A Stroke of Midnight
by Laurell K. Hamilton
Ballantine Books
April 1, 2005
ISBN #0345443578
384 pages
Paperback
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Other Books by
Laurell K. Hamilton

Blue Moon

Bloody Bones

Blood Noir

The Harlequin

The Lunatic Cafe

Burnt Offerings

A Lick of Frost

Guilty Pleasures

The Harlequin

Strange Candy

Danse Macabre

Circus of the Damned

Mistral's Kiss

Strange Candy

Danse Macabre

The Killing Dance

Micah

Bloody Bones

Incubus Dreams

The Laughing Corpse

The Lunatic Cafe

Bite

Incubus Dreams

Cerulean Sins

Guilty Pleasures

Cravings

Circus of the Damned

Seduced By Moonlight

The Laughing Corpse

Cerulean Sins

Guilty Pleasures

Narcissus in Chains

A Caress of Twilight

A Kiss of Shadows

Narcissus In Chains

Out Of This World

Obsidian Butterfly

REVIEWS

A Stroke of Midnight has not yet been reviewed at SensualRomance Reviews. You may want to read the following reviews from our partner sites:

"Laurell K. Hamilton scores another bestseller heading for the New York Times bestseller list."
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted May 18, 2005 on The Best Reviews

"Laurell K. Hamilton scores another bestseller heading for the New York Times bestseller list."
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted May 29, 2005 on The Best Reviews



Summary

Solving a double homicide, avoiding assassins and coping with growing, sometimes uncontrollable, power keep faerie private detective Princess Meredith NicEssus (aka Meredith Gentry) busy in the fourth and strongest entry in Hamilton's adult fairy tale series (after 2004's Seduced by Moonlight). When someone murders a fey and a reporter during a press conference inside the Unseelie's headquarters, Merry calls in the cops to assist (and inadvertently involves the FBI as well). But once on magical turf, human police face challenges and dangers of which the princess was unaware. Meanwhile, Merry lives up to the five fertility deities in her lineage and lustily fulfills her royal duty of mating with sidhe males and making sex beyond mere human comprehension. As Merry matures, the meaning of all the sex and magic comes into more effective focus, as does Hamilton's underlying mythos of the restoration of the faerie race's true power. The absence of complicated politics results in a more palatable plot than in previous volumes. By the end, the Unseelie court seems to be tiring of Merry's super- sadistic Aunt Andais, the Queen of Air and Darkness (as are, most likely, many readers). The queen's son and Merry's rival for the throne, Prince Cel, looms as an even greater, more corrupt menace to her future. Faeries, fornication and forensics fuse for yet another darkly fantastic frolic for Hamilton fans.



 

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