The quarter storm

Veronica G. Henry

Book - 2022

A practitioner of Vodou must test the boundaries of her powers to solve a ritual murder in New Orleans and protect everything she holds sacred. Haitian-American Vodou priestess Mambo Reina Dumond runs a healing practice from her New Orleans home. Gifted with water magic since she was a child, Reina is devoted to the benevolent traditions of her ancestors. After a ritual slaying in the French Quarter, police arrest a fellow vodouisant. Detective Roman Frost, Reina's ex-boyfriend--a fierce nonbeliever--is eager to tie the crime, and half a dozen others, to the Vodou practitioners of New Orleans. Reina resolves to find the real killer and defend the Vodou practice and customs, but the motives behind the murder are deeper and darker than s...he imagines. As Reina delves into the city's shadows, she untangles more than just the truth behind a devious crime. It's a conspiracy. As a killer wields dangerous magic to thwart Reina's investigation, she must tap into the strength of her own power and faith to solve a mystery that threatens to destroy her entire way of life.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Seattle : 47North [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Veronica G. Henry (author)
Physical Description
278 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781542033916
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Mambo Reina Dumond investigates a murder pinned on a fellow vodouisant in this fresh, entertaining urban fantasy from Henry (Bacchanal). Henry vividly renders New Orleans's French Quarter and Tremé communities and details the religious and ritual aspects of vodou as Haitian American Reina finds herself connected to the grisly murder through a recent client. Despite the ritualistic elements surrounding the crime, Reina knows that no upstanding vodou practitioner would commit murder and takes it upon herself to find the real killer and defend her religion. Using her skills at reading people and the water magic gifted to her by her patron goddess, Erzulie, Reina follows clues that lead her ever deeper into New Orleans's underbelly. In the process, she runs afoul of her detective ex-boyfriend--a man so hateful it's hard to know what she saw in him--as well as the leader of the local vodouisant community. Henry maintains an expert balance between the supernatural and real vodou beliefs, but there's less depth to the mystery than the magic, leading to an underwhelming, albeit reasonably convincing, resolution. Still, as urban fantasy detective stories go, this hits the sweet spot of eschewing overdone tropes while retaining the familiar elements that draw fans to the genre. Readers will hope to see more of Mambo Reina. Agent: Mary C. Moore, Kimberley Cameron & Assoc. (Feb.)

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