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Book Reviews of Bloodhound (Beka Cooper, Bk 2)

Bloodhound (Beka Cooper, Bk 2)
Bloodhound - Beka Cooper, Bk 2
Author: Tamora Pierce
ISBN-13: 9780375838170
ISBN-10: 0375838171
Publication Date: 2009
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 16

4.2 stars, based on 16 ratings
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Pb-Patch avatar reviewed Bloodhound (Beka Cooper, Bk 2) on + 42 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
2nd Beka Cooper Book.. 1st was Terrier. I got Terrier on audio dvd to listen to on a lengthy drive and was captivated by the characters and story line. The young female protagonist is straight forward, intelligent, stubborn and likeable. I didn't quite have enough time to finish the first book on my trip so I got the actual hardback upon return home and finished it. Was impressed enough to snatch up "Bloodhound" as soon as I saw it on the shelf.

Beka Cooper is a wonderful character and her tribulations at being the newest member of the watch (police...) in a large slum type neighborhood is at once gritty and compelling. The magic involved is unique with her ability to hear the ghosts of recently departed who ride with pigeons and also her abiility to hear spates of old conversations by feeding "twisters"... Not to mention that she has a familiar in the person of a cat who may or may not be a god but is definitely a character unto himself.

Beka's rough and tumble trainers on the watch reminded me mostly of Hawke and Fisher if you've ever read that series by Simon R Green. Pragmatic coppers who keep the peace by dint of being tougher and smarter than the bad guys. Graft is a way of life and the take is expected. Beka herself comes from a poor family but her mother married into a higher status upon the passing of her father so she has in's at all levels of the society. However, her family is less than enchanted with her choice of careers or the fact that she continues to reside in the "lower city". Her friends on the other hand are quite entertaining: The head thief of the city is half in love with her and she has friends who are quite rogueish themselves. Prostitutes, bakers, thieves and lords. Beka walks a tightwire with a balance and precision that is fascinating. A wonderful character.

In this second book she leaves some of her friends behind (kind of missed them) because it is mainly set in a separate city from her own due to her having been sent to investigate a problem there. It mainly relates to a major counterfeiting ring that could destroy the economy stability of the realm. I won't bother you with the whole story line but the book is wonderful and definitely worth the read.
GeniusJen avatar reviewed Bloodhound (Beka Cooper, Bk 2) on + 5322 more book reviews
Reviewed by Samantha Clanton aka "Harlequin Twilight" for TeensReadToo.com

Rebekah "Beka" Cooper is now a Dog, a fully qualified member of Provost's Guard, which is basically the police force in Corus, the capital of Tortall. Beka is a natural at Dog work - she's observant and persistent, but her magical traits set her apart from the rest. She has the ability to gain information from the spirits that attach themselves to pigeons and the dust and dirt that swirl on the ground called dust spinners. These skills, along with the help from the company she keeps, make Beka a skilled Dog.

Beka has been a Dog for five months at this point, and her fourth partner has just decided to leave her, which sends her back to her (amusing) training Dogs, Tunstall and Goodwin. One her first day back with them, they learn of counterfeit silver coins being used throughout Corus, which begins their investigation on the subject. On the second day, the merchants raise their prices in order to cover their losses, which causes a riot in the Lower City. During the riot, Tunstall is injured and in trying to get him to safety, they meet a group of men from a security caravan, who turn out to be quite useful to them.

After the riots, it's found that the counterfeit coins are being brought in by gamblers from Port Caynn and the Port Caynn Dogs don't seem to be doing anything about it. With Tunstall on bed rest, Cooper and Goodwin are sent undercover to Port Caynn to try and locate where these fake coins are coming from - and who is sending them out into the mainstream. Beka and Goodwin must explore the deep world of gambling and find the root of the problem, all in a strange city.

Along the way, Beka sees Dale Rowan, a bank courier who sometimes works on the caravan whom she met in the riot. Dale becomes more than just someone to help the women learn about the gambling places, and the eating houses that could help aid them - he becomes someone Beka really begins to like. He is handsome, buys her fine gifts, and becomes a bedmate for her, all in a matter of days. There is just enough romance that you almost want to root for him, but personally I am still rooting for her and Rosto, the Rogue of Corus.

With the help of the adorable Achoo, Beka's new scent hound, Slapper, a hilarious pigeon that carries the voices of the dead, and their new friends from the riots, they have just the aid they need to get their investigation started. Things finally start falling into place when Goodwin goes to Corus to report what they have found so far. Once Goodwin is gone, things come together rather quickly for young Beka, and it is up to her alone to keep it all from blowing up before help arrives. And it is up to Achoo to teach Beka that there is more to finding a criminal than the chase, and sometimes you have to sniff them out of their hiding places.

I love this story! It's told very well - everything you read is written through Beka's journal and, despite the length of the book, the entire story covers just under three weeks. I didn't read TERRIER, the first book in the trilogy, but BLOODHOUND seems to stand on its own, with only a slight temporary confusion. Some of the terminology is quite different, but there is a dictionary in the back, along with a few other things that are quite helpful when it comes to keeping things straight. The cast of characters is quite colorful, and very interesting, particularly when Dogs, mages, thieves, and the Rogue not only live in the same lodgings, but also dine frequently together and intertwine themselves in each others lives as they do. It's easy to see that despite what they all do for a living, they all care and respect each other as friends.

There are some aspects of the story that could become a little much for younger readers and I think I should state that Beka may only be 16 or 17, but in her time, that is classified as an adult. She deals with adult situations: there is crime, gambling, adult relationships, and violence, but nothing is told in explicit detail or anything like that. This is a story that I could totally recommend for almost anyone, male or female, teenager or adult. Either way, it is a good story and I, for one, am eagerly waiting for the next book, MASTIFF.