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Strange Practice
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"Strange Practice" by Vivian Shaw (BR)
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It was time to replace the handbag, too. The leather on this one was holding up but the lining was beginning to go, and Greta had limited patience regarding retrieval of items from the mysterious dimension behind the lining itself.
If the writing continues like this, I think I'll be happy.

Hooray!
I'm listening to the audiobook and consulting the ebook for spellings of unusual names (surprisingly frequent so far). A couple of chapters in, and I like the warmth of Greta's supporting cast. I wonder what sort of creature Fastitocalon is--probably missing something there.




Oops, yep, she just checked get phone for texts.

I loved all the characters, the unique traits of each species, the dialogue, the description of places and all the little details. I liked that the author kept making references to Greta's hair. It was such a defining characteristic and it was done in a way that wasn't repetitive but helped me envision her. This was done with a few of the characters and it made the story really vivid.
The pacing was quick and kept me invested the entire time and I ADORED the writing. (It reminded me in a few small ways of Good Omens) The last book I read was really heavy, and this was just the most perfect light action and adventure story peppered with humor and delightful friendships.
I tend to highlight when a passage is meaningful or really just amuses me. I'll throw some of my favorites here. Not really spoilers, but behind tags just in case.
6% (view spoiler)
12%(view spoiler)
27%(view spoiler)
41%(view spoiler)
55%(view spoiler)
57%(view spoiler)
Okay. I think I'm done gushing for the moment. *goes away to hide after finishing another buddy read before it's even technically started.* oops :D

I'm on Ch. 6 or so. I really liked the scene around here where (view spoiler) So sweet and cozy! And I like the little group who is kind of gathering in his house.
I'm enjoying the sense of humor, too.

I am impatiently waiting for the sequel hold to come in, so I'll be delightedly checking in on what others think here. :)
The dynamics between the difference characters were so wonderful!

I like this book's sense of humor.
ETA Ch. 8 (I don't think any of this is specifically spoiler-y but I'll mark parts of it): Fastitocalon's discussion of the afterlife and the roles of (view spoiler) was interesting to me. The ghouls seem to be their own species, not a form of undead or whatever vampires might be, since there is a baby in the clan that Greta and Ruthven are helping out.

I particularly liked the deep, familial (NON-romantic) relationships Greta had with Fas and Ruthven.
I also loved how you get a feeling for what drives Greta as a physician, how she wants to help people that no one else wants to help.

I'm a little ways past the halfway point now, and I'm not too sold on the mystery, but if this isn't gonna be a romance--and it seems not to be going there--there has to be some sort of plot, so this'll do. I'm enjoying the fantasy-medicine and somewhat wish there was more of it!

I also don't know where Greta has been getting any of her meagre income from. It doesn't seem like any of her patients actually pay for services, unless it's in kind or barter, like with a bag of rats.
message 17:
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Allison, Fairy Mod-mother
(last edited Jun 21, 2019 12:24PM)
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rated it 3 stars
I think this book is very much on the "cozy mystery" side of things, which often has those blind spots, Marc! Definitely not for everyone--I know a lot of people like the "bang 'em up/shoot 'em up" action stories as their sort of fluffy reads. For me, the cozy is absolutely my "turn off brain, clap along" read.
But I'm still not halfway through, so we'll see if it keeps my interest!
I do agree with the italicized words. Her wife does it too. I have to think they converse like this and it's a fairly common thing for debut authors to feel they need to stress things more frequently than more experienced authors. I trust it's a quirk, not a style.
But I'm still not halfway through, so we'll see if it keeps my interest!
I do agree with the italicized words. Her wife does it too. I have to think they converse like this and it's a fairly common thing for debut authors to feel they need to stress things more frequently than more experienced authors. I trust it's a quirk, not a style.


I'm a couple hours from the end now and should be able to finish it on lunch breaks this week. The mystery is still kind of blah to me, but it's done well in showing us that Greta doesn't discriminate when it comes to medical care, even dealing with someone who'd otherwise be an enemy.
I really liked the quote from 55% that Kristin highlighted above.

On "cozy": when I think cozy, I think things turning out all right, and certainly not anywhere near this level of violence and death. So I guess it's more of a UF (unfortunately?).
Agreed on the pacing of the middle--it contributed to a feeling of languidness, and the audio narrator's somewhat flat narration made it something I could kind of peacefully vedge out to and not have to worry that I'd missed anything (there was also a decent amount of repetition). Looking at what I wrote there that doesn't sound very complimentary, but I did like it! Although I'm not sure if I'd have found it as soothing if I'd read it vs. listening. I have a copy of the ebook, so could try it in that format at some point.
On Ch. 15 specifically, it has the trope (view spoiler) I predicted the second part of that because (view spoiler) . If I hadn't just read another book with the exact same trope in it, I would have been more okay with that, probably.
Yeah, the drama of that was essentially nonexistent for me, I was more confused about Sam.
End of book: (view spoiler)
End of book: (view spoiler)

Speaking of the ending, there's yet another nit I could pick. Here and there, Greta makes moving speeches about how important her father's legacy is to her, and how she is dedicated to helping and caring for supernaturals in London. And those were great. (view spoiler)


I like the writing style a lot. There are enough fillips and frills to make the prose interesting and fun, but not so many to make it twee or overblown. The overuse of italics is distracting in this format, y'all were right about that.
The characterization's a bit flat, but the coziness makes up for that. The scenes in Ruthven's place where people are just discussing things over tea & brandy were some of my favorites in the book and I'm glad there are a lot of them. :)
The discussion is "scheduled" for Jun 17, but feel free to post whenever you like. Please use spoiler tags for any discussion of the book that goes beyond a basic "look and feel" from the first couple of chapters.
This should be a fun one. Enjoy!