GtPGKogPYT4p61R1biicqBXsUzo" /> Google+ I Smell Sheep: Hailey Edwards
Showing posts with label Hailey Edwards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hailey Edwards. Show all posts

Thursday, January 18, 2024

Book Review: Gray Days (Black Hat Bureau - Book 9) by Hailey Edwards

Gray Days (Black Hat Bureau - Book 9)
by Hailey Edwards
Sept 21, 2023
Pages: 320
The Black Hat compound is rubble on the ocean floor, the director hasn’t been seen since the explosion that demolished his life’s work, and old enemies have decided it’s open season on the remaining agents. Oh. And Arden has decided now is a great time for a surprise visit to force a confrontation with Rue.

Between holding the Bureau together, searching for her grandfather, and babysitting Arden, Rue has her work cut out for her. But her distraction allows her to be blindsided by a loss that fractures her very soul. Betrayal is a familiar sting for Rue, she barely feels it anymore, but this time? She might not survive it.

Amazon

This might be my favorite book in the series yet! One, there are quite a few surprises which I always appreciate; two, Arden has reappeared which I was happy about and finally it’s just the team itself including some of the new additions that I just love.

Rue’s head is about to explode with all the different directions she’s being pulled in not to mention trying to keep the grimoire from taking her over and turning her back into a black witch. Even though Rue doesn’t want to admit it, she has empathy for most people and paras and would make the perfect candidate to turn the Black Hat Bureau around. Arden has decided to show up and immerse herself in all things Rue, which Rue is happy about but scared at the same time because she doesn’t want anything to happen to her young friend. One of the biggest things on Rue’s mind that she can’t quite shake is Aeden, there has to be a way to save him without being in breach of contract and she might just be able to do it.

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
 
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
USA Today best-selling author Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy.

Monday, January 15, 2024

Book Review: Gray Seas (Black Hat Bureau - Book 8) by Hailey Edwards

Gray Seas (Black Hat Bureau - Book 8)
by Hailey Edwards
June 27, 2023
Pages: 246
After the challenge for the throne of Hael went sideways, Rue expected Stavros to place a bounty on Asa’s head, but she didn’t expect him to pin an even bigger target on her back. Then again, it was her fault he was forced to turn tail and run from the fight during a live broadcast to the entire kingdom. That had to sting his pride. Life would have been so much simpler if only he had been incinerated by her magic along with the rest of the arena.

But simple is one thing Rue’s life has never been. And things keep getting more complicated when a stalker turns to murder, carving messages into the bodies of his victims. With a killer on her trail, she ought to be focused on staying alive, but a hot tip on another case leads her into the bowels of the Black Hat compound, where Rue discovers a world of secrets and lies that just might bring the Bureau crashing to its knees.

Rue’s love for Asa literally blew up the challenge between Asa (as Blay) and Stavros which she figured would put a price on Asa head but instead it put a huge target on Rue’s back (like she doesn’t have enough of those already). Rue comes up with a plan to hopefully take Stavros out of the equation and prays it works for both of their sakes. To complicate matters someone is sending Rue’s messages by carving into the victim’s bodies plus it seems someone else is also trying to kill her.

Through the series, we’ve seen Rue grow as a gray witch and the empathy she now has for others is something that still surprises her and her fellow agents. She is trying really hard to keep up her bad girl image so those within the Black Hat Bureau don’t realize she is no longer a black witch but that’s easier said then done. Rue’s team is just a lot of fun. You’ve got Blay (Asa’s beast) who is like a little kid in a daemon body, Clay might be a golem who can be controlled but is the king of fun and then there’s Colby, the person who Rue cares more about in the whole world than anything, is full of love, sassiness and brains making this rag tag team one you would want to partner with anytime. 

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
 
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
USA Today best-selling author Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Book Review: Gray Court (Black Hat Bureau - Book 7) by Hailey Edwards

Gray Court (Black Hat Bureau - Book 7)
by Hailey Edwards
March 19, 2023
Pages: 242
After wiping out an entire black witch coven on the shores of Lake Pontchartrain, Rue can no longer afford to have a laissez-faire attitude toward the Maudit Grimoire. Its black magic is infecting her, and it’s leaking into her familiar bond with Colby, poisoning the loinnir with its thirst for violence.

A trip to the fae realm ought to be just the ticket, but any hope for a quick fix dies when a message arrives from High Priestess Naeema. Her daughter has gone missing, and she expects Rue to find her. As much as Rue wants to help Naeema, can she afford to put off disposing of the cunning book yet again?

Amazon

The Maudit Grimoire has been nothing but a pain in Rue’s butt and after she wiped out an entire coven of black witches at Lake Pontchartrain, she figures it’s time to figure out what to do about it. She figures if she can hop on over to the fae realm she could take care of it, no problem but as usual there’s always something to get in her way of fixing her own life. Callula, Asa’s mother, has gone missing and the assumed culprit is his father but when no one can find her, Rue can’t imagine where she could possibly be hiding that has kept her from everyone.

This book in the series starts a new chapter in Rue’s life so to speak and she can’t begin to imagine all the ways it could possibly go wrong. The list is so long she might need a decade just to read it. As Rue and Asa’s fascination with each other grows, Rue is finally accepting how much she loves him and will stop at nothing to keep him safe.

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
 
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
USA Today best-selling author Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Book Review: Gray Tidings (Black Hat Bureau - Book 6) by Hailey Edwards

Gray Tidings (Black Hat Bureau - Book 6)
by Hailey Edwards
Oct 18, 2022
Pages: 268
Black Hat Bureau, Book 6

Corpses are vanishing from New Orleans morgues, there’s talk of a sea monster in Lake Pontchartrain, and Hiram Nádasdy is turning the French Quarter upside down in search of a witch with the power to bring the dead back to life.

When the director assigns Rue the case, she suspects he’s sending her hunting all right. For her father, not the creature. Too bad she’s got her hands full with dueling covens, drunk revelers, and a whole lot of pool noodles. Oh. And it’s Mardi Gras. Of course it is. But as the locals say, laissez les bons temps rouler.

Amazon

Rue is now the Deputy Director of the Black Hat Bureau, and she is less than thrilled about her new position. The director assigns her a case that takes her and her team to New Orleans to investigate a sea monster and missing corpses from the morgues around the city. To top it off, the girls will also be in New Orleans at the same time for Mardi Gras which is causing Rue’s two worlds to collide and she’s not sure she can handle it.

The characters in this series are so much fun! I’m not sure I can pick a favorite. Clay has a flair for wigs, food and general fun which makes him the one to put a smile on your face. Then there’s Colby, she is smart, sweet yet still full of spit fire. Asa seems handsome and mysterious, which fans the heat between him and Rue. Once again, Edwards has a home run with this book and series.  

Review: Black Hat, White Witch (Black Hat Bureau - Book 1) 


Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
 
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
USA Today best-selling author Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Book Review: Gray Witch (Black Hat Bureau Book 5) by Hailey Edwards

Gray Witch (Black Hat Bureau Book 5)
by Hailey Edwards
July 16, 2022
Pages: 282
Famous monsters are resurrecting across Mississippi, each one recreating their own gruesome deaths through new victims. Every time Rue pins down one horror legend, another appears with its own bloodthirsty agenda. The summoners raising these vengeful spirits save their best for last, a cruel gift that shatters Rue. But she’s not the only one whose heart gets broken.

Once her father realizes what the summoners have done, who they’ve awakened, there is nowhere they can hide where he can’t find them. After this final betrayal, there are no limits on how far he’s willing to go to bring down Black Hat, the director, and anyone else who gets in his way.

Including his own daughter.


It’s hard enough killing monsters once let alone multiple times. Someone is resurrecting monsters all over the place which has Rue and her team hopping from one scene to another. As quick as the monsters are being raised, Rue is wondering who and how it is happening so quickly. One of the resurrections shatters both Rue and her father and there is no place to hide from Rue’s father when he decides he’s willing to do anything for his revenge against Black Hat, the director and anyone else who blocks him from his end goals.

Rue’s goal is to keep her team as well as Colby safe, but she feels that around every corner someone or something wants to stop her from reaching that goal and this time is no different. As she puts the pieces together of who is actually the puppet master in this bizarre monster resurrection plan. One thing that she knows for sure, she is in love with Asa no matter what happens with his or her family. This book had a lot of great surprises, so you don’t want to miss out!

Review: Black Hat, White Witch (Black Hat Bureau - Book 1)
Review: Black Arts, White Craft (Black Hat Bureau - Book 2)
Review: Black Truth, White Lies (Black Hat Bureau - Book 3)

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
I was one year old when the movie The Dark Crystal hit theaters. I was five when Labyrinth was released. Other favorites of mine include The Last Unicorn, The Hobbit, Flight of Dragons, and Nausicaa. Those are the movies and cartoons that shaped my childhood. I watched them until my parents begged me to stop, and then I waited until they left the room before I hit play one last time.

The movies, the stories, were pure fantasy. I didn’t realize as a small child that those worlds were impossible to visit. I just assumed I hadn’t found my way in yet. I wanted to pet a unicorn. Heck, I wanted to ride one. I wanted a chance to snatch a dragon’s scale and learn what magic it held. I wanted my own sword, which resulted in my parents installing a lock on the silverware drawer. Something about thou shalt not skewer thy baby brother…

I also had a huge crush on Jareth, the Goblin King from Labyrinth. My parents discouraged this obsession as well. Something about thou shalt not bargain away thy baby brother in exchange for a hot boyfriend…

I know what you’re thinking—my parents never let me have any fun. Okay, and that maybe I had an unhealthy fascination with all the ways I could rid myself of my annoying little brother.

But the truth is, those movies kick-started my imagination, and my love of all things fantasy. So it’s strange to think, looking back, that I fell into reading crime and mystery instead of fantasy or paranormal novels. It wasn’t until a few years ago that I stumbled across Darkfever by Karen Moning and became hooked on urban fantasy. From there, I rediscovered my love for the fantasy genre and all its enticing new subgenres.

I gobbled up paranormal romances—J.R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood, Kresley Cole’s Immortals After Dark, and Gena Showalter’s Lords of the Underworld. I devoured all flavors of urban fantasy from Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files to Patricia Briggs’s Mercy Thompson series.

Really, it wasn’t until after I read Darkfever that I got that tickle in the back of my mind that maybe I could write a book. All those years of reading crime and mystery, and the thought had never occurred to me. But after glutting on fantasy and paranormal romance, I began having ideas for my own worlds and characters. It was so unexpected I didn’t know what to do.

So I sat down. And I started writing.

Six years later, here I am. I still write fantasy and paranormal stories. I still read them too.

I have been told my tastes are limited, but there I must disagree. My tastes are specific, yes, I will admit that. But no other genre has as much variety as fantasy. No other genres encompass witches, vampires, wizards, demons, werewolves, angels, gods and goddesses, creatures of myth and folklore, humans, mermaids, mermen, and every other creature you ever promised your little brother lurked under his bed.

Not that I ever told him monsters were waiting for him to use the bathroom so they could grab him and drag him into their underground lair, because that would be wrong. What? Okay, so maybe I hinted at monsters. A little. And okay, one time I hid under his bed and grabbed his ankles then giggled like a loon while he screamed.

I couldn’t sit down for a week after Mom caught me.

I feel I should add here that my parents had no sense of humor. But I’m happy to report they have much improved since I hit my thirties and stopped tormenting my brother…for the most part. I think giving them a granddaughter probably helped too.

I’m sure you can guess what my daughter’s favorite genre is. Yep. Fantasy.

I guess some things really do run in the family.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Friday, June 24, 2022

Book Review: Black Wings, Gray Skies (Black Hat Bureau - Book 4) by Hailey Edwards

by Hailey Edwards
April 16, 2022
Pages: 259
Black Hat Bureau, Book 3
Monsters with a taste for children are nothing new, but fairy tales never mentioned this nightmarish predator. Rue has her hands full tracking the creature hunting the streets of Charleston, but a call from home divides her attention—and her loyalties.

A stranger has come to Hollis Apothecary, asking questions that prickle the hairs on her nape, but she can’t abandon the victims based only on a bad feeling. The pit in her stomach only grows when the stranger takes a hostage and makes his demands. He wants to talk to Rue, face to face. Or else. What he has to say will change her life, and her perception of her past, forever.


One thing that can be said about Rue is that her life is never boring. Something supernatural is taking kids in Charleston and Rue’s team is called in to hunt the creature killing kids and put it down. Rue takes the safety of all of her team both with Black Hat and at open very seriously and her attention is split when she gets a call from the shop that stranger has been asking questions and looking for her.

Rue has a hard time accepting help and feels that it’s her mission in life to take responsibility for those in need, especially Colby. While in Charleston hunting monsters something strange starts happening, and Rue is determined to get to the bottom of it because safety for her family comes first. The more time Rue and Asa spend together the harder it is to hide the fact that she is in love with him and no matter how hard she tries to run from it she just can’t. The rag tag team of Rue, Asa, Clay and Colby warms my heart and I look forward to seeing where this group ends up when it’s all said and done.

Review: Black Hat, White Witch (Black Hat Bureau - Book 1)
Review: Black Arts, White Craft (Black Hat Bureau - Book 2)
Review: Black Truth, White Lies (Black Hat Bureau - Book 3)

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
I was one year old when the movie The Dark Crystal hit theaters. I was five when Labyrinth was released. Other favorites of mine include The Last Unicorn, The Hobbit, Flight of Dragons, and Nausicaa. Those are the movies and cartoons that shaped my childhood. I watched them until my parents begged me to stop, and then I waited until they left the room before I hit play one last time.

The movies, the stories, were pure fantasy. I didn’t realize as a small child that those worlds were impossible to visit. I just assumed I hadn’t found my way in yet. I wanted to pet a unicorn. Heck, I wanted to ride one. I wanted a chance to snatch a dragon’s scale and learn what magic it held. I wanted my own sword, which resulted in my parents installing a lock on the silverware drawer. Something about thou shalt not skewer thy baby brother…

I also had a huge crush on Jareth, the Goblin King from Labyrinth. My parents discouraged this obsession as well. Something about thou shalt not bargain away thy baby brother in exchange for a hot boyfriend…

I know what you’re thinking—my parents never let me have any fun. Okay, and that maybe I had an unhealthy fascination with all the ways I could rid myself of my annoying little brother.

But the truth is, those movies kick-started my imagination, and my love of all things fantasy. So it’s strange to think, looking back, that I fell into reading crime and mystery instead of fantasy or paranormal novels. It wasn’t until a few years ago that I stumbled across Darkfever by Karen Moning and became hooked on urban fantasy. From there, I rediscovered my love for the fantasy genre and all its enticing new subgenres.

I gobbled up paranormal romances—J.R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood, Kresley Cole’s Immortals After Dark, and Gena Showalter’s Lords of the Underworld. I devoured all flavors of urban fantasy from Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files to Patricia Briggs’s Mercy Thompson series.

Really, it wasn’t until after I read Darkfever that I got that tickle in the back of my mind that maybe I could write a book. All those years of reading crime and mystery, and the thought had never occurred to me. But after glutting on fantasy and paranormal romance, I began having ideas for my own worlds and characters. It was so unexpected I didn’t know what to do.

So I sat down. And I started writing.

Six years later, here I am. I still write fantasy and paranormal stories. I still read them too.

I have been told my tastes are limited, but there I must disagree. My tastes are specific, yes, I will admit that. But no other genre has as much variety as fantasy. No other genres encompass witches, vampires, wizards, demons, werewolves, angels, gods and goddesses, creatures of myth and folklore, humans, mermaids, mermen, and every other creature you ever promised your little brother lurked under his bed.

Not that I ever told him monsters were waiting for him to use the bathroom so they could grab him and drag him into their underground lair, because that would be wrong. What? Okay, so maybe I hinted at monsters. A little. And okay, one time I hid under his bed and grabbed his ankles then giggled like a loon while he screamed.

I couldn’t sit down for a week after Mom caught me.

I feel I should add here that my parents had no sense of humor. But I’m happy to report they have much improved since I hit my thirties and stopped tormenting my brother…for the most part. I think giving them a granddaughter probably helped too.

I’m sure you can guess what my daughter’s favorite genre is. Yep. Fantasy.

I guess some things really do run in the family.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Book Review: Black Truth, White Lies (Black Hat Bureau - Book 3) by Hailey Edwards

Black Truth, White Lies (Black Hat Bureau - Book 3)
by Hailey Edwards
December 7, 2021
Pages: 272
When one of Santa’s reindeer meets a grisly end during the annual A Downtown Dickens Christmas Festival, Rue realizes her enemies are closing in on her location, and Samford will pay the price.

But when one creature turns into two, and two into three, and then three into four, Rue knows the problem is bigger than a singular threat to her new hometown. And that’s before a holiday shopper strolls into Hollis Apothecary claiming to be a long-lost relative. Of her father’s.

As old loyalties are tested and new relationships threaten to unravel the fabric of her identity, Rue must choose either the family she was born into or the one she created for herself, and the losing side might not survive her decision.


As the annual A Downtown Dickens Christmas Festival is in full swing, one of Santa’s reindeer gets murdered in a most grisly way causing Rue to realize that her enemies may have found her and she’s worried that her town will pay the price. As more creatures start showing up in Samford and the surrounding town, Rue has to figure out where they are coming from and why they are here.

Rue may have started out as a black witch, but with her loyalty to Colby, she has been slowly transitioning to a white witch. She hopes that her enemies stay far away and that they do not realize that she has switched her loyalties because that makes the target on her back bigger than ever.

Before Rue even realized that she had done it, she had put together her one little family with Colby, Clay, Asa, the girls at the shop, and now a new one has been added to her growing group. Her connections with each of these people are something to be admired, and I love the growing fascination with her and Asa/Daemon.

Review: Black Hat, White Witch (Black Hat Bureau - Book 1)
Review: Black Arts, White Craft (Black Hat Bureau - Book 2)

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
I was one year old when the movie The Dark Crystal hit theaters. I was five when Labyrinth was released. Other favorites of mine include The Last Unicorn, The Hobbit, Flight of Dragons, and Nausicaa. Those are the movies and cartoons that shaped my childhood. I watched them until my parents begged me to stop, and then I waited until they left the room before I hit play one last time.

The movies, the stories, were pure fantasy. I didn’t realize as a small child that those worlds were impossible to visit. I just assumed I hadn’t found my way in yet. I wanted to pet a unicorn. Heck, I wanted to ride one. I wanted a chance to snatch a dragon’s scale and learn what magic it held. I wanted my own sword, which resulted in my parents installing a lock on the silverware drawer. Something about thou shalt not skewer thy baby brother…

I also had a huge crush on Jareth, the Goblin King from Labyrinth. My parents discouraged this obsession as well. Something about thou shalt not bargain away thy baby brother in exchange for a hot boyfriend…

I know what you’re thinking—my parents never let me have any fun. Okay, and that maybe I had an unhealthy fascination with all the ways I could rid myself of my annoying little brother.

But the truth is, those movies kick-started my imagination, and my love of all things fantasy. So it’s strange to think, looking back, that I fell into reading crime and mystery instead of fantasy or paranormal novels. It wasn’t until a few years ago that I stumbled across Darkfever by Karen Moning and became hooked on urban fantasy. From there, I rediscovered my love for the fantasy genre and all its enticing new subgenres.

I gobbled up paranormal romances—J.R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood, Kresley Cole’s Immortals After Dark, and Gena Showalter’s Lords of the Underworld. I devoured all flavors of urban fantasy from Jim Butcher’s Dresden Files to Patricia Briggs’s Mercy Thompson series.

Really, it wasn’t until after I read Darkfever that I got that tickle in the back of my mind that maybe I could write a book. All those years of reading crime and mystery, and the thought had never occurred to me. But after glutting on fantasy and paranormal romance, I began having ideas for my own worlds and characters. It was so unexpected I didn’t know what to do.

So I sat down. And I started writing.

Six years later, here I am. I still write fantasy and paranormal stories. I still read them too.

I have been told my tastes are limited, but there I must disagree. My tastes are specific, yes, I will admit that. But no other genre has as much variety as fantasy. No other genres encompass witches, vampires, wizards, demons, werewolves, angels, gods and goddesses, creatures of myth and folklore, humans, mermaids, mermen, and every other creature you ever promised your little brother lurked under his bed.

Not that I ever told him monsters were waiting for him to use the bathroom so they could grab him and drag him into their underground lair, because that would be wrong. What? Okay, so maybe I hinted at monsters. A little. And okay, one time I hid under his bed and grabbed his ankles then giggled like a loon while he screamed.

I couldn’t sit down for a week after Mom caught me.

I feel I should add here that my parents had no sense of humor. But I’m happy to report they have much improved since I hit my thirties and stopped tormenting my brother…for the most part. I think giving them a granddaughter probably helped too.

I’m sure you can guess what my daughter’s favorite genre is. Yep. Fantasy.

I guess some things really do run in the family.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Book Review: Moment of Truth (The Potentate of Atlanta Book 5) by Hailey Edwards

Moment of Truth (The Potentate of Atlanta Book 5)
by Hailey Edwards
January 19, 2021
Pages: 286
Witches are marching down the streets, shifters are prowling the night, and portals to Faerie are popping up all over downtown.

Hadley has one chance to save Atlanta, but it means trusting her dark side to get it done.

The city will survive. She'll see to that. But will her soul?




The witches are filling up the streets of Atlanta in a fight to take back someone that they believe is theirs and to take over Atlanta at the same time. The shifters are patrolling the streets and one thing after another keeps popping up causing Hadley to do what must be done to protect her city and to protect all those that she loves. On top of it all, portals to Faerie keep popping up all over town and that’s a problem in itself.

Hadley is the type of character that you can’t help but root for. She is constantly trying to atone for her past life and has yet to realize that those around her feel that she has already changed to the person she wants to be. “I Am Enough” is a mantra that Hadley keeps repeating over and over to herself hoping that one day it would be true.



Getting 5 sheep





Denise B

About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy. She lives in Alabama with her husband, their daughter, and a herd of dachshunds.



Friday, October 15, 2021

Book Review: Proof of Life (The Potentate of Atlanta Book 4) by Hailey Edwards

Proof of Life (The Potentate of Atlanta Book 4)
by Hailey Edwards
October 31, 2020
Pages: 294
Hadley owes a wicked fae seven beating hearts, Boaz and Addie are coming for a visit, and her city is going up in magical flames.

Betrayal and heartbreak. Chocolate and sentient shadows.

Just another night in Atlanta.

Hadley is still trying to retrieve seven beating hearts from the witch coven to fulfill a deal she made with a nasty fae which isn’t the easiest task in the world, not to mention Hadley needs to figure out what the fae wants the hearts. What Hadley uncovers makes her uneasy, and she hopes that she can find a way to fulfill the deal without handing over the keys to more trouble. On top of it all, Boaz and Addie are coming to visit her, and she’s excited but nervous about the visit but also dreads the company they will be bringing with them.

Hadley has done an excellent job at redeeming herself, and no matter how terrible she is treated by some who know who she really is, she keeps her head held high and continues to do her job, which at the moment is to stop the magical fires that keep popping up all over the city.

Some major twists in book 4 of the Potentate of Atlanta shocked and left me speechless!


Getting 5 sheep





Denise B

About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy. She lives in Alabama with her husband, their daughter, and a herd of dachshunds.

Friday, October 1, 2021

Book Review: Black Arts, White Craft (Black Hat Bureau - Book 2) by Hailey Edwards

Black Arts, White Craft (Black Hat Bureau - Book 2)
by Hailey Edwards
September 1, 2021
Pages: 256
After a black witch pitched a hissy fit in Hollis Apothecary, Rue got stuck cleaning up his mess. That was the easy part. Repairing the damage he inflicted on Camber and Arden? That makes Rue wish she could bring him back to life just to kill him again. Slower this time.

While Rue is setting her new life back to rights, Clay and Asa are off working a case, but it soon becomes clear that they’ll need her help to catch the vicious creature preying on locals in a small Tennessee town. She’s got her hands full at home, but Rue has no choice. She must report for duty to honor her agreement with the director. Or else.

What she discovers leads her deeper down the rabbit hole of Black Hat Bureau corruption and promises that, no matter how grim the past few weeks have been, the worst is yet to come.


Rue and her two employees, Camber and Arden, have been spending time cleaning up and rebuilding Hollis Apothecary after a black witch destroyed the store. Rue is worried about the mental health of her employees as she feels she’s to blame for bringing this upon them, but both girls are insistent they are fine, and Rue is doing all she can to makes sure they are.

Clay and Asa have been working a case that soon draws her in to help catch the creature killing people in a small Tennessee town. She has so much going on at home that she really doesn’t want to go but has to honor the agreement she made with the Black Hat Bureau for her and Colby’s safety.

The more time that Rue and Asa spend together, the weirder it gets. Slowly, Rue is finding out all the rules involved with Asa and his daemon half, but instead of sending her running, it brings them closer together. It’s almost like they’re fated to be together. Clay and Colby start developing a bond that makes you smile each time one of them helps the other.

I really like this new series Edwards is writing. It’s fun, passionate, and has lots of monsters to learn more about.

Review: Black Hat, White Witch (Black Hat Bureau - Book 1)

Getting 5 sheep





Denise B
About the Author:
website-FB-twitter
Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy. She lives in Alabama with her husband, their daughter, and a herd of dachshunds.