far into the black magic side, and intend to flatten him if there is any further hint of magic abuse.

    Harry is a bit of a luckless sort. In attempting to question the vampire hostess of an upscale house of ill repute he makes a serious enemy of what could best be described as an old bat. One of his information sources then turns up dead the same way as the first couple. A demon nearly turns him and his date into pudding and a giant scorpion attempts to take out Detective Murphy and Dresden with one swipe of a very deadly tail. And, without fail, Harry is pestered at every step by an obnoxious representative of the White Council.

    Unfortunately, as either wizard of gumshoe, Harry is a bit hapless. He knows his stuff, but he is forever forgetting his gun, dropping his staff and getting ambushed by bad guys. As a result he is always coming from behind, which is a bad place to be when you are chasing the black wizard who is saturating the city in a dangerous new drug that not only gets you high, but opens your third eye as well. Harry is more of the rush right in where angels fear to tread type than he is the careful planner. It doesn’t help that he has a bit of a hero complex as well.

    Ok, the magic is a bit hokey and the language is slightly overblown. Other than Harry the characters are right out of a cheat book. Even Harry is a bit hackneyed. But the plot is original and well laid out. Narrative skills come with maturity, and Jim Butcher is still a novice storyteller. In a wave of tedious, repetitive genre tales, “Storm Front” stands out as something worth a second look. It will be a while though before I forgive him for the following tidbit. “…he picked me up to hurl me toward the demon. I objected with fragile tenacity.”

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  3. Sophie Williams @ 8:27 pm

    “Storm Front” by Jim Butcher is the first book in a promising new series that already has me hooked. Butcher has come up with a fun and entertaining idea, and has crafted likable characters that readers can root for. Harry Dresden is a wonderful creation and I look forward to many more adventures with him.

    “Storm Front” introduces Harry Dresden, the only wizard in the Chicago phone book, who is currently having trouble making ends meet. You’d think that being the only “out” wizard in the country would mean Harry was in demand, but unfortunately, people in the 21st century would rather pretend those unsettling things that science can’t explain aren’t really there. Then Harry gets what he believes to be a stroke of luck – a woman whose husband has disappeared wants to hire Harry to find him AND his friend Lieutenant Karrin Murphy with Special Investigations in the Chicago PD calls Harry in to consult on a murder case. Two paying jobs in one day has Harry thinking that things are looking up, but in truth, Harry’s trouble is only just beginning.

    The murder scene Murphy shows to Harry has him feeling distinctly nervous. Someone very powerful has used Black Magic to murder two people in a violent and horrifying way, and the only way Harry can help Murphy is to figure out the spell the killer used. Not a good idea when Harry is already under the Doom of Damocles, a kind of magic probation, from the all-powerful White Council, whose job it is to ensure that those who abuse magic are dealt with swiftly and permanently. Morgan, the White Council representative monitoring Harry, would just love to nail him for messing with Black Magic.

    And Morgan and the White Council aren’t Harry’s only problem. Gentleman Johnny Marcone, Chicago’s top mob boss, warns Harry to keep his nose out of this case, which of course Harry can’t do. Especially when he somehow becomes the top suspect in these Black Magic murders. Now Harry has to get to work fast and find the real wizard who is committing these atrocities, otherwise, Harry’s not going to live to see another week!

    Butcher crafts an original and compelling mystery, and readers will become utterly wrapped up in Harry’s dilemma. In the course of his investigation, Harry runs into all kinds of supernatural beasties, including faeries, demons, vampires, and giant scorpions! Add in Harry’s hilarious assistant, Bob, an air spirit with an overactive libido who lives in a human skull and just a dash of romance and you have the recipe for a wonderful and exciting read.

    “Storm Front” is an amazingly good book considering that it is Jim Butcher’s first. I became an instant fan of Butcher while reading this book, and intend to read the rest of the series very soon. “Storm Front” contains a suspenseful and well-written mystery, but at the same time, Harry Dresden has a wonderful self-depreciating sense of humour that got quite a few chuckles out of me. If you enjoy mysteries or fantasy writing of any kind, give “Storm Front” a try, you’ll like it a lot!

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  4. Jonathan Appleseed @ 10:08 pm

    First, A THREE-STAR REVIEW IS A GOOD REVIEW. Some think that if a product doesn’t have a four- or a five-star review, it’s no good. Four is Very Good, and Five is “Superlative”. Three is Good. Good. Good.

    This book is Good.

    Interestingly, the Publisher’s Weekly review for the CD of this appears incorrect. It notes that James Marsters does the voices, but also notes the incidence of werewolves. There are no werewolves in Storm Front. I haven’t read beyond this book of the Harry Dresden series, so I can’t say when the werewolves come in, but I can tell you that they don’t make an appearance in this, the first book. And, based on PW’s review – I was waiting.

    If I were patient enough to listen to Audio Books, I would love to hear Marsters handle this material. As I lack the necessary patience, and am 75% deaf, I really can’t comment further. Others have noted that he handled the material well, and I hope they’re right.

    As first books go, this was darned good. I doubt that the author, Jim Butcher, would try to pass himself off as a keen turner of phrases. And much that is here has been seen before (and presented better) – just one example is that part of the magic in the book is predicated on knowing another entities true name. While it’s true that Ursula K. LeGuin wasn’t the first to use that idea, she was the writer of contemporary fantasy that used it so uniquely that anyone following her example should tiptoe, and do their best to avoid any semblance of comparison. (Christopher Paolini could use a bit of that advice, but he will not. He does not tiptoe. He TRODS.) Why tiptoe around another author? Let’s say that, as an author, you decide to resurrect Tolkien’s Ringwraiths into your “Jakundi”. The Ringwraiths have been on horseback, and they have been on foul steeds who prefer the exosphere. You put your Jakundi on the back of zebras. I certainly hope that’s enough said. If it’s not – pity. Savvy?

    All this aside, I honestly expected to dislike this book, and am not sure that I could put together a reason for buying it that would satisfy anyone that was even a quasi-intellectual. You could say I bought it on a whim. And – surprise! – I enjoyed it.

    Sure, there were characters I’d seen before. “Magics” I’d seen before. But Butcher did something innovative with all of this. He made Henry Dresden, a wizard who lived in Chicago and advertised himself in the yellow pages, REAL.

    OK – sure, Henry was a gumshoe, and much of the book read like a nod to a noir detective story. But remember that we have a detective story merged with the sci-fi/fantasy genre. And while the cliché’s flew as frequently as burps after a beer bong, I really didn’t mind.

    What does it mean, that I didn’t mind, and why should you care what I think? Nothing, I suppose, but I promise you this: I am no easy reviewer of fantasy. Teethed on Tolkien, and fouled on his imitators, I hold the bar high. Fantasy needs to make sense, on every level, before I will give it a pass. This, for the most part, works.

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  5. Jason Venter @ 12:11 am

    A problem with the fantasy genre, and one many have acknowledged quite freely, is a general sense of redundancy in just about any book you see these days. “Storm Front,” the first book from new author Jim Butcher, addresses those concerns head-on and introduces a new setup that pulled me in at the start and kept me from getting sleep until I had finished.

    The premise is simple enough: Harry Dresden is a wizard who acts about like a gumshoe. He uses his magic for harmless things, mostly, and finds things for people. But when he sets out to find a missing husband, and to solve a double homicide involving black magic, you can bet there’s going to be some amazing action.

    Amazing action is what makes this book so absorbing, as it turns out. There are several scenes that will stay with me for a long time. Not since Dean Koontz’s “Darkfall” has a single scene brought me so close to the edge of my seat as some of the scenes near the end of “Storm Front.”

    None of that would matter, though, were it not for the incredible cast of characters. They all come to life in a way you wouldn’t expect from so short a novel (well, considering the genre). Each character is different, not just someone that feels like he or she was cut from a cardboard box. I loved Bob, the talking skull with an appetite for sex. And Murphy came across as a real person. So did everyone else. The human motivations motivated me to keep going. I really couldn’t set this book down until I finished it, at some point just after midnight.

    If Jim Butcher continues to deliver fiction like this-and I truly hope he does-then the genre has just found another master. I recommend “Storm Front” to anyone who wants to lose themselves to a humorous, action-packed variation of the modern world for a few hours. Better than a good movie.

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