Cathy C. (cathyskye) - , reviewed The White Magic Five & Dime (Tarot, Bk 1) on + 2307 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Alanis McLachlan charmed me right away with her smart mouth and her suspicious nature, but it takes a while to understand her motivations. Through the first half of the book, we're allowed occasional glimpses of a dark childhood, and even though we're made aware of the fact that this young woman knows every trick in the book, we quickly learn to trust her.
Alanis meets her mother's teenage live-in apprentice and one of the local police as well as some of her fellow business people. She's decided that the best way to find out how her mother died is to give tarot readings to her mother's clients. At first she stumbles through all the readings, but soon she begins to find meaning in the cards, and I like the way tarot lore is woven into the very fabric of the story.
Halfway through the book, it changes from light, humorous, and slightly world weary fare to something with unexpected depth and darkness. This is when we're given much more information about Alanis's childhood and her relationship with her mother-- and it is eyeopening. I went from merely enjoying the main character's smart aleck-y attitude and persistence to being her whole-hearted supporter. The White Magic Five and Dime took a while to set up, but once it was, it became the beginning to a new series that I definitely want to read more of.
Alanis meets her mother's teenage live-in apprentice and one of the local police as well as some of her fellow business people. She's decided that the best way to find out how her mother died is to give tarot readings to her mother's clients. At first she stumbles through all the readings, but soon she begins to find meaning in the cards, and I like the way tarot lore is woven into the very fabric of the story.
Halfway through the book, it changes from light, humorous, and slightly world weary fare to something with unexpected depth and darkness. This is when we're given much more information about Alanis's childhood and her relationship with her mother-- and it is eyeopening. I went from merely enjoying the main character's smart aleck-y attitude and persistence to being her whole-hearted supporter. The White Magic Five and Dime took a while to set up, but once it was, it became the beginning to a new series that I definitely want to read more of.