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Seven Kinds of Hell (Fangborn, Bk 1)
Seven Kinds of Hell - Fangborn, Bk 1
Author: Dana Cameron
Archaeologist Zoe Miller has been running from a haunting secret her whole life. But when her cousin is abducted by a vicious Russian kidnapper, Zoe is left with only one option: to reveal herself. — Unknown to even her closest friends, Zoe is not entirely human. She's a werewolf and a daughter of the "Fangborn," a secretive race o...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781611097955
ISBN-10: 1611097959
Publication Date: 3/12/2013
Pages: 374
Rating:
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 12

3.4 stars, based on 12 ratings
Publisher: 47North
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

ophelia99 avatar reviewed Seven Kinds of Hell (Fangborn, Bk 1) on + 2527 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I got a copy of this book through the Amazon Vine program. Thanks to Amazon for providing this book for review. This book sounded like an interesting start to a new urban fantasy series; I mean archeology and werewolves sounds kind of cool! It really wasnt that great of a book, everything about it was okay but not great.

Zoe has been on the run with her mother for her whole life from her fathers violent people. When her mother dies, Zoe is looking forward to a new start at life. Then her cousin is kidnapped by someone, she thinks her fathers people. As she tried to comply with Dannys capturs in order to facilitate his release she is drawn into an archeological quest to find the keys to Pandoras box.

I did not enjoy this book and almost didnt finish it. The storyline was all over the place, the writing was difficult to read and the characters didnt have much depth and were hard to engage with. I pretty much struggled through the whole thing.

Zoe is a very strange character. Supposedly she was raised running from place to place with her mother, living carefully and avoiding detection. When her mother dies you would think she would be careful, especially when she is followed by some of her fathers people through the city. Soo....what does she do? She leads them right to her family and friends, because you know she spent her whole life hiding....how did she not get caught ages ago if she is this horrible at hiding and sneaking around?

Additionally Zoes background feels shallow and contrived. She never thought to question why her and her mom ran around hiding until now...when she is in her mid-20s; she just kind of accepted it. It seemed like a flimsy back story to me and made Zoe seem very 2D.

Zoe has a love interest that also goes quickly in and out of the story. The scenes between Zoe and William are flat feeling and boring; theres not a lot of chemistry here and it really didnt engage me at all.

You would think that Zoe trapsing around to exotic locations and exploring to find hidden artifacts would be cool...it was not. The locations arent described well and never really come alive for the reader. A number of characters flit in and out of the story but never really make that big of an impression. The idea is cool and I love that the author explores the mythos of Pandoras box...but the rest is not so cool.

The world building is incredibly weak. Supposedly vampires and werewolves are called Fangborn. The vampires and werewolves are incredibly bland; the vamps can do some mind control and the werewovles are hot-tempered and stronger than normal. To spice things up vamps actually like the sun in this book, but that is about as creative as this world gets. Outside of the Fangborn this world doesnt have anything else creative or exciting.

The book ends well enough I guess. I just had a lot of trouble caring. I was not engaged with the story or the characters. While there didnt seem to be anything technically wrong with the writing, I just had a lot of trouble reading the writing style; it didnt flow well and I had to constantly go back and re-read things because I felt like I was missing things.

Overall not a great urban fantasy read. The world is boring, Zoe is not a character that has much depth, none of these characters are all that easy to relate to. The concept sounds neat, but the execution left a lot to desired. I definitely dont recommend this urban fantasy read.
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cyndij avatar reviewed Seven Kinds of Hell (Fangborn, Bk 1) on + 1031 more book reviews
I liked Dana Cameron's mystery series, so I thought this urban fantasy might be good. It wasn't. It does have nice archaeological bits; the Pandora's Box mythos was clever. But Zoe is a 2D character who does what she does to move the plot along only where Cameron wants her to go. She and her mother have spent their whole lives running and hiding, and when mom dies and the bad guys find Zoe, does she run and hide? Nope. There are scads of supporting characters and for most of them, we don't know whose side they're on. That can be a very suspenseful tactic but here it's just confusing. I think Zoe is supposed to have a love interest here, but we're not sure about him either. The vampires love the sun and are healers, not killers, isn't that special. The Fangborn are dedicated to helping the human race...why is that, exactly? Well because they are. There is a lot of action but it's almost exclusively Zoe running from place to place, with the bad guys (and most of the good guys) apparently knowing where she's going before she does, because they are always only minutes behind her. By the end, I was uninterested in who lived, died, or got the prize. Oh well.


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