Dream Chaser (A Dream-Hunter Novel, Book 3)
Dream Chaser (A Dream-Hunter Novel, Book 3) book cover

Dream Chaser (A Dream-Hunter Novel, Book 3)

Mass Market Paperback – February 5, 2008

Price
$11.99
Publisher
St. Martin's Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312938826
Dimensions
4.15 x 1.3 x 6.7 inches
Weight
6.4 ounces

Description

Praise for DREAM CHASER:xa0"Humor, snappy dialogue and general character crankiness make this one of Kenyon's most entertaining. The interplay between characters is lively, and the plot threads twisty--all leading toxa0a most excellent adventure." Romantic Times BOOKreviews (Top Pick, 4 1/2 stars)xa0DEVIL MAY CRY:xa0"Irresistible."-- Publishers Weekly DARK SIDE OF THE MOON “Kenyon’s writing is brisk, ironic, sexy, and relentlessly imaginative. These are not your mother’s vampire novels.”— The Boston Globe From the Inside Flap PRAISE FOR AUTHOR SHERRILYN KENYON "Kenyon is the reigning queen of the vampire novel."--Barbara Vey, Publishers Weekly "An engaging read."x97 Entertainment Weekly on Devil May Cry "Kenyon's writing is brisk, ironic, sexy, and relentlessly imaginative. These are not your mother's vampire novels."x97 The Boston Globe on Dark Side of the Moon From New York Times Bestselling Author Sherrilyn Kenyon The spellbinding Dream-Hunter series continues! Hades doesn’t often give second chances... Xypher has one month on Earth to redeem himself through one good deed or be condemned to eternal torture in Tarturus. But redemption means little to a demigod who only wants vengeance on the one who caused his downfall. Until one day in a cemetery... Simone Dubois is a medical examiner with a real knack for the job. Those who are wrongfully killed appear to her and help her find the evidence the police need to convict their killers. But when a man appears and tells her that she’s more than just a psychic, she’s convinced he’s insane. Now the fate of the world hangs in her hands... It was bad enough when just the dead relied on her. Now’s there’s the seductive Dream-Hunter Xypher who needs Simone’s help in opening a portal to the Atlantean hell realm to fight insatiable demons. The future of mankind is at stake—and so is her life. The only question now is: Who is the bigger threat: the demons out to kill her, or the man who has left her forever changed? “Brisk, ironic, sexy, and relentlessly imaginative.”— Boston Globe New York Times bestselling author Sherrilyn Kenyon has more than ten million copies of her books in print, in twenty-nine countries. She is the author of the Dark-Hunter novels, which have an international cult following and have appeared on the top-three positions of The New York Times, Publishers Weekly, and USA Today . Writing as both Sherrilyn Kenyon and Kinley MacGregor, she is the author of several other series, including: The League, Brotherhood of the Sword, Lords of Avalon, and Nevermore.Near Nashville, Tennessee, Sherrilyn Kenyon lives a life of extraordinary danger . . . as does any woman with three sons, a husband, a menagerie of pets, and a collection of swords on which all of the above have a major fixation. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Dream Chaser By Sherrilyn Kenyon St. Martin's Press Copyright © 2008 Sherrilyn KenyonAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-0-312-93882-6 CHAPTER 1 Café Maspero New Orleans February 2008 "Have you ever wanted to put your head in a blender and turn on the liquefy switch?" Simone Dubois frowned then laughed at Tate Bennett, the parish coroner for New Orleans, as he took a seat at the dark wood table, across from her. As always, Tate was impeccably dressed in a white button-down shirt and black slacks. His skin was dark and flawless, a gift from his Creole and Haitian heritage. With sharp, sculpted features, he was extremely good-looking and those dark eyes of his never missed a detail. His impeccable attire was a sharp contrast to her faded jeans, navy sweater and riotous mop of dark brown curls that would never obey any style Simone attempted to beat them into. The only feature she had that she considered even remotely interesting were her hazel brown eyes that turned gold whenever the sun hit them. She wiped her mouth on her napkin. "Honestly ... I can't say that I have. But there have been a few other heads I'd like to do that to. Why?" He dropped a folder in front of her. "How many serial killers can one city have?" "I'm not up on those stats. Depends on the city I suppose. Are you telling me we have another one here?" He unwrapped his silverware and placed his napkin on his lap. "I don't know. Couple of weird murders have come through my office over the last two weeks. Seemingly unrelated." Those two words were loaded with meaning. "But ..." "But I have a gut feeling on this and it's not the oh-look-it's-a- bright-shiny-world kind." Simone took a sip of her soda before she opened the file and grimaced at the grisly crime scene photos. As always, they were gory and detailed. "I just love the gifts you bring me for lunch. Other girls get diamonds. Me? I get mayhem and blood—and all before noon. Thanks, Tate." He leaned over and stole a French fry from her plate. "Don't worry, boo, I'm buying. Besides, you're the only woman I know I can meet for lunch and talk business with. Everyone else gets squeamish." She looked up. "You know, I'm not sure that's much of a compliment." "Trust me, it is. If LaShonda ever comes to her senses and leaves me, you're the next Mrs. Tate." "Again, not flattering to either of us. Should I tell LaShonda what her hubby thinks of her?" she teased. "Please don't. She might poison my cush-cush ... or worse, beat my tush-tush." Simone laughed again. "Don't worry, I'd make sure and bring her to justice for it." "I'm sure you would." He paused to order a shrimp po'boy and fries from the waitress. Simone continued to look at the photos while he spoke to the young Goth woman who was taking his order. Yeah, these pictures were pretty gruesome. But then these types of photos usually were. How she hated that the world was filled with people capable of doing such horrific things to others. What people could do to each other was bad enough. What the other, nonhuman inhabitants could do was a whole other nightmare. Literally. And she was more than just a little acquainted with both kinds of monsters. The waitress headed back toward the kitchen. Tate leaned closer. "You getting any vibes from the other side?" She shook her head. "You know it doesn't work that way, T. I have to be touching the body or something that belonged to the victim. Photos only give me a paper cut ... and the willies." Shivering in sympathy for the way the poor woman had died, she closed the file and slid it back toward him. "Want to come to the morgue with me after lunch?" She arched one brow at his offer. "I shudder at the thought of the pickup line you must have used the night you met LaShonda. Come with me, baby, and see my collection of stiffs." He laughed. "God, I love your sense of humor." Too bad a married man was one of the very few people who actually got her offbeat humor. The only other person to really appreciate it was a teenaged ghost who'd been haunting her since she was ten years old. Jesse was seated to her right, but only Simone knew that. No one else could see or hear him—oh, lucky her. Especially since Jesse was locked in a late 1980s time warp. Case in point, he was wearing a light blue blazer reminiscent of Don Johnson from Miami Vice with a curly black pompadour courtesy of Jon Cryer from the movie Pretty in Pink. Jesse was a huge John Hughes fan who made her watch way too many reruns. He completed his offbeat outfit with a skinny white keyboard satin tie and matching white checkerboard Vans. "I don't want to go to the morgue, Simone," Jesse said from between clenched teeth. "I don't like it there." She could certainly understand that sentiment. It was her favorite spot to visit right after the proctologist's office. She gave Jesse a pitying look, but they both knew that she'd have no choice except to go. There was nothing she wouldn't do to bring a killer to justice and that included hanging out in the creepy city morgue instead of her lab at Tulane. "So what's the strangest part about these murders?" she asked, trying to distract Jesse from repeating a tirade she was more than familiar with. Besides, he could go home without her—he just didn't like being in the house when she wasn't there. Jesse could be a very needy ghost sometimes. Tate stole another fry before he answered. "The fact that Ms. Gloria here got up and walked off her examining table." Simone choked on the Coke she was drinking. "Excuse me?" "You heard right. Nialls is now in a straitjacket because of it. He freaked out so badly we had to call the psych ward for him." She coughed twice to clear her throat before she spoke again. "The victim was in a coma?" "The victim was dead as a doornail. As you saw from the photos, her throat had been ripped out and Nialls had just opened up her chest for the autopsy. Her heart was in his hands when she started breathing." "Uh-huh ..." It was the only response she could manage for a moment. "And she got up and walked off ..." He nodded glumly. "Welcome to my world. Oh, wait, welcome to your world. Yours is even more bizarre than mine. At least I don't live with a ghost who has his own bedroom in my house." He glanced around the table, then lowered his voice. "Is Jesse here?" Simone inclined her head in the direction of where her friend was seated and staring at them with a stern frown. "Please explain to me how she got up while he was holding her heart," she said slowly. "That's what I want you to tell me. See, I deal with ... well, most days, bizarre paranormal crap. You are Queen Weird. I need the queen on this before I have to start hiring a new staff of medical examiners who don't freak out when the dead move off their tables. You know where I can find some of these unusual people? I know you hang out with them." "Thanks, Tate. I always look forward to these ego-bolstering pep talks of ours." "Yes, but at least you know I love you." "Like a hole in your shoe." He laughed. "Not true. You are the best damned medical examiner I've ever seen and you know that. If I could get you away from Tulane and hire your butt for the city, I'd do it in a heartbeat. The fact that you're the only one I can talk to about paranormal deaths is a major bonus to me. Anyone else would have me in a room next to Nialls." Simone reached for her pickle. "True. I'm also told they have incredible drugs to help curb those hallucinations." "Then sign me up. I could definitely use them." So could she, but that was another story. Then again, her entire life was bizarre enough to be considered one massive hallucination. If only it were. Simone paused as she got that weird feeling in her gut again. She glanced about the dark restaurant, then out the window to the left of her that showed the traffic on Decatur Street. Nothing appeared out of the ordinary, but still the sensation persisted. "Is something wrong?" Jesse asked. "I've got that feeling again." Tate scowled. "What feeling?" Her face heated at his question. "I was actually talking to Jesse. But for the last couple of weeks I've had this bizarre sensation that something is watching me." "You mean some one, right?" She shook her head. "I know it sounds crazy—" "I just had a body walk off the table mid-autopsy and you think your story is nuts? Yeah, boo ..." That was what she liked most about Tate. He made her feel almost normal. Not to mention he was the only person besides her who knew about Jesse. Of course she was also the only person outside of a small handful who knew Tate was a Squire for the Dark-Hunters—a group of immortal warriors who hunted down and executed the vampiric Daimons who preyed on human souls. Yeah, her life was anything but normal. So why should she even be concerned about the fact that she felt as if something evil were watching her? It probably was. And unfortunately, it wouldn't be the first time. She only wanted to make sure it wasn't the last one. "Do you know where it's coming from?" Jesse asked. "No. I can't pinpoint it. All I know is that it's making my skin crawl." Tate leaned back in his chair to stare at her. "I really wish I could hear Jesse. It's so disconcerting when you two talk. Makes me wonder if he's not sitting there, mocking me." She smiled. "Jesse only makes fun of me." "That's not true." She looked at Jesse. "Yes it is." "No it's not," Tate inserted. Simone frowned at him. "Do you even know what you're arguing?" "Not really. It just seemed natural to add that." She laughed. "How I ever got mixed up with the two of you, I'll never know." But that wasn't true. Jesse had come to her during the darkest hour of her life and he'd been with her ever since. Tate ... he'd been there when she'd come the closest she'd ever been to catching her mother's and brother's killer. Unfortunately, her hunch hadn't panned out and the evidence she thought would give them a clue to her mother's murderer had been too tainted to use. Even so, Tate had fought for her tooth and nail even though he hadn't known her at the time. That meant more to her than anything and they'd been friends ever since. There was nothing she wouldn't do for him and he knew it. Tate, LaShonda, and Jesse were the only family she had. He leaned back and waited for the waitress to put his plate on the table and leave before he spoke again. "Are you sure it's not one of the ghosts you see eyeballing you?" She shook her head. "No. They're never this subtle. They usually pop in, like 'yo, she-bitch, do my bidding.' This ... this is something else." "Evil is coming for you," Jesse said in a grim, echoing voice. Simone narrowed her eyes on him. "I hate it when you do that." Tate pulled back as if he were offended. "What'd I do?" She smiled at him. "Not you. Jesse. He's using his ghost voice on me. It's extremely unnerving." "Yes, but you still love me." Jesse winked at her. "Of course I do. But save the voice for a haunting." "I would if anyone else could hear me. Have you any idea how annoying that is? No, 'cause everyone hears you when you talk." He stood up and danced in the corner. "Hey, people!" he shouted. "See the freaky ghost dance." He flapped his arms around and shook his booty. "I'm bad, I'm bad, I'm bad." He stopped and looked around at the people who went on about their business, oblivious to his offbeat antics. "See. Sucks." She passed a dry look to Jesse, who held his hands up in surrender. There were times when he was a strange cross between a nagging mother and a wife combined with a lunatic brother. She focused her attention on Tate. "Anyway, back to the decedent ... do the police have any leads?" Tate shook his head. "She was found in an alley down in the Warehouse District. Her throat was lacerated with something clawlike. Too large to be animal and too jagged to be individual knife marks." "Definitely not a Daimon attack then." Daimons were a particular breed of vampire who called New Orleans home ... and unlike many of the others who made ambitious blood-sucking claims, these guys were real and they were deadly predators with highly developed supernatural powers. As medical examiners, she and Tate were used to seeing their handiwork come through their offices. Her acceptance and willingness to help cover the Daimons' tracks was what kept her close to Tate. They weren't protecting the Daimons, they were keeping the rest of humanity safe by not informing them of what was really out there ready to take them down. If mankind were ever to know, they would freak out and kill innocent people, too. The bad thing was that even though the Daimons drank blood, they didn't feed on it. They fed on actual human souls. Luckily a single human soul could keep them fed for a long time, so as a rule, they weren't out hunting victims every night. If you could call that lucky. Which Simone did, and that more than anything said just how weird her life was. Anytime the Daimons left their holes, the Dark-Hunters Tate worked for would seek them out, hoping to stop them from killing more people. A bonus to the Daimons' deaths was that it also freed the human souls they'd eaten so that their victims could go on to the afterlife. Tate swabbed his fry in ketchup. "Definitely not Daimon," he repeated. "She was drained of all her blood, and since none was found at the crime scene, we assume she died somewhere else and was dumped in the alley. You sure you can't summon her from the grave and ask her what happened?" "That would be a voodoo priestess, Tate. The decedents come to me, not the other way around." He stifled a look of disappointment. "We need to find the body ASAP. Her parents are on their way down from Wichita and I don't want to tell them that their little girl went AWOL from the examining table." "Did you get anything from Nialls?" Tate scoffed. "Nothing coherent. As you can imagine, he was a bit hysterical. All he'd say was that she smiled at him on her way out the door." "So you don't know if she was a zombie then?" "Thankfully, I've never seen a zombie. Much other weird shit on the job, but not that. Have you?" "No. However, I've learned to not question things like that. If there's a legend, then there's something real behind it." He saluted her with his drink. "What about your Squire contacts? Have they anything to offer on this?" Tate shook his head. "None of them know anything more about the dead walking around than you or I. Daimons don't make the dead rise. They make the living fall." Simone looked at Jesse. "You have any suggestions?" "Only that I wish my body were still walking around. It would make my undeath easier to bear." "Thanks for the nonhelp, Jess. You're such a doll." Simone didn't speak much more as they finished lunch, then headed to the morgue. Jesse opted to stay outside while she followed Tate into the crypt. Honestly, she couldn't blame Jesse for his feelings. She didn't like hanging out with the dead, either, Jesse notwithstanding. The only reason she did what she did was to help the victims and their families. Having seen her own mother and brother gunned down before her, the last thing she wanted was to stand by and let someone else's killer go free. It was why she worked cases for the city pro bono and why she spent her life training the next generation of medical examiners at Tulane. She figured she could do more good by training other MEs to be conscientious than she could working on mundane cases. The more people who did their jobs right, the fewer criminals who would go free to slaughter again. That philosophy was also what kept her single. Most men didn't appreciate dating a woman who was handy with both a scalpel and a shovel. Tate opened a door in the middle of the crypt vault and pulled out an empty drawer. "She was stored in here." "Do you have any of her personal items?" "Let me get them." Simone closed the drawer and turned slightly as she felt a presence behind her. It was a young woman around the age of twenty-four. Her brown hair was mussed and she looked a bit confused. It was a natural state for many of the newly deceased. "Can I help you?" Simone asked the girl. "Where am I?" Simone hesitated. She never liked being the one to tell another that they were no longer alive. "What's the last thing you remember?" "I was walking home from work." (Continues...) Excerpted from Dream Chaser by Sherrilyn Kenyon . Copyright © 2008 Sherrilyn Kenyon. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From #1
  • New York Times
  • Bestselling Author Sherrilyn Kenyon
  • The spellbinding Dream-Hunter series continues!
  • Hades doesn’t often give second chances...
  • Xypher has one month on Earth to redeem himself through one good deed or be condemned to eternal torture in Tarturus. But redemption means little to a demigod who only wants vengeance on the one who caused his downfall.
  • Until one day in a cemetery...
  • Simone Dubois is a medical examiner with a real knack for the job. Those who are wrongfully killed appear to her and help her find the evidence the police need to convict their killers. But when a man appears and tells her that she’s more than just a psychic, she’s convinced he’s insane.
  • Now the fate of the world hangs in her hands...
  • It was bad enough when just the dead relied on her. Now’s there’s the seductive Dream-Hunter Xypher who needs Simone’s help in opening a portal to the Atlantean hell realm to fight insatiable demons. The future of mankind is at stake—and so is her life. The only question now is: Who is the bigger threat: the demons out to kill her, or the man who has left her forever changed?
  • “Brisk, ironic, sexy, and relentlessly imaginative.”—
  • Boston
  • Globe

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(629)
★★★★
25%
(262)
★★★
15%
(157)
★★
7%
(73)
-7%
(-73)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Put My Interest in the Series to Bed... Permanently

Over the last year I've been seriously questioning why I keep buying the Whatever-Hunters books as they continue their downward slide into failed novel series that should have ended long ago when the author lost that creative spark. I absolutely hated the last one, but for some reason the overwhelming positive reviews lured me back in.

The only reason I can figure that this book has been getting such high praise is 1) the fence sitters have already left the building so there is no voice left to counter the super-fans who would give five stars to anything with Sherrilyn Kenyon's name on it 2) the book is only marginally better than the last four or five and people are just so happy to see any improvement that they are willing to grade it on the curve.

There is really nothing new or original that I can say about Dream Chaser that I and many other readers have not already said, multiple times, about the last half dozen novels. That's okay because the originality in this book has long left the station. In Dream Chaser, our two love birds are chained together via magical handcuffs and they must work together to stop the blood sucking demons haunting the streets of the Big Easy while exchanging canned action movie dialogue. The emo-boy hero whines constantly about how awful his life is because he had the bad judgment to fall in love with Cruella DeVille many centuries ago, and the heroine, whose spent her life running away from the magic mojo powers inside her, puts out out of pity. Then they realize that it must be love! In case you didn't key in on it, this book is a re-write of the very first Dark Hunter novel. If you read that then you've already read a superior version of this. Not only does it make Dream Chaser trite and unoriginal, but incredibly cynical too. Cynical that the author thought she could slip her recycling act by us, especially when it seems like she's doing her best to eliminate all but the hardest of the hard-core from her fan base. You know, the people that read the books so many times that the pages are falling out and should be most likely to spot the blatant similarities.

It felt like an absolute chore to read. Characters still feel like they are talking at one another rather than to one another, and everybody regardless of age still talks like a gum-snapping valley girl. Characterization is still as subtle as a brick to the face with anyone either being mawkishly virtuous or so evil that it isn't hard to imagine them biting the heads off of newborn kittens.

What else can I say? I've payed my dues as a loyal fan against my better judgment. I've withstood the increasingly amateurish prose, muddled unwieldy world building, terrible dialogue, and juvenile characterization for many book now and I'm finally ready to put this series to bed. Kenyon has cranked out at least five terrible book in the space of a year and that speaks of someone more concerned with quantity than quality. If the author doesn't care, then I certainly can't be bothered to.
34 people found this helpful
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Xypher's Story

If you have read DEVIL MAY CRY you have some idea who Xypher is, if not, he is a Phobatory Skotos, one of the Dream Gods, who brings nightmares and eats the dreams of humans for emotion. Zeus has condemned them to have no emotions. Xypher was sentenced to Tartarus for his misdeeds. In DEVIL MAY CRY he helped Sin defeat the dimme demons and for that he was promised a month on earth to redeem himself by doing a good deed.

Xypher didn't think Hades would abide by the bargain but now he finds himself on Earth. He is given only his clothes and strength and memories. He has been living on the streets, finding food where ever he can and sleepiing standing up. But the only thing he wants is to find a way into Kalosis so he can destroy the one who betrayed him and left him in hell.

Simone Dubois is a medical examiner with Tulane, she is a contemporay of Tate who is the medical examiner for New Orleans. Tate is also a squire for the Dark Hunters, he has seen many things that others would not believe, only Simone knows about all the other supernaturals that populate our world. She has the ability to see and talk to ghosts. As a matter of fact a ghost lives with her. She helps Tate when he needs it.

When a body gets up off the examining table and walks out, Tate calls Simone. She goes with Tate to look at the scene of the crime. The woman's throat was torn out. While there they are attacked by daimons, Xypher is trying to force the daimons to open a portal to Kalosis, where Satara has gone to hide from him. He saves Simone but Satara has a plan, she will use Atlantian braclets to kill Xypher, by putting the bracelets on him and Simone if she dies he dies. His brother is a demon and he is the one sent to kill her after the spathi daimons chain them togather.

From here the story justs gets better and better. We meet up with Julian and others from other books. This is the best of the Dream Hunter books so far. I loved it and there are so many surprises. I liked Xypher in DEVIL MAY CRY and I am thrilled to get his story. Do not miss it. Good Reading.
19 people found this helpful
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I need to get off the Sherrilyn Kenyon train

This book was better than her last few attempts (hence the 2 star, not 1 star review) but honestly...it was still a pretty bad story. Apparently, I'm in the minority with this conclusion. While I was reading this story, it just felt like I've read it before. And I realized that I had....the last several Kenyon books sounded EXACTLY like this story. This book was a real case of same old, same old...For example:

1)Same old "teenagers in a mall" language - ex. Jesse - Grody to the max. Gag me with a spoon. I've seen you in the mornings. Huh?

2)Same old "tired" plot - Tortured hero meets do-gooder heroine. Do gooder heroine just wants to show tortured hero that there is someone out there who cares about him. And that someone is her. - How many stories did Sherrilyn use this plot in? Unfortunately, too many to count.

Same old "gorgeous" hero - I'm sorry, but is anyone else tired of seeing the same men (with different color hair and eyes) in her stories? Good Lord, can we have some average looking guys here? What about average looking and under 7 feet? Pretty please.

What else can I say? The romance between Xypher and Simone was just a little too, "Gift of the Magi." I kill myself to save your life, but you give up your soul to save mine? Plus, the ending was just a little too quick. The entire book was about him getting into Kalosis to deal with Satara. You know, the person who initially betrayed him, and sent him into hell in the first place.

Well, what does he do when he finally sees her? Make another deal with her and kills himself. Again. That's it. That's how he deals with the person he spent centuries hating. Why would he have thought she would have kept her word this time? She didn't the last time. The truth is, he would have NEVER trusted this woman again.

By ending this book with a whimper, instead of a bang solidified my previous thoughts about Sherrilyn's stories: I really need to get off the Sherrilyn Kenyon train.
18 people found this helpful
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I don't get it!

After reading all the 5 and 4 star ratings, I figured this book would be worth reading. Unfortunately, it was not. Again, corny dialogue, same old characters with different names. Same happy ending, throw Acheron in for a little excitement, predictable love story and you have a Sherrilyn Kenyon book. I have read them all. Even her Bad series and this book was no better than the past several books. Trite, corny, and predictable. These books no longer thrill me.
11 people found this helpful
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A Huge Improvement

I was so relieved to see some positive reviews of this book as the last couple (Dream Hunter, Upon a Midnight Clear, Devil May Cry) were not-so-stellar, that I immediately ran out and bought this book. I was not disappointed.

Though I have to disagree with some reviewers that say Sherri is back to her old form, I can say that she is definitely moving in the right direction. Let me begin by saying: If you have not read at least Devil May Cry before picking up this book, don't even try to follow along. Dream Chaser features Xypher, the tortured Skoti brought in during Devil May Cry. Xypher is the son of a gallu demon and Phebos, the Greek god of nightmares, and he has spent centuries in Tartarus, tortured for taking the blame behind a woman's crimes. For his good deeds, he is given one month to live as a human - with limited powers. If he can regain his humanity in that time, he will be freed from Hades' clutches. Instead of seeking this out, however, Xypher is firm that if he's going back to hell, so is the woman who damned him. That woman, being of course, Satara, Artemis's handmaiden and sister of Stryker, the Daimon leader. Satara appeals to her brother for help and he produces gold bands, which are actually an Atlantean weapon against the gods. They link two beings together, usually one god and one weak human, and then the two united beings cannot separate at risk of being killed. Oh, and if one is killed, the other dies, too.

Enter Simone Dubois, ME professor at Tulane and attractant for all manner of weird things, ie a teenage ghost stuck in the '80s. As she and Xypher are linked, she struggles to see past his rage and bitterness to the hurt man beneath, and begins to restore a part of Xypher that he'd thought long dead: his heart.

I thought this story was well-paced, engaging and a huge step up from the last few books, but there still was a little something missing for me. The dialogue between Simone and her ghost companion Jesse was humorous, but I would have liked to have seen more of that calibre of banter between the two main protagonists, like SK has done in past installments of this series. At times the romance took a back seat to all the action, which is fine, because it moves the story along swimmingly, but I would have liked more emotional build-up in the romance part. The ending is very emotional, and one of the best tear-jerkers of this series since Seize the Night, and you want to cheer when Xypher and Simone get their well-deserved HEA. Dream Chaser takess a big weight off my shoulders as ACHERON gets closer and closer, and now I can't wait.
11 people found this helpful
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Kenyon is Back!!!

As a long time fan of Ms. Kenyon's Dark-hunter, Dream-hunter, Were-hunter series I had began to loose hope that she would ever regain the fire she once had at the beginning of the series. Her past efforts had been tepid at best, and sadly there were even a few stinkers amongst the offerings. Admittedly these were the shorter stories, but still...So it was with a heavy heart that I picked up Xypher's story. I didn't bother to read reviews as I wanted to come to my own conclusions but I prayed I would not be let down. My wishes were answered! Kenyon seemed to tap into her old self and write a story that was hard to put down, that left me crying and sighing!

Xypher has one month in order to exact revenge on a Satara, the woman he stupidly thougth he loved and loved him in return. He learned the hard way she was only using him and his punishment is to spend all of eternity in Hades care being tortured. Xypher is hard, bitter and very angry. He's made even more so when he arrives in New Orleans to find himself bound to a little human named Simone with a Pollyanna complex. If he takes too many steps away from her they both die. Not that he cares after all she's just a human and she's going to die anyhow. But, something changes and it's not long before Simone teaches him that people can be kind to each other but will he learn to care enough for her to give up his revenge.

Simone is lonely, witha ghost to keep her company and a best friend that protects Dark-hunters. Yeah that's normal. She finds that life is what you make of it. Then one night she finds herself bound to one of the crabbiest, crankiest, handsome hottie she's ever set eyes on. One minute she wouldn't mind him taking a huge leap and the next she's finding things she likes about him. Now, she's his unwitting partner in his quests and just when she thinks she's never going to find the one persn she could love for a lifetime, she realizes she already has but he would rather have his revenge then be with her. What's a girl supposed to do?

Xypher is a wonderful hero. One minute you think he's horrid, the next you're rooting for his happy ending. Kenyon manages to incorporate many of the different legends and characters she's already introduced in past books in this one. This was a very good read, one I couldn't put down until it ended. I look forward to her next effort with eager anticipation!
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Good plot, probably not a stand alone book

This was the first book I've picked up by this writer. Xypher & Simone are thrown together when the one who betrayed him has them "cuffed"--they cannot become too distanced from each other, and if one dies, so does the other.

I think the story was a good one, the characters were actually pretty likeable, and I laughed out loud several times at the comments and insults they threw back and forth at each other. Her writing is good, and I didn't get distracted by bad grammar, and subject jumps. She seemed to move smoothly from one place to another.

I had several issues with this book:

1. I don't think it's a stand alone book. I felt like a lot of the names that were thrown around were from previous works of hers and I was lost as to who they were. Perhaps this is one of those series that must be read in order.

2. I felt like I needed to bone up on my ancient mythology, too. I can remember some names from school, but she threw around a lot of obscure gods/goddesses and I had to look some up.

3. The sexual tension between these two didn't build up until after they'd had sex. There was a reference or two about how hot he was, or she was cute for a human, but he didn't have time; but there was nothing with "teeth". I do have to say, that when I read a book that's this far out in the paranormal, I want a little more explicit sex scenes, and a little more in depth, too, but I didn't find them here.

4. For a "demi-god" as old as Xyther was, it took him very little time - I think it was mentioned that it was less than 2 weeks, to become so enamored with Simone that he was willing to sacrifice himself and his vengeance to keep her safe. It was just a little too pat for me.

5. The climactic moment where he confronts the one who betrayed him - and to show how much the name stuck with me, I can't remember it (and the book is not here) - was, well, quite anti-climactic. She has spent the whole book sending demons out to kill him, he has spent the whole book talking about his vengeance, and then, *poof*, it's solved. I think in about 1 page, no less.

Okay - that really sounds like I hated it, but to be truthful, it wasn't the worst book I've ever read. I liked it enough that I'll try to find the others in the series, do a little back reading and see if I can understand what's going on. I'm not sure I would pay full cover price for this (I got it at the grocery store for $3.00 off), but I'll see how the others stack up.
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Finally a Dream-Hunter story worth losing sleep over

Like other reviewers, I did not like any of the previous Dream-Hunter books. After getting a glimpsed of Xypher in Devil May Cry, I was really hoping his story would somehow be better and it is! As I read the book, I kept thinking to myself, "finally Sherrilyn Kenyon is back to the great way she writes". Acheron, Kat, the Sanctuary crew, Stryker, and a new all powerful character, Jaden, take parts in this book but the story is all about Xypher and Simone even with all these other characters. You do get to find out what happened to the Dimme gallu demon that escaped in Devil May Cry and you even find out what happened to Xedrix, the Charonte demon that was Apollymi's favorite. This story has good humor and to me, the flow of the story was similar to that of Dance With The Devil (fast-paced, full of action and hot sex). I couldn't put the book down and finally had to when I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore at 5:30AM!

If you like Dance With The Devil or Devil May Cry, you definitely want to read this book. The preview of Acheron's book at the end also makes you wish even more that Acheron's book was already available.
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Great for fans of the series!

I'm addicted to the Dark Hunter books and all the accompanying off-shoots. I don't feel like the latest books are stand alone novels, but are more like chapters in a saga. If you haven't read the other books in the series, do not start with this one. Begin at the beginning!

I loved the new character of Jaden and look forward to reading more about him in the future.

Dream Chaser did seem to end with less wrap up than usual (and less sex), but I did enjoy the twists in the end. I had figured other things out earlier in the story, but the ending did hold surprises!
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This is more like it

Still not perfect, but it's more of a story than recent past books. The characters had more depth and didn't whine as much as in recent books.

As another reviewer pointed out there was still something missing, the characters still were not that fleshed out. This is pretty much all the characters, secondary and primary. Though I had more of a sense as to the primaries, their past was more words than something that was actually felt and worked through. And working through does not mean to continually bring up the past, which was kept down to a minumum, but it was to be more consistent with what is being said, actions to words to thoughts.

There was one seen at the restaruant that the primaries seemingly come to an understanding on how similar their pain is and that they don't want to talk about it and then the next thing Simone is asking Xypher what happened? Despite this "ah what" which there are a few, the flow of the story is not lost, you just need to let it go and move forward.

All the secondary characters were more of a means to an end -- convenient. I don't really see why there would be a lasting friendshipt or connection between any of them, though there is a a making of all this. It's just light weight and these two can go off and disapear, but at the sametime they could be very good catalysts for future stories. I'd really like to see better connections and why the connections are there instead of just accepting that people will help.

I like the new character Jayden. I guess after Acheron is saved Jayden will take his place a bit to being a tourched anti-hero. I did like him and want to see more.

Anyway, this is a buy. It's got some nice heart.
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