
Burning Water
Diana Tregarde Investigation Series, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Traci Odom
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By:
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Mercedes Lackey
Dallas Police Detective Mark Valdez isn't just any cop, he's a psychic who knows that the cattle mutilations and torture murders he's been investigating are somehow tied together. He also knows that his meager psychic abilities aren't enough to identify the killers, much less stop them.
Luckily, Mark has an ace up his sleeve: an attractive young romance novelist who happens to be a practicing witch. And not just any witch, either - Diana Tregarde is a Guardian, charged with protecting the Earth and all its creatures.
Using modern science and ancient magics, Diana and Mark discover that they are tailing no ordinary serial killer but the awakened avatar of an Aztec god. Tezcatlipoca and his four beautiful handmaidens are preparing for a great sacrifice that will transform North America into a new Aztec realm.
Diana isn't sure her powers are strong enough to take on those of a risen Aztec god, but she has no choice. As a Guardian, she is sworn to protect mankind, even at the cost of her own life. Luckily, she does not stand alone. Mark Valdez is more than just a cop. And Tezcatlipoca is not the only Aztec god walking in the world.
©1989, 2018 Mercedes Lackey (P)2019 TantorListeners also enjoyed...




















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It was a bit surreal to read a book set in the '80's, since it seems like it should be relatively close in time to now (I was a small child when this was originally published), but the world of the book is so different from 2019. It was interesting, in it's own way, to realize how much the US has changed in a few decades.
Regarding the narration, for the first couple sentences, I honestly thought it was a computer reading. The narrator did pick up some emotive qualities as it went on, but she's by no means Tantor's best reader. The battle scenes and climax were particularly noticeable in their lack of emotion. I recommend the reader listen to someone like James Marsters and take a few more acting lessons. And work on her enunciation. When she did male voices such as the Chief, she tended to mumble, and I had to keep going back and replaying to figure out what she was saying.
Despite my technical issues with the audiobook, I will definitely be buying Book 2 as soon as I finish this review. It's been a while since I found a new urban fantasy story that actually kept me wondering what's going to happen next (as opposed to being able to surmise the whole book from the first couple chapters). On to Book 2 and another adventure!
One of the Better Fantasy Novels I've Found Lately
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I would probably be better if it was updated.
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Nice change from princesses and fancy horses
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love this series
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Magic comes with responsibility... great book!!!
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As good as I remember
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love everything by Mercedes Lackey!
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A great story overall, but ...
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Narrator is good at both male and female voices also Mexican accents were believable (to me at least). Her pace and diction were quite good.
Chilling
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The protagonist is a strong female investigator with a hinted-at deep backstory. The plot is interesting and its timing is more reasonable than that of most police novels, taking weeks to resolve rather than hours. The magical version of the world shown in the novel is coherent and deep.
And yet, with all those virtues, the story seems to lack vitality. Tregarde is rather sketched in and never really engages me, and her partner seems likewise to be a bit flat.
Not Lackey's strongest work, but decent.
NB: The use of "ack emma" for a.m. by several of the characters is an affectation. It's a British slang phrase from WWI and certainly not common in 1980s US slang. I found its use really distracting here.
Interesting Urban Fantasy
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