Storm Front (Dresden Files)
Storm Front (Dresden Files) book cover

Storm Front (Dresden Files)

Mass Market Paperback – April 1, 2000

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Roc
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0451457813
Dimensions
4.19 x 0.96 x 7.5 inches
Weight
7.6 ounces

Description

Praise for the Dresden Files “Think Buffy the Vampire Slayer starring Philip Marlowe.”— Entertainment Weekly “Fans of Laurellxa0 K. Hamilton and Tanya Huff will love this series.”— Midwest Book Review “Superlative.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review) xa0 “One of the most enjoyable marriages of the fantasy and mystery genres on the shelves.”— Cinescape “Butcher...spins an excellent noirish detective yarn in a well-crafted, supernaturally-charged setting. The supporting cast is again fantastic, and Harry’s wit continues to fly in the face of a peril-fraught plot.”— Booklist (starred review) xa0 “What’s not to like about this series?...It takes the best elements of urban fantasy, mixes it with some good old-fashioned noir mystery, tosses in a dash of romance and a lot of high-octane action, shakes, stirs, and serves.”— SF Site “A tricky plot complete with against-the-clock pacing, firefights, explosions, and plenty of magic. Longtime series fans as well as newcomers drawn by the SciFi Channel’s TV series based on the novels should find this supernatural mystery a real winner.”— Library Journal “What would you get if you crossed Spenser with Merlin? Probably you would come up with someone very like Harry Dresden, wizard, tough guy and star of [the Dresden Files].”— The Washington Times A martial arts enthusiast whose résumé includes a long list of skills rendered obsolete at least two hundred years ago, #1 New York Times bestselling author Jim Butcher turned to writing as a career because anything else probably would have driven him insane. He lives mostly inside his own head so that he can write down the conversation of his imaginary friends, but his head can generally be found in Independence, Missouri. Jim is the author of the Dresden Files, the Codex Alera novels, and the Cinder Spires series, which began with The Aeronaut’s Windlass . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One I heard the mailman approach my office door, half an hour earlier than usual. He didn’t sound right. His footsteps fell more heavily, jauntily, and he whistled. A new guy. He whistled his way to my office door, then fell silent for a moment. Then he laughed. Then he knocked. I winced. My mail comes through the mail slot unless it’s registered. I get a really limited selection of registered mail, and it’s never good news. I got up out of my office chair and opened the door. The new mailman, who looked like a basketball with arms and legs and a sunburned, balding head, was chuckling at the sign on the door glass. He glanced at me and hooked a thumb toward the sign. “You’re kidding, right?” I read the sign (people change it occasionally), and shook my head. “No, I’m serious. Can I have my mail, please?” “So, uh. Like parties, shows, stuff like that?” He looked past me, as though he expected to see a white tiger, or possibly some skimpily clad assistants prancing around my one-room office. I sighed, not in the mood to get mocked again, and reached for the mail he held in his hand. “No, not like that. I don’t do parties.” He held on to it, his head tilted curiously. “So what? Some kinda fortune-teller? Cards and crystal balls and things?” “No,” I told him. “I’m not a psychic.” I tugged at the mail. He held on to it. “What are you, then?” “What’s the sign on the door say?” “It says ‘Harry Dresden. Wizard.’” “That’s me,” I confirmed. “An actual wizard?” he asked, grinning, as though I should let him in on the joke. “Spells and potions? Demons and incantations? Subtle and quick to anger?” “Not so subtle.” I jerked the mail out of his hand and looked pointedly at his clipboard. “Can I sign for my mail please?” The new mailman’s grin vanished, replaced with a scowl. He passed over the clipboard to let me sign for the mail (another late notice from my landlord), and said, “You’re a nut. That’s what you are.” He took his clipboard back, and said, “You have a nice day, sir.” I watched him go. “Typical,” I muttered, and shut the door. My name is Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. Conjure by it at your own risk. I’m a wizard. I work out of an office in midtown Chicago. As far as I know, I’m the only openly practicing professional wizard in the country. You can find me in the yellow pages, under “Wizards.” Believe it or not, I’m the only one there. My ad looks like this: HARRY DRESDEN—WIZARD LOST ITEMS FOUND. PARANORMAL INVESTIGATIONS. CONSULTING. ADVICE. REASONABLE RATES. NO LOVE POTIONS, ENDLESS PURSES, PARTIES, OR OTHER ENTERTAINMENT. You’d be surprised how many people call just to ask me if I’m serious. But then, if you’d seen the things I’d seen, if you knew half of what I knew, you’d wonder how anyone could not think I was serious. The end of the twentieth century and the dawn of the new millennium had seen something of a renaissance in the public awareness of the paranormal. Psychics, haunts, vampires—you name it. People still didn’t take them seriously, but all the things Science had promised us hadn’t come to pass. Disease was still a problem. Starvation was still a problem. Violence and crime and war were still problems. In spite of the advance of technology, things just hadn’t changed the way everyone had hoped and thought they would. Science, the largest religion of the twentieth century, had become somewhat tarnished by images of exploding space shuttles, crack babies, and a generation of complacent Americans who had allowed the television to raise their children. People were looking for something—I think they just didn’t know what. And even though they were once again starting to open their eyes to the world of magic and the arcane that had been with them all the while, they still thought I must be some kind of joke. Anyway, it had been a slow month. A slow pair of months, actually. My rent from February didn’t get paid until the tenth of March, and it was looking like it might be even longer until I got caught up for this month. My only job had been the previous week, when I’d gone down to Branson, Missouri, to investigate a country singer’s possibly haunted house. It hadn’t been. My client hadn’t been happy with that answer, and had been even less happy when I suggested he lay off of any intoxicating substances and try to get some exercise and sleep, and see if that didn’t help things more than an exorcism. I’d gotten travel expenses plus an hour’s pay, and gone away feeling I had done the honest, righteous, and impractical thing. I heard later that he’d hired a shyster psychic to come in and perform a ceremony with a lot of incense and black lights. Some people. I finished up my paperback and tossed it into the DONE box. There was a pile of read and discarded paperbacks in a cardboard box on one side of my desk, the spines bent and the pages mangled. I’m terribly hard on books. I was eyeing the pile of unread books, considering which to start next, given that I had no real work to do, when my phone rang. I stared at it in a somewhat surly fashion. We wizards are terrific at brooding. After the third ring, when I thought I wouldn’t sound a little too eager, I picked up the receiver and said, “Dresden.” “Oh. Is this, um, Harry Dresden? The, ah, wizard?” Her tone was apologetic, as though she were terribly afraid she would be insulting me. No, I thought. It’s Harry Dresden the, ah, lizard. Harry the wizard is one door down. It is the prerogative of wizards to be grumpy. It is not, however, the prerogative of freelance consultants who are late on their rent, so instead of saying something smart, I told the woman on the phone, “Yes, ma’am. How can I help you today?” “I, um,” she said. “I’m not sure. I’ve lost something, and I think maybe you could help me.” “Finding lost articles is a specialty,” I said. “What would I be looking for?” There was a nervous pause. “My husband,” she said. She had a voice that was a little hoarse, like that of a cheerleader who’d been working a long tournament, but had enough weight of years in it to place her as an adult. My eyebrows went up. “Ma’am, I’m not really a missing-persons specialist. Have you contacted the police or a private investigator?” “No,” she said, quickly. “No, they can’t. That is, I haven’t. Oh dear, this is all so complicated. Not something someone can talk about on the phone. I’m sorry to have taken up your time, Mr. Dresden.” “Hold on now,” I said quickly. “I’m sorry, you didn’t tell me your name.” There was that nervous pause again, as though she were checking a sheet of written notes before answering. “Call me Monica.” People who know diddly about wizards don’t like to give us their names. They’re convinced that if they give a wizard their name from their own lips it could be used against them. To be fair, they’re right. I had to be as polite and harmless as I could. She was about to hang up out of pure indecision, and I needed the job. I could probably turn hubby up, if I worked at it. “Okay, Monica,” I told her, trying to sound as melodious and friendly as I could. “If you feel your situation is of a sensitive nature, maybe you could come by my office and talk about it. If it turns out that I can help you best, I will, and if not, then I can direct you to someone I think can help you better.” I gritted my teeth and pretended I was smiling. “No charge.” It must have been the no charge that did it. She agreed to come right out to the office, and told me that she would be there in an hour. That put her estimated arrival at about two-thirty. Plenty of time to go out and get some lunch, then get back to the office to meet her. The phone rang again almost the instant I put it down, making me jump. I peered at it. I don’t trust electronics. Anything manufactured after the forties is suspect—and doesn’t seem to have much liking for me. You name it: cars, radios, telephones, TVs, VCRs—none of them seem to behave well for me. I don’t even like to use automatic pencils. I answered the phone with the same false cheer I had summoned up for Monica Husband-Missing. “This is Dresden, may I help you?” “Harry, I need you at the Madison in the next ten minutes. Can you be there?” The voice on the other end of the line was also a woman’s, cool, brisk, businesslike. “Why, Lieutenant Murphy,” I gushed, overflowing with saccharine, “it’s good to hear from you, too. It’s been so long. Oh, they’re fine, fine. And your family?” “Save it, Harry. I’ve got a couple of bodies here, and I need you to take a look around.” I sobered immediately. Karrin Murphy was the director of Special Investigations out of downtown Chicago, a de facto appointee of the Police Commissioner to investigate any crimes dubbed unusual. Vampire attacks, troll maraudings, and faery abductions of children didn’t fit in very neatly on a police report—but at the same time, people got attacked, infants got stolen, property was damaged or destroyed. And someone had to look into it. In Chicago, or pretty much anywhere in Chicagoland, that person was Karrin Murphy. I was her library of the supernatural on legs, and a paid consultant for the police department. But two bodies? Two deaths by means unknown? I hadn’t handled anything like that for her before. “Where are you?” I asked her. “Madison Hotel on Tenth, seventh floor.” “That’s only a fifteen-minute walk from my office,” I said. “So you can be here in fifteen minutes. Good.” “Um,” I said. I looked at the clock. Monica No-Last-Name would be here in a little more than forty-five minutes. “I’ve sort of got an appointment.” “Dresden, I’ve sort of got a pair of corpses with no leads and no suspects, and a killer walking around loose. Your appointment can wait.” My temper flared. It does that occasionally. “It can’t, actually,” I said. “But I’ll tell you what. I’ll stroll on over and take a look around, and be back here in time for it.” “Have you had lunch yet?” she asked. “What?” She repeated the question. “No,” I said. “Don’t.” There was a pause, and when she spoke again, there was a sort of greenish tone to her words. “It’s bad.” “How bad are we talking here, Murph?” Her voice softened, and that scared me more than any images of gore or violent death could have. Murphy was the original tough girl, and she prided herself on never showing weakness. “It’s bad, Harry. Please don’t take too long. Special Crimes is itching to get their fingers on this one, and I know you don’t like people to touch the scene before you can look around.” “I’m on the way,” I told her, already standing and pulling on my jacket. “Seventh floor,” she reminded me. “See you there.” “Okay.” I turned off the lights to my office, went out the door, and locked up behind me, frowning. I wasn’t sure how long it was going to take to investigate Murphy’s scene, and I didn’t want to miss out on speaking with Monica Ask-Me-No-Questions. So I opened the door again, got out a piece of paper and a thumbtack, and wrote: Out briefly. Back for appointment at 2:30. Dresden That done, I started down the stairs. I rarely use the elevator, even though I’m on the fifth floor. Like I said, I don’t trust machines. They’re always breaking down on me just when I need them. Besides which. If I were someone in this town using magic to kill people two at a time, and I didn’t want to get caught, I’d make sure that I removed the only practicing wizard the police department kept on retainer. I liked my odds on the stairwell a lot better than I did in the cramped confines of the elevator. Paranoid? Probably. But just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean that there isn’t an invisible demon about to eat your face. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In the first novel in the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling Dresden Files series, Harry Dresden’s investigation of a grisly double murder pulls him into the darkest depths of magical Chicago…
  • As a professional wizard, Harry Dresden knows firsthand that the “everyday” world is actually full of strange and magical things—and most of them don’t play well with humans. And those that do enjoy playing with humans far too much. He also knows he’s the best at what he does. Technically, he’s the
  • only
  • at what he does. But even though Harry is the only game in town, business—to put it mildly—stinks. So when the Chicago P.D. bring him in to consult on a double homicide committed with black magic, Harry's seeing dollar signs. But where there's black magic, there's a black mage behind it. And now that mage knows Harry's name...
  • “A great series—fast-paced, vividly realized and with a hero/narrator who’s excellent company.”—
  • Cinescape

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(8.2K)
★★★★
25%
(6.8K)
★★★
15%
(4.1K)
★★
7%
(1.9K)
23%
(6.3K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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The perfect mix of hardboiled and fantasy fiction

Take traditional hardboiled fiction, give it a mind bending preternatural twist and you have Storm Front, the first book in a new series with the potential to send author Jim Butcher to the top of the gumshoe sub-genre of horror/fantasy fiction.
Harry Dresden, the series' protagonist, is everything that's great about the hardboiled anti-hero, with a twist: He's a wizard trying to make a living working practical magic in a modern world that's foolishly rejected the supernatural in favor of science and technology. Part average guy, part renaissance man, Harry's got a dark side, a wicked sense of humor and a deeply rooted, personal code of honor that drives him to risk everything to fight the supernatural forces preying on his clients, an attitude that puts him at constant, dangerous odds with both the bad guys and the authorities alike.
In Storm Front, when a routine murder investigation turns out to be anything but routine, the police reluctantly turn to Harry for help. But a case that started as a way to pay the rent soon gets complicated for Harry when he's forced to cross paths with the Chicago mob and a mysterious figure known as the Shadowman, drawing Harry into a web of black magic and danger.
Already under the Doom of Damocles (a form of probation placed on him by the White Council who oversee the ethical use of magic in the world of the mundane) Harry himself falls under suspicion and is forced to risk execution to solve the mystery and stop the Shadowman, before the killer takes another victim.
Storm Front is a riveting, action packed roller coaster of a novel, a damn good mystery with compelling characters set in a rich alternate reality universe where anything can happen. There's a little something for just about everyone here from black magic and the Chicago mob to vampire madams, demons and the fey.
I enjoyed this novel immensely and am looking forward to the next in the series.
476 people found this helpful
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No amount of good mystery can redeem this book from its persistent ick factor.

As a mystery novel, this book was engaging– the mystery presented was well-written and cleverly revealed. But the writing disappointed me. Character development is scant (at points it read like badly written fan fiction), and the author indulges in lengthy descriptions of each female character's body and facial features and constant commentary on their attractiveness. Practically no appearance of a woman in the novel came without an evaluation of her sex appeal. Each woman fits neatly into a male fantasy trope (the secretly vulnerable "tough girl," the coquettish vamp, the victimized good wife, etc.) and ultimately needs to be rescued by the male protagonist. (YES, all of the women need rescuing! And NO, a woman never rescues a man.) No amount of good mystery writing can redeem this book from that persistent ick factor.
289 people found this helpful
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A tough introduction to The Dresden Files

With the fifteenth volume of Jim Butcher’s The Dresden Files series about to be released (just over a fortnight away as I write these words), I thought it was an appropriate time to reread the series. And to write a few words about it. I haven’t followed the series since its inception; I was finally persuaded to read the series a few years ago, and after reading part of Storm Front, I abandoned it and went to read something else. Two years ago, I finally sat down and read through the entire series and it’s a series I really enjoy.

Storm Front, on the other hand, is not a great introduction to the series. It isn’t actively bad, but neither did it grab me and say “This is a writer to watch!” What you have is a fairly standard mystery novel: two people have been murdered and Harry Dresden, Wizard for Hire, is brought in on the case.

The actual mystery is interesting and moderately well-handled. More interesting is the world-building on display. Harry is a pariah amongst Wizard-kind, due to something undisclosed that happened in his youth, and is watched over suspiciously by the Wizard Council. The world in general does not admit to the paranormal being real, and only two “normal” characters – a policewoman and a journalist – know that Harry is not a fraud. There are vampires, one of whom operates a brothel, and faeries.

However, these things are but lightly touched upon. The book feels moderately short – at 372 pages in the paperback edition, it isn’t really that short – but you only get glimpses of the world that Jim Butcher creates in the subsequent novels. More importantly, those glimpses are rarely engaging. For instance, the revelation of the true form of vampires feels thrown away; it’s incidental to the plot of the book. It’s just something creepy.

Perhaps most problematically, the characters didn’t engage. Harry Dresden reads as a person just getting by, lacking money and, more importantly, friends. Without those friends, there aren’t the interactions that the book really needs. Dresden will come out of his shell, but his shell makes this book a moderately tough read.

It doesn’t take that long for the series to really come alight, but Storm Front is much less than what comes later.
166 people found this helpful
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Useless Females book 1

Not bad but veeery sexist stereotype ‘sexy women’ tropes, and frankly-I can’t stand Murphy-the ‘tough girl with a soft heart’ (and obviously tiny but hot)... def a man writing about all the types of women he thinks guys want to have sex with. A Spice Girl lineup-something for everyone-but not really useful other than as sex objects or objects to be saved. The CONSTANT reiteration of what a ‘old fashioned guy’ and ‘nice guy’ he is it makes me shiver.
And the ‘strong woman’ character ends up being pathetic, useless, in need of saving also- but just blusters, bosses, comes to wrong conclusions and is generally awful-(but needs to be saved because she’s so stubborn she gets herself in danger)... exactly how a man would write a ‘strong woman’. /Eyeroll.
77 people found this helpful
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It Hurt to Read

The main character and story were intensely painful to follow, as the intention of the plot was to give the Mary Sue, or in this case Harry Sue, a backdrop to show how down and out he is, yet still emensely powerful. Most of what serves as back drop are obvious rips off other more popular book and tv series, which I wouldn't mind if the rips had been halfway decent ones.
I had to force myself to read the entire book, mostly because so many people had given it such high reviews, I kept thinking it had to get better, and there had to be something really good coming up that would make all the "ow!" "wince much!" moments worth the agony. Only there wasn't.
I thought it might just be me, so I flipped the book at a friend of mine, asked him to read some and tell me if he liked it. Maybe it was because I'm a girl that I found Harry to be a jerk. But it isn't a gender thing, as my guy friend pretty much said, "I can't stand this guy." And couldn't get more than a few pages in before he utterly refused to read any more.
I'll give the writer cred for following through and getting a full manuscript together, and getting it and the sequels published. Apparently some people like it, but I wonder if it's because it's good work, or because they all know each other on the same mailing list and want to boost another list member as much as they can.
I found it very irritating on more levels than I have the time and energy to go into, but the high points are that there isn't even an attempt at realistic portrayals of a policewoman (see major supporting character), women in general actually, and the story's movement depends mostly on out of the blue coincidences with no plot support, and a magic system that is senseless and dopey, as well there is also an overly smug feel of Harry Sue self indulgence to the over all work.
The writer is a great guy, well spoken, and I have only great respect for him as a person. Seen him on the mailing lists, and really enjoy his posts. I just can't stand his books. Other people seem to like it though, so my suggestion is to read a few chapters before actually buying the book. If you like it, great. If you don't, the precaution will save you cash you can spend on other books.
68 people found this helpful
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Great premise, slightly mishandled.

I know there are a lot of fans of this series, and I desperately wanted to be after I'd first heard of it. But after reading Storm Front, I just couldn't completely buy in. Part of it is that I didn't jibe with Butcher's writing style.

For starters, his female characters seem a bit two dimensional, as their only available reactions seem to be fear, anger, and horniness for Harry Dresden. Seriously, this guy is broke, wears a cowboy duster around present-day Chicago, advertises himself as a wizard detective, (and in one scene, reveals he doesn't even trim his nails), and these women are throwing themselves at him? What, were all the winos taken?

Then there's the setting - Chicago. I didn't feel like this was a "Chicago" story, nor a very noir story for that matter. There were noirish elements, but I felt like the story could have taken place in any city. I love the city of Chicago, and it feels like there's a much grittier, darker, gothic side to this setting that could have been injected into the story.

There are flashes of brilliance - his "hard drive" Bob, some of the action scenes, Harry's intriguing history, McAnally's Pub. But I found myself wishing for more as the story went on. It just felt too simple or too easy for a premise this awesome.

I don't know - I wanted to like this, but I just couldn't bring myself to do it. I was hoping for a grown-up Harry Potter (`cept with, you know, sex and stuff) that takes place in a rich, textured world full of whimsy and magic, but also populated with dark spirits and ancient evils. For me, Storm Front kind of fell short in all those departments. This wasn't a world I couldn't wait to slip back into.

I don't know whether or not the series would improve for me in the later books, but right now I just can't motivate myself to find out.
49 people found this helpful
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Wonderful! A Magical Mystery!

"Storm Front" by Jim Butcher is the first book in a promising new series that already has me hooked. Butcher has come up with a fun and entertaining idea, and has crafted likable characters that readers can root for. Harry Dresden is a wonderful creation and I look forward to many more adventures with him.
"Storm Front" introduces Harry Dresden, the only wizard in the Chicago phone book, who is currently having trouble making ends meet. You'd think that being the only "out" wizard in the country would mean Harry was in demand, but unfortunately, people in the 21st century would rather pretend those unsettling things that science can't explain aren't really there. Then Harry gets what he believes to be a stroke of luck - a woman whose husband has disappeared wants to hire Harry to find him AND his friend Lieutenant Karrin Murphy with Special Investigations in the Chicago PD calls Harry in to consult on a murder case. Two paying jobs in one day has Harry thinking that things are looking up, but in truth, Harry's trouble is only just beginning.
The murder scene Murphy shows to Harry has him feeling distinctly nervous. Someone very powerful has used Black Magic to murder two people in a violent and horrifying way, and the only way Harry can help Murphy is to figure out the spell the killer used. Not a good idea when Harry is already under the Doom of Damocles, a kind of magic probation, from the all-powerful White Council, whose job it is to ensure that those who abuse magic are dealt with swiftly and permanently. Morgan, the White Council representative monitoring Harry, would just love to nail him for messing with Black Magic.
And Morgan and the White Council aren't Harry's only problem. Gentleman Johnny Marcone, Chicago's top mob boss, warns Harry to keep his nose out of this case, which of course Harry can't do. Especially when he somehow becomes the top suspect in these Black Magic murders. Now Harry has to get to work fast and find the real wizard who is committing these atrocities, otherwise, Harry's not going to live to see another week!
Butcher crafts an original and compelling mystery, and readers will become utterly wrapped up in Harry's dilemma. In the course of his investigation, Harry runs into all kinds of supernatural beasties, including faeries, demons, vampires, and giant scorpions! Add in Harry's hilarious assistant, Bob, an air spirit with an overactive libido who lives in a human skull and just a dash of romance and you have the recipe for a wonderful and exciting read.
"Storm Front" is an amazingly good book considering that it is Jim Butcher's first. I became an instant fan of Butcher while reading this book, and intend to read the rest of the series very soon. "Storm Front" contains a suspenseful and well-written mystery, but at the same time, Harry Dresden has a wonderful self-depreciating sense of humour that got quite a few chuckles out of me. If you enjoy mysteries or fantasy writing of any kind, give "Storm Front" a try, you'll like it a lot!
48 people found this helpful
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A Very Good But Flawed First Book in the Series

This is a truly enjoyable novel, but had several of those annoying moments where you slap your forehead and rein in the impulse to scream, "What was he THINKING?"

The minor stuff first.

(1) At one point in the narrative, Butcher needs to arm Harry with a handgun. For reasons we won't go into, it needs to be revolver, and it needs to be small enough to drop into an overcoat pocket. He chooses a Smith & Wesson Chiefs Special. A sound choice. (I should mention I make my living testing and evaluating firearms, primarily handguns, and writing them up for gun magazines, as well as being a firearms instructor.) But he mentions, several times, this is a 6-shot revolver. He hasn't done his research well enough to know the Chiefs Special .38 holds five rounds, not six. Like I said, a minor point, but jarring for a specialist in the area.

(2) Harry's friend has been seriously injured. As the EMTs take her, Harry babbles out instructions on how to treat her, "She's got a puncture wound in the shoulder. You may need to put on a tourniquet." False. Speaking as a graduate of the EMT course, one of the basic rules of applying a tourniquet is that it may only be applied to arms or legs, i.e. you're placing a constricting band between the heart and the wound site. You can't do that with a wound to the torso. Again, a minor point but irritating to those who know something about the topic under discussion.

(3) And here's the biggie, the one that absolutely drove me nuts. Without giving away too much of the plot, let's just say there's a scene where Harry is examining a lake front house that belongs to a missing husband he's been hired to locate. He finds, on the house's lawn, an empty, bright red film canister. Later we learn this canister was left behind by a photographer sneakily taking pictures of an orgy occurring in an upstairs room. Later, for no discernible reason, Harry, in a depressed funk, wandering the streets, decides to break into a police secured murder scene and falls asleep on the floor of the murder room - a bedroom, lying by the bed in which the dead body was found. Why did he go to this room - even Harry says there's no good reason. Well, obviously it's because Butcher needs to get Harry there to move the story along. Because when Harry wakes up, he beholds, by the downward hanging edge of the bed's cover....a bright red film canister! And yes, inside it, it turns out, is the very roll of film that was taken at the lake house.

In order to believe this scene, we have to believe that (a) the photographer was so incompetent he arrived at the lake house in the dead of night, only then realized his camera was unloaded, while loading the camera on the lawn he dropped the film canister and just left it laying there. Okay, with a generous suspension of disbelief I can buy that part. (b) We have to believe that a police forensics team, investigating a murder scene in a bedroom, didn't happen to notice there was a roll of exposed film inside a bright red film canister laying by the bed in which the murder took place, and just left it laying there. Uh, no. The strings were showing in that one, the deus ex machina in full view.

So Butcher is weak in the area of research, and at times his plot depends on abolute impossibilities to move the story along. You ask me to believe in wizards and demons, I'm down with that. It's called magical realism. You ask me to believe a Chicago Police Department forensics team is so incompetent they overlooked something that had CLUE tattooed on it, didn't scoop that roll of film into an evidence bag and develop it at the first opportunity (hell, they didn't even take the bed covers for testing), that's not magical realism - that's impossible.

Still, for all that, believe it or not, I greatly enjoyed this book. For me, it's the character of Harry Dresden who carries the book. He's irresistibly good. I'll be reading the second book in this series shortly. The friend who loaned me the first book did say that, as the series progresses, Butcher's plotting skills improve over this first outing.
28 people found this helpful
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Hated this book: Harry is stupid and annoying

I was only able to finish this book because I was so annoyed that I had already wasted my time reading half of it. It's impossible to respect Harry because he just bumbles around, talking to himself and breaking electronics and thinking he's going to die. I think there must have been at least 5 times when he thought he was definitely going to die and then he'd randomly remember some random thing and woop he wouldn't die. Ugh. This was especially annoying when he was being chased by a demon in a thunderstorm and he kept whining about not having enough energy to fight the demon when 4 pages before, he had spent 1/2 a page talking about how much energy thunderstorms have. UGH. He is SO stupid. He was also had no other redeeming qualities. Also, he kept doing a lot of magic and getting tired out and at his limits but then he'd go around doing more magic. Why doesn't he have a realistic gauge of his energy levels? oh right, because he's STUPID. Do not read this book if you like the main character to be competent. Oh also, the other characters are flat and stupid too. Especially the White Council enforcer and the cop woman. I understand that Harry is supposed to be getting misunderstood even by the people whose side he's on (poor Harry!) but I don't think the way to do that is by making those people dumb as bricks and blindly antagonistic.

Also the magic system is boring.

Just because so many people like this I'm going to try reading one of the later books where supposedly Harry and Jim Butcher are more mature at their respective jobs. Maybe those will be okay. But this was terrible.
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Chauvinist pig...

I barely could make myself read this book. Actually, I didn't even read the ending. I'm so glad I didn't buy the book, but first got it from the library to check it out.

The initial premises were good: magic, wizards, vampires, mystery, paranormal activity, Nevernever, etc... However, the main character, Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden is too much of a Chauvinist pig to enjoy the story. He even refers to himself twice as one. Every female character in the book is introduced and refered to constantly in a demeaning and sexist way: the tough police lieutenant, Karrin Murphy, is to this guy the blond cheerleader. The list goes on: the reporter, Susan; the vampire, Bianca; the call girls, Jenny and Linda; the customer, Monica. The main character (maybe the author) has some sort of unrealized football dream, being rejected from his high school team, that keeps coming up as Harry Dresden tackles down bad guys over and over, and that gives meaning to this line in the book: "Less than one minute on the clock and no time-outs remaining for the quarterback." He also refers to himself as Batman at some point.

In any case, this book is awful. The story is predictable and too descriptive when you just want it to wrap up and end your suffering. Which by the way ended, when I put the book down before finish reading it.
26 people found this helpful