Good guys

Steven Brust, 1955-

Book - 2018

Donovan was shot by a cop. For jaywalking, supposedly. Actually, for arguing with a cop while black. Four of the nine shots were lethal--or would have been, if their target had been anybody else. The Foundation picked him up, brought him back, and trained him further. "Lethal" turns out to be a relative term when magic is involved. When Marci was fifteen, she levitated a paperweight and threw it at a guy she didn't like. The Foundation scooped her up for training too. "Hippie chick" Susan got well into her Foundation training before they told her about the magic, but she's as powerful as Donovan and Marci now. They can teleport themselves thousands of miles, conjure shields that will stop bullets, and read info...rmation from the remnants of spells cast by others days before. They all work for the secretive Foundation ... for minimum wage. Which is okay, because the Foundation are the good guys. Aren't they?--from dust jacket.

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

SCIENCE FICTION/Brust Steven
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor SCIENCE FICTION/Brust Steven Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Paranormal fiction
Published
New York : Tor, Tom Doherty Associates 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Steven Brust, 1955- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Tom Doherty Associates Book."
Physical Description
316 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780765396372
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The Foundation is a huge bureaucracy dedicated to keeping folks who use magic from doing bad things or leaking the idea of magic to the general population. Donovan Longfellow was recruited by the Foundation and leads a team that investigates crimes involving sorcery. When a series of magical murders threatens to upset the Mystici, a rival group to the Foundation, Donovan and his team jump into the fray to find those responsible. Brust thrusts readers right into the action, but the characters' conversations and some comical interrogations fill in backstory and the workings of the Foundation. Some of the most humorous passages occur as Donovan is navigating the red tape of the Foundation, the minimum-wage pay, and the penny-pinching accounting. Best known for his ambitious Vlad Taltos fantasy series, veteran author Brust crafts an amusing and campy urban fantasy with fast-paced action and witty narration. Though it's not as ambitious as his other secret-society novel, The Incrementalists (2013), fans of quirky characters and offbeat stories will find themselves at home here.--Clark, Craig Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this underwhelming paranormal procedural, a trio of investigators working for the Foundation, a secret organization that regulates and monitors magic, set out to find a magic-using hit man. Donovan, Marci, and Susan must figure out the connection among the victims while dodging attempts on their own lives and contending with the Foundation's bureaucracy and a possible traitor somewhere in the organization. Brust (the Vlad Taltos series) has a clever and complicated take on urban fantasy. The use of multiple viewpoints, including a first-person thread from the killer's perspective, livens things up somewhat, and the plot takes some unexpected turns, leading to a satisfying if vague conclusion. But the story is hampered by a focus on the mundane details of the investigatory process, including lengthy Skype chats and requests for reimbursement. The detached, almost dispassionate narrative voice and the clichéd nature of the Foundation and the serial killer give the impression that Brust might be intentionally drawing out the details to deconstruct genre tropes, but the book doesn't succeed either as commentary or as a mystery. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Donovan, Marci, and Susan all work for the Foundation, using their magical powers to solve supernatural crimes and defend the innocent from attacks by the Mystici. Their latest case involves a series of increasingly violent murders carried out with the aid of mystical objects. The victims all had done despicable things, but it's unclear what else they might have in common. Donovan's team has a chance at stopping the killer, if only their penny-pinching supervisor would approve their expenses-because sometimes you need to take a pricey magical short-cut instead of flying commercial to get to the crime scene in time. In his first stand-alone in two decades, Brust ("Vlad Taltos" series) does a solid job of creating complex, likable characters and a world with consistent rules of magic. The rapidly changing points of view can be challenging to follow, but they add to the dramatic tension as the author builds his story. VERDICT Brust fans and admirers of Connie Willis and Jim Butcher will appreciate this twisty and clever urban fantasy.-Laurel Bliss, San Diego State Univ. Lib. © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three operatives work to solve a string of murders committed by sorcery, but their investigation leads them to question both their own secretive employers and the ethics of using magic, in this novel by fantasist Brust (Vallista, 2017, etc.).Donovan is a skilled investigator, and legally dead. He leads Marci, a sorcerer who specializes in charms and picking up the lingering signatures of spells cast, and Susan, a gifted martial artist, as an investigative team for the Foundation, a mysterious society that recruits and trains sorcerers and whose mandate is to make sure "civilians" don't learn about magic's existence. But when seemingly random people start being killed by magic, the trio must call upon all their gifts to discover the common thread connecting the victims. In doing so, they're frequently frustrated by their own minimum-wage pay and the Foundation's penny-pinching internal bureaucracy...a conceit that is cute the first time but wears thin as the Foundation's full power becomes clear (it seems like our heroes earn minimum wage for no deeper reason than allowing them to gripe about it). Their investigation raises more questions: what's the connection between the Foundation and their ancient rivals, the Mystici? Is there a mole in the Foundationperhaps their own enigmatic supervisor? Most importantly, do sorcerers have a moral obligation to use their powers well? Some questions get answered satisfactorily and others less so; the moments of climactic confrontation are often shunted off-screen in favor of reflections after the fact. It's telling that after experiencing personal loss and delving into the Foundation's secrets, the characters' biggest change at the end is simply getting a bonus.An engaging cast can't entirely save this novel from the leaps it asks readers to make. The story often fizzles where it should bang. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.