Unchained: Feathers and Fire Book 1
Unchained: Feathers and Fire Book 1 book cover

Unchained: Feathers and Fire Book 1

Price
$11.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
294
Publisher
Argento Publishing
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1947709003
Dimensions
6 x 0.74 x 9 inches
Weight
15.3 ounces

Description

" Kevin Hearne , Jim Butcher , K.F. Breene and now Shayne Silvers has been added to my favorite Urban Fantasy Authors list." - Michael Anderle, Amazon Bestselling Authorxa0" Best books I've read in thirty years.""His intense actions scenes let you see the fangs and claws , hear the gunshots , feel the magic , and smell the fear .""Shayne could write a grocery list on a dirty napkin and make it an international bestseller .""All the humor of Deadpool , all the magic of Harry Potter .""I went from crying my eyes out to laughing uncontrollably , repeatedly.""This HAS to be picked up by Netflix ."" Publishers who didn't snap up this series are missing out on a gold mine ."xa0"Everything you thought you knew about vampires , shifters , dragons , wizards , fairies and gods is flat wrong.""I usually see plot twists a mile away. Shayne has proven me wrong . Every time.""I am astounded as to how the author keeps the story fresh and exciting .""It's like the characters walked off the page , joined me at the bar, and bought me a drink.""Shayne deals literary crack , and I'm not ashamed to admit I'm addicted ." TEMPLE SHARED UNIVERSE : Feathers and Fire Series - Ongoing 1. Unchained - B073V4ZG762. Rage - B076DGK4T93. Whispers - B078Z2VRLK4. Savage - coming April 17, 2018 The Temple Chronicles - ongoing 1. Obsidian Son - B009NNHPIA2. Blood Debts - B0180YBIYY3. Grimm - B01L1CM1T84. Silver Tongue - B01N9CYNK45. Beast Master - B06XCRXVF26. Tiny Gods - B072M22BXT6.5 Daddy Duty - B077ZMX2W97. Wild Side - B07576D9M88. War Hammer - B077S4GN5C9. Nine Souls - B07B3FCTHN

Features & Highlights

  • SILVERS HAS SOLD OVER 500,000 BOOKS, AND IS A DRAGON AWARD NOMINATED AUTHOR
  • Meet Callie Penrose. Is she Heaven’s Devil, or Hell’s Angel?
  • Callie is a middle-class, Midwest American girl. And a wizard in training. She works for Roland, a member of the Vatican Shepherds – an elite group of twelve warrior priests who travel the world smiting whatever offends them or their Good Lord.
  • One problem. Callie isn’t a huge fan of churches… Not even a minor fan, really.
  • She trains with Roland only to learn how to use those strange magical powers inside her. And because Roland had once saved her and her friend from monsters in a dark alley.
  • But when a Heavenly spear enters an auction in Kansas City, and Roland is gravely wounded, Callie finds herself forced to step up as an interim Shepherd, and her first night on the job puts her in a bidding war against the infamous Nate Temple – the billionaire wizard from St. Louis. And when demons, shifter bears, vampires, and Nephilim attack the auction for the spear, Nate and Callie are forced to join teams, and one-time foes become hesitant allies.
  • Callie must learn where she stands as a wizard. Will she hide behind a man, or light Kansas City afire with a name of her own? And will she finally come to appreciate God? Or will the demons and monsters in the shadows take her for themselves?
  • Because Callie soon learns she isn’t
  • just
  • a wizard, and it was never just about the spear. Monsters have evidently been hunting Callie her entire life, and now, they’ve finally found her…
  • If you like Patricia Briggs, Ilona Andrews, Linsey Hall, K.F. Breene or Shannon Mayer, you will
  • LOVE
  • the first installment of the Feathers and Fire series.
  • Click or tap BUY NOW to jump into this high-octane world TODAY!
  • INTERVIEW WITH THE AUTHOR:
  • Q: So, what makes your writing so special?
  • A:
  • I wanted to write stories that mirrored the books I liked to read in my childhood. My top picks were usually urban fantasy, paranormal best sellers, and of course, books featuring your classic gritty, pulp-fiction heroes. Basically, anything with a lot of creepy crawly supernatural characters: mythical creatures, ancient heroes, super villains, and gods. You will find that my stories focus on the ancient myths, characters, and stories we all know, fear, and love. Then twist them up and toss them back like an empty beer can.
  • Q: What other books do you write?
  • A:
  • I also write the Amazon Bestselling Nate Temple Series that crosses over (if you're into that) with the Feathers and Fire Series.
  • Q: So, why should readers give your books a try?
  • A:
  • Because my writing is a present day thrill-ride that takes no prisoners. Dragons, Angels, Demons, Greek Legends, Wizards, werewolves, and a whole slew of other supernatural ‘Freaks’ abound in my stories. My books have hit the #1 bestsellers list on Kindle for Science Fiction and Fantasy dozens of times. The plots twist and turn until the last page, and my twisted sense of humor will have you laughing out loud at things you really shouldn’t be laughing at.Feathers and Fire Series eBook categories:
  • Dark Fantasy
  • Dark Fantasy
  • Supernatural Thriller
  • Supernatural Thriller
  • Witches & Wizards
  • Witches & Wizards
  • Urban Fantasy Thriller
  • Urban Fantasy Thriller
  • Supernatural Shifter
  • Supernatural Shifter
  • Angels & Demons
  • Angels & Demons
  • Science Fiction & Fantasy
  • Science Fiction & Fantasy
  • Paranormal and Urban Romance
  • Paranormal and Urban Romance
  • Supernatural Mystery and Suspense
  • Supernatural Mystery and Suspense
  • Vampires and Werewolves
  • Vampires and Werewolves
  • Scroll up and tap or click BUY NOW to jump face-first into this wild ride with demons, angels, shifters, and vampires TODAY!!

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.2K)
★★★★
25%
(977)
★★★
15%
(586)
★★
7%
(274)
23%
(899)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A 261 page advertisement for the Nate Temple series

A friend got me this book and told me to read it on a few conditions. I was not allowed to read the synopsis on the back or any online reviews.

When I asked if he could give me anything about what I was getting myself into he smirked and said,
"Shayne Silvers is a man of mystery and power, whose power is exceeded only by his mystery. In other words, a storyteller." Jeeeeezus.

So the usual warning, this review will be long and container spoilers.

The plot is that Callie Penrose is a wizard being trained by her mentor Roland. Roland works for the Vatican killing monsters, acquiring dangerous artifacts, preventing doomsday that sort of thing. We are introduced to this pair as they team up on
Callie's first real mission which is locating three pieces to the spear of Longinus before they fall into the hands of evildoers.

One thing I noticed right away is the writing isn't very good. Shayne Silvers has a habit of making Callie's inner monologue repeat/reiterate things to the reader.

In it's least offensive form it looks like this:
pg 8 - "I wanted to run. To just sit there. To do something. To do nothing. I didn't know what to do."

This type of laundry listing appears regularly in various degrees throughout the book, which destroys the flow and makes it a chore to read.
Silvers also enjoys contradicting himself. A prime example occurs on page 49 as Callie describes herself: "My black dress clung to me like oil had been poured down my shoulders. Falling into place as the contours of my body dictated. Not indecent, but leaving little to the imagination."

When clothing leaves little to the imagination, that's the definition of indecent. This also brings up another point, which is the author has no idea how to write a female character.

Callie describes herself as a thirty-something male private eye would describe a high-class escort,
but that's the least of her problems. Silvers seems to think a believable female character is a bipolar nut job. Callie is easily offended, quick to anger, slow to forgive, petulant, jealous, and has random emotional changes from chapter to chapter. She will talk about how experienced and professional she is one minute only to devolve into insecurity and self-loathing the next.

She has PTSD. Not from a vampire attack that occurred when she was a teenager but from, I kid you not, her mother abandoning her as a baby. The trauma of not feeling worthy of her mother's love causes her to freeze in the face of werewolves and vampires because you know that makes total sense.

Callie's radical mood swings aren't limited to how she views herself but also in her feelings toward male characters.

For instance, at the beginning of the book, she has an intense reverence for Roland. Referring to him at one point as her "titan of a mentor." By the end of the book, it's clear Roland's role is as the punchline for jokes spearheaded by Nate Temple or Callie.

In another instance, Callie meets a man named Johnathan at a bar, they go on a single date, and she seems to think the world of him. She then meets him again by chance at a grocery store and become furiously jealous seeing him chat up the female cashier and acts like a spoiled brat when he approaches her. He's not your boyfriend after one date!

The grocery store chapter ends with her getting into the sports car of the incredibly wealthy Nate Temple who mistakes Johnathan for a bagger, acts like a jerk, and dismissively tips him as he takes the groceries. Johnathan would be way more justified in any anger he had towards Callie for how she let Nate treat him than Callie is for her jealousy watching Johnathan have a pleasant conversation with another woman.

As Callie watches Johnathan angrily drive off on his motorcycle she points out to the reader that his motorcycle is a Ducati and that owning a Ducati means that he "has serious money." I have no idea why the author thought this was relevant information unless he wanted the reader to view Callie as a shallow gold digger.

I should point that I have not read a single Nate Temple book, and then I learned to my horror that Unchained is a crossover. The minute Nate Temple shows up Callie starts playing the sidekick in her own book. It becomes abundantly clear at this point that Silvers is using Unchained to advertise for his other series.

Nate Temple is by far the most egregious example of a Mary-Sue I've ever come across in a published work. I have expressed similar opinions toward Harry Dresden in my reviews of the Dresden Files, but Dresden has got nothing on Nate.

Nate is a handsome, powerful, billionaire playboy wizard who inherited his wealth from his parents. He's an arrogant jerk, but all the women want him, and all the men want to be him. Any time a character shows disdain toward Nate, it's very clear that they are just totes jealous of how
awesome he is.

You will find all members of "Team Callie" talking about Nate when he's not around as he quickly cements himself as the center of their world and intricate to the book's plot. The author benches Roland by having him decline Nate's offer to heal an
injury he suffered early in the book. This way Callie can spend her time with a young, wealthy hunk of a wizard instead of the doddering grandpa. I hope you like contrived romances.

Nate's presence creates friction between Callie and Roland causing her to distrust Roland; a man she's known for ten years while blindly believing in Nate who she just met yesterday. Her friend Claire who was a shy wallflower gains more confidence and starts flirting with men merely from being around the unshakable bravado of the great Nate Temple.
Even Callie's adoptive father who hates Nate at the beginning is singing the praises of "Master Temple" by the end.

Nate offers on multiple occasions to call in his crew to aid "Team Callie" in the quest for the spear. Callie refuses and puffs out her chest while going on a tirade about this being "her city" and sharing her
reasoning that if she doesn't make herself appear as a threat to the supernatural community, every monster in the city will be gunning for her after Nate leaves.

The problem is Nate's people are hilariously overpowered. Meaning the story would be over in two chapters if Callie accepted their help. But spouting off faux feminist slogans rather than getting help from a man makes Callie look
like she cares more about her reputation than the safety of the world. This completely removes any tension the reader might have regarding the protagonist's chances of success and makes it plain as day that the good guys are going to win. Boring.

Silvers makes sure his golden boy is the picture of professionalism next to Callie, as there are moments I wonder if she can tie her shoes properly.
I understand she's supposed to be the noob while Nate is the veteran, but she's been training for ten years. The kinds of blunders she makes should have gotten her killed within the first few chapters. The Nate/Callie combo is a terrible team-up with Callie only being around to make Nate look good, and become infatuated with him. Good team-ups are characters who complement each other in either personality or ability. Deadpool and Wolverine (buffoon and straight man) Batman and Superman (brains and brawn). Each character brings something to the table, and it's exciting and enjoyable watching them interact with each other.

Nate Temple brings everything to the table while Callie only brings her baggage and neurosis.
Nate's got more money and connections. He's got more skill than both the protagonist and her mentor. He does the mission recon without her. He protects her friends and family. He provides transportation via shadow-walking. He relishes battle, and tangles with were-creatures while she stands there wetting herself because her mommy never loved her. It's nauseating how much the author is in love with this douchebag wizard.

Silvers spends the end of the book severely backpedaling trying to make up for the damage he's done to Callie's character. So she predictably gains a butt load of confidence (thanks to Nate) and has a PTSD breakthrough from 10 minutes of meditating in her car. She then acquires a massive amount of magical ability, learns about her past and destiny, and single-handedly defeats the "big bad" thanks to Nate conveniently having to leave to take care something in St. Louis. All of which takes place in the last fifty to sixty pages of the book.

Unchained is an urban fantasy novel suffering from below average writing, a badly written unrealistic main character, and Nate Temple. Temple's presence not only steals the spotlight from Callie but makes the book after his introduction feel like I'm reading a Nate Temple fanfiction.

Callie Penrose needs a massive overhaul just to become a decent character and I will not be
reading book 2 to find out if that happens.
349 people found this helpful
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Shane Silvers is awesome!!

Shane Silvers is a master wordsmith!! I enjoyed this book as I have all his other books!!
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A good read

A good read
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Couldn't put the book down...

Really enjoyed Shayne's Nate Temple series and I'm so glad I tried this one. Callie is an excellent addition to the wonderful cast of characters :) Fun, fast moving, I love it :)
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Want more!

Can't wait to see more of Calli.
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Three Stars

Book was good but I liked
Nate Temple series better