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Gabriel Blackstone is an unscrupulous hacker and unrepentant "remote viewer" who can't resist his ex-lover's request to look into her stepson's disappearance. His investigation leads him to a rambling Victorian home that bewitches him-as do its beautiful, enigmatic owners, the Monk sisters. The pair are solar witches, obsessed with alchemy and the Art of Memory, a practice invented by the ancient Greeks.
With his uneasy suspicion that one of the sisters is a killer, Gabriel sets out to determine which. But the more entangled in the case he becomes, the more deeply he is drawn into the sisters' entrancing world-losing hold of reality even as he falls into mortal danger...
This spellbinding tale of magic and seduction from Mostert (Windwalker) shows that the unfettered pursuit of arcane enlightenment can sometimes come at too high a price. William Whittington, a terminally ill London investment banker, hires Gabriel Blackstone, a rakish "information broker," to find Robert, his missing 21-year-old son. Whittington's wife, who happens to be Blackstone's ex-girlfriend, knows Blackstone once belonged to an organization, Eyestorm, that used psychic methods to find missing objects and persons. When Blackstone draws on his remote viewing powers ("slamming the ride"), he discovers that Robert was murdered by one of two sisters-raven-haired Morrighan or flame-haired Minnaloushe Monk, direct descendants of Elizabethan occultist John Dee, who dabble in alchemy and the "Art of Memory." As Blackstone woos the suspects to discover which one is guilty, he falls desperately in love. Mostert, a South African writer now living in London, has produced a feverish tale that's goth SF at its finest. (Apr.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsNatasha Mostert is the author of three previous novels, and her political opinion pieces have appeared on the Op-Ed pages of The New York Times and The Times of London. Author website: natashamostert.com.
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September 21, 2009: I had a hard time putting this book down. It wasn't what I expected in the beginning but didn't mind because the idea in the book was creative and I'd never read a book with the concepts before. I look forward to reading more books by this author.
I Also Recommend: Labyrinth.
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June 19, 2009: The book had a very interesting idea. I was captivated by this idea of modern witches with impressive mind abilities. However, the book, for me, fell flat in a few ways:
1) The romance between the main character, Gabriel, and the witches just was NOT enough. It was boring. There was no electricity. Nothing kept me thinking "omg when are they going to finally kiss/surrender their love for one another." 2) There was no mystery at all. The sister witches blend together as one character and frankly, by the conclusion, I don't really care which sister is the killer because they seem like the same person. 3) As stated before, the sisters need more distinction between them. They seemed more like one character than two seperate characters. 4) It was predictable. I did not feel the urge to keep turning the pages to figure out what was gonna happen next.The author had a really GREAT idea. However, she didn't design the book in a way that really expanded all the potentials of the book to make it as intersting, intriguing, mysterious, and page-turning as it could have been.Either way, I still recommend this book because it is a good read and has very intersting ideas with the memory abilities and the 'remote viewing'... even if you get to the end and think "wow, that was so predictable and somewhat unfulfilling."