Lake Silence (World of the Others Book 1)
Lake Silence (World of the Others Book 1) book cover

Lake Silence (World of the Others Book 1)

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“I loved, loved Lake Silence. Anything by Anne Bishop goes on my keeper shelf.”—#1 New York Times bestselling author Patricia Briggs“Anne Bishop writes with a world-class blend of humor and chills. Her world is startlingly original.”—#1 New York Times bestselling author Charlaine Harrisxa0 Praise for Etched in Bone “A fantastic punch of gritty and dark politics and interspecies war. This series is utterly engrossing.”—Fresh Fiction xa0 “One of the most original and phenomenal UF series out there...an epically amazing and thrilling story.”— RT Book Reviews “As compelling as ever.”— Library Journal “[A] beautifully crafted world.”—Smexy Books More Praise for Anne Bishop and the Novels of the Others “Anne Bishop is so good at writing character development....I love this series and I NEED MORE!”—USAToday.com xa0“A stunningly original yarn, deeply imagined, beautifully articulated, and set forth in clean, limpid, sensual prose.”— Kirkus Reviews “The Queen of Fantasy....Teeming with intrigue, suspense, heartbreak, and hints of romance, Bishop’s literary skills continue to astound and enchant.”—Heroes and Heartbreakers “I loved, loved Lake Silence. Anything by Anne Bishop goes on my keeper shelf.”—#1 New York Times bestselling author Patricia Briggs“Anne Bishop writes with a world-class blend of humor and chills. Her world is startlingly original.”—#1 New York Times bestselling author Charlaine Harrisxa0 Praise for Etched in Bone “A fantastic punch of gritty and dark politics and interspecies war. This series is utterly engrossing.”—Fresh Fiction xa0 “One of the most original and phenomenal UF series out there...an epically amazing and thrilling story.”— RT Book Reviews “As compelling as ever.”— Library Journal “[A] beautifully crafted world.”—Smexy Books More Praise for Anne Bishop and the Novels of the Others “Anne Bishop is so good at writing character development....I love this series and I NEED MORE!”—USAToday.com xa0“A stunningly original yarn, deeply imagined, beautifully articulated, and set forth in clean, limpid, sensual prose.”— Kirkus Reviews “The Queen of Fantasy....Teeming with intrigue, suspense, heartbreak, and hints of romance, Bishop’s literary skills continue to astound and enchant.”—Heroes and Heartbreakers --This text refers to the audioCD edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Vicki Moonsday, Juin 12 I wouldn’t have known about the dead man if I hadn’t walked into the kitchen at the exact moment my one-and-only lodger was about to warm up an eyeball in the wave-cooker. Until that moment, I hadn’t known I had a scream that could crack glass; I hadn’t wondered if an eyeball would puff up and explode in a wave-cooker like those animal-shaped marshmallows; and I hadn’t realized my lodger—Agatha “call me Aggie” Crowe—was that kind of Crow. She seemed so normal, if you overlooked her timely payment of the rent each week and the fact that she had taken up residence in The Jumble three weeks ago and seemed to be enjoying herself. “You can’t eat that!” I tried to sound firm, like a responsible human and business owner should. In truth, I sounded a wee bit hysterical, and I wished with all sincerity that I had walked into the kitchen five minutes later. Then again, since the kitchen was one of the common rooms in the main building, I could have walked in when Aggie was halfway through her lunch, which I’m sure would have been more distressing for at least one of us. “Why can’t I eat it?” She looked at the eyeball rolling around in the small bowl that was now sitting on the counter. “Nobody else wants it. It’s starting to get squooshy. And the dead man doesn’t need it.” The words got me past the physical evidence. “What dead man?” “The one who doesn’t need the eyeball.” Little black feathers suddenly sprouted at her hairline, confirming the nature of my lodger. I was going to have to rework the rental agreement so that there was a space for unimportant bits of information likexa0.xa0.xa0. oh, sayxa0.xa0.xa0. species. “Where did you find the dead man?” “On the farm track that runs alongside Crabby Man’s place.” I should have pointed out that Mr. Milford wasn’t usually crabby, but he did get exercised when someone took one bite out of all the ripe strawberries or pinched fruit from his trees, since he and his wife needed the income they made from selling fresh fruit and homemade preserves. But there were other priorities. “Show me.” I held up a hand. “Wait. And don’t nibble.” “Butxa0.xa0.xa0.” “You can’t eat it. It could be evidence.” Her dark eyes filled with reproach. “If I hadn’t wanted to warm it up because it was squooshy, you wouldn’t have known about the dead man and I could have had eyeball for lunch.” I couldn’t refute that statement, so I backed up until I reached the wall phone in the kitchen, and then I dialed the emergency number for the Bristol Police Station. Bristol was a human town located at the southern end of Crystal Lake. Sproing, the only human village near Lake Silence, was currently without its own police force, so Bristol had drawn the short straw and had to respond to any of our calls for help. “Bristol Police Station. What is your emergency?” “This is Victoria DeVine at The Jumble in Sproing. One of my lodgers found a dead man.” Okay, Aggie was my only lodger, but there was no reason to advertise that. Right? I started counting and reached seven before the dispatcher said, “Did you see the body?” “No, but my lodger did.” “How do you know the body is dead?” “I’m looking at an eyeball that used to be attached to the body.” This time I counted to eight. “We’ll send someone.” The words were slow in coming, but at least they were said and would be officially noted somewhere. I didn’t blame the dispatcher for hesitating to send someone to Sproing—after all, the police officer we’d had before last year’s Great Predation had been eaten, and a couple of officers who had answered calls since then had provoked something in the wild country and never made it back to their station—but I resented that I could feel her blaming me for whatever the police were going to find. On the other hand, I did withhold one tiny bit of information. Just wait until the responding officer realized he had to interview one of the terra indigene. A bit of useful information. My name is Victoria “call me Vicki” DeVine. I used to be Mrs. Yorick Dane, but giving up my married name was one of the conditions of my receiving valuable property—aka The Jumble—as part of the divorce settlement. Apparently the second official Mrs. Dane didn’t like the idea that someone else had had the name first. Fortunately, she didn’t seem as possessive about Yorick’s Vigorous Appendage. I could have told her that a couple dozen other women had had it before she took possession. But it wasn’t likely that she would keep solo possession of the appendage for long, so let her figure things out the hard way like I did. Of course, if she had been one of those indulgences, then she already knew the signs and might be able to nip them in the bud. Maybe that’s why, before I had moved away from Hubb NE, I had seen her in the garden center buying long-handled loppers—the kind used to prune branches—when I’d heard her loudly proclaiming the previous week that gardening was a hobby for women who couldn’t do anything else and so not of interest to her. Anyway, I was married to Yorick Dane, an entrepreneur—aka wheeler-dealer—although I never understood what sort of deals were wheeled. He said I didn’t have a head for business. I finally said I didn’t have a head for cheating of any kind. Suddenly, after a decade of marriage, he said I wasn’t living up to the promises that were implied by my name, meaning I wasn’t hot or in any way sexy. The fact that it took him a decade to realize I was fivefoot four and plump instead of a five-foot-ten pole dancer with big tits was confusing. But once he made that discovery, he decided that he needed someone who would stand by him, and that would not be me. So that’s how I came to be the owner of The Jumble. According to the story that was muttered by Yorick’s family once they’d had a little too much to drink, The Jumble was conceived and built by Yorick’s great-great-aunt, Honoria Dane, a woman who was equal parts visionary and eccentric. She and her brothers were given equal shares in their father’s fortune, the shares being dispersed upon the child’s twenty-fifth birthday. Great-great (I never heard anyone refer to her by her given name) had sunk her part of the fortune into building The Jumble. It was supposed to be a self-sufficient and self-supporting community. It began its genteel decline almost from the moment Great-great finished building it. The Jumble consisted of the sprawling two-story main house, which had a small but fully equipped apartment for the owner as well as two suites with private bathrooms for guests. It also had a big communal kitchen, a dining room, a library, a social room, an office for the owner, several empty rooms whose use I couldn’t identify, and a large shower area off the kitchen that could accommodate up to four people at a time as long as they weren’t shy. Besides the main house, there were four sets of cabins—three connected cabins to a set—within easy walking distance from the main building. Each cabin was similar to an efficiency apartment with an open floor plan—no walls or doors for anything but the bathroom. Well, the three lakeside cabins that were closest to the main building had en suite bathrooms. The other nine cabins were a bit more primitive and an ongoing project. There were acres of land that could be used by thexa0.xa0.xa0. beingsxa0.xa0.xa0. in residence—plenty of room for growing food or raising a goat or two for whatever reason one keeps goats. There was even a chicken coop, sans chickens. It was probably sans a few other things, but if the chickens couldn’t pay rent, I couldn’t afford to update their lodgings. But The Jumble had one thing the village of Sproing did not—it included easy access to Lake Silence, which was an afterthought body of water compared to the other Finger Lakes. There was a public beach at the southern end of the lake, but I thought The Jumble’s private beach and dock were a lot nicer. Whoever negotiated the original lease agreement for the use of the land knew every devious loophole a person might try to use to rezone/repurpose/re-something the land. But the terms were brutally simple: it was The Jumble with its set number of buildings of a particular size and so many acres of cultivated land (being a modest percentage of the overall acreage) or nothing. The Dane inheritance was actually the buildings and their contents. The land could be used only within the terms of the lease. Last bit of information. Sproing is a human village with a population of less than three hundred. Like most, if not all, of the villages in the Finger Lakes area, it is not human controlled. Sure, we have an elected mayor and village council, and we pay taxes for garbage pickup and road maintenance and things like that. The main difference is this: on the continent of Thaisia, a human-controlled town is a defined piece of land with boundaries, and humans can do anything they want within those boundaries. But villages like Sproing don’t have a boundary, don’t have that distance from the terra indigene. The earth natives. The Others. The dominant predators that control most of the land throughout the world and all of the water. When a place has no boundaries, you never really know what’s out there watching you. The surprising thing is there hadn’t been a reported interaction with one of the Others in decades. At least around Sproing. Maybe the Others have been coming in and buying come sproing with me or i [heart] sproingers T-shirts without anyone realizing it, but even though the village lost about a quarter of its residents because of last summer’s Great Predation, everyone still wanted to believe that the Others were Out There and didn’t find us interesting enough—or bothersome enough—to hunt down and have as snacks. Which made me wonder if the Others came into town seasonally, like tourists. And that made me wonder if everyone had missed the obvious when stores ran out of condiments like ketchup and hot sauce some weekends—and whether a run on ketchup and hot sauce coincided with people disappearing. --This text refers to the mass_market edition. New York Times bestselling author Anne Bishop is a winner of the William L. Crawford Memorial Fantasy Award, presented by the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts, for The Black Jewels Trilogy . She is the author of the Novels of the Others series and The World of the Others series. --This text refers to the mass_market edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In this thrilling and suspenseful fantasy set in the world of the
  • New York Times
  • bestselling Others series, an inn owner and her shape-shifting lodger find themselves enmeshed in danger and dark secrets.
  • Human laws do not apply in the territory controlled by the Others--vampires, shape-shifters, and even deadlier paranormal beings. And this is a fact that humans should never, ever forget....After her divorce, Vicki DeVine took over a rustic resort near Lake Silence, in a human town that is not human controlled. Towns such as Vicki's don't have any distance from the Others, the dominant predators who rule most of the land and all of the water throughout the world. And when a place has no boundaries, you never really know what is out there watching you.Vicki was hoping to find a new career and a new life. But when her lodger, Aggie Crowe--one of the shape-shifting Others--discovers a murdered man, Vicki finds trouble instead. The detectives want to pin the death on her, despite the evidence that nothing human could have killed the victim. As Vicki and her friends search for answers, ancient forces are roused by the disturbance in their domain. They have rules that must not be broken--and all the destructive powers of nature at their command.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(3.4K)
★★★★
25%
(1.4K)
★★★
15%
(848)
★★
7%
(396)
-7%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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that's pretty much it

Please note that this review contains mild spoilers.

Lake Silence takes place in the world of the Others, shortly after the Elders wiped out some human settlements. A few characters from the Lakeside Courtyard are mentioned, but do not make appearances. It's a new story with new characters.

Vicki DeVine and her abusive husband divorced a few months ago, and Vicki received a worn-down boarding complex on Lake Silence in a terra indigene controlled area as her settlement. After allowing Vicki a few months to pour time and money into the complex, the ex attempts to reclaim the property for himself to build it into a luxury resort, ignoring the fact that the original contract with the terra indigene does not allow for this. Plot-wise, that's pretty much it.

When I was finished, I didn't feel that I had wasted my time, but I also wouldn't recommend this book or delve into a discussion about it. There are some interesting elements, including a few new types of terra indigene and more information about Intuits. Sadly the plot was simplistic to the point of feeling dull and stretched out. I also found the shifts in perspective from first person for Vicki and third person for everyone else disorienting.

Since the plot was minimal, I expected more development for the cast, but they fell a bit short. Julian, an Intuit whose abilities have caused difficulties in his life, was probably the most engaging character, but we received a stronger sense of his problems than his personality. The protagonist, Vicki, suffers a host of anxiety and self-confidence issues as a result of her abusive marriage. While I'm all for exploring these issues, again, they eclipsed her personality. What I'll recall about Vicki is that she suffers trauma from being victimized for so long, and that she insists on speaking like a socially inept teenage girl ("vigorous appendage" and "yummy lawyer" are the most cringey offenders).

I also wasn't sure why the Others didn't... simply... eat the ex husband and his entourage. In the Lakeside Courtyard, we're told that Simon holds back so he can improve human/Others relations, and because he's on human territory. This story took place in terra indigene territory. The Others killed some of the offenders early on, but left others alone until the last possible moment. Why? The books stress over and over again that problematic humans are food in the wild country. The only reason to hold off on destroying the humans that don't follow their rules in this book is so that we'll have a completed story line, and that killed my suspension of disbelief.

I'm also unsure of why the terra indigene developed much interest in Vicki at all. In Meg's case, we watched her build relationships with individual Others by being kind and acting as they had never seen a human or terra indigene act before. In Vicki's case, she was initially protected because her property was important to the terra indigene for its potential to improve relations between them and humans, but she isn't really shown befriending them bit-by-bit, like Meg was.

Bottom line: I don't mind that I read it, but I won't read it again or recommend it.
45 people found this helpful
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3.5 * follows a certain plot and character paradigm

I really liked the book up until about halfway through—about when the Others adopted another damaged woman with a horrible backstory, the Lady of the lake showed up with her pony, plus there was a vampire and a strong honorable officer to take care of the poor abused woman, who becomes crucial to Other/human relations. . .and suddenly this book was beginning to read like a clone of the first books in Bishop’s Others series.

One of the male characters in this story warns the vampire, Ilya, that behavior he sees as “taking care of” Vicki, she may see as Ilya’s thinking Vicki can’t take care of herself. That’s a very good point—yet both Bishop and the vampire ignore his advice, so none of the good guys (and it’s always the guys in Bishop’s stories who take the lead on protecting) allow Vicki to help protect herself from the stupid vicious bad guys (another constant in Bishop’s books). In fact, Vicki’s protectors even conceal from her that she’s in mortal danger until Vicki is almost killed, thus reenforcing her ex-husband’s message that she’s completely clueless, incompetent and worthless and making Vicki doubt herself just when she most needs her courage and strength. Bishop always creates reasonably believable reasons for why this is how things are, but when all her characters and all her stories begin to sound the same, those reasons are no longer acceptable.

I had hopes that this book would be the one in which Bishop wrote a smart strong woman, who might have been hurt in the past, but was ready to step up and learn to pull her own weight in the protection department. . .but no go. Just same old, same old: here’s a helpless woman so damaged by male abuse that she has to rely on the Others and that strong honorable policeman to save her from those stupid nasty bad men.

Bishop writes well, and I do like the world she has created here, but I’m really tired of reading stories that actually re-victimize the female main character by keeping her dependent instead of helping her grow into her own strengths. Certainly in the previous Others novels, Meg Corbyn and other blood prophets fought tooth and nail to achieve their independence and self worth, so why is Vicki, this book’s damaged heroine, forced to be so helpless?

Maybe the next book could have women who get to inhabit more than just the broken places found in any human heart; women and men who interact in some different way with the Others, the Elders and humans. l really like all the breadth and depths of this fascinating world Bishop has created, with all its myriad beings, and power used differently than we’re accustomed to—it’s just that I’d just like to hear more about the other ways humans can interact with them.
27 people found this helpful
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Disappointing.

I really, really like the world of The Others, so naturally when this popped up on NetGalley, I was more than happy to send in a request for it. This one is a spin-off of the first five books in the series. It takes place in the same world but a different part of it with different characters.

We start out meeting Vicki, a woman who recently went through a very nasty divorce after 10 years of terrible marriage. She has taken over control of a camping resort in the Finger Lakes, specifically on Lake Silence, called the Jumble which used to belong to her ex-husband’s family and was left to her in the divorce. When her one lodger, a woman named Aggie Crowe, finds a dead body, all kinds of shenanigans start.

Now, just to warn you… This might be mildly spoilery. I’m not usually spoilery, but to really illustrate why this is a 2 star book for me, I’m going to explain a bit.

I’m not sure if I can put my thoughts together adequately about this one, but there was a lot of stuff about this book that disappointed me. It certainly kept me reading, and I continue to love the world of the Others, but I didn’t really latch on to this one like I was hoping I would. The terra indigine are a really interesting part of this world, and that hasn’t changed, with them being both the ‘good guys’ (usually, in some fashion) and also terrifying. I am especially a fan of the Sanguinati, this world’s version of vampires. They’re very old world, but often the most relatable of the Others, and Ilya Sanguinati, this novel’s best example, was fun to read about.

Vicki DeVine, a woman with an eye-rollingly terrible name who comments more than once about how she is nothing like what her name implies she would be, wasn’t my favorite character. Not least favorite, but just sort of meh. I kind of wanted her to succeed after learning about how she was treated by her husband for ten years, but at the same time, I think I expected her to be something she really wasn’t. She very much comes across as being a fairly standard archetype of the ‘dark and troubled past’ trope.

Vicki’s past has left her pretty broken, and she suffers from some legit anxieties because of it (which I can relate to – in fact it was rather difficult for me to get through some of the anxiety-laden parts because the symptoms were described in a way that I can really relate to). Even despite that, humans are prey in this world, and despite being very, very vulnerable at times, Vicki is an exception to that, and for nearly half this book, the reason why (and at least there is a reason for it) isn’t really apparent. So, all you know from the beginning is that Vicki isn’t cassandra sangue, but regardless, the Others don’t consider her prey, and they just take a shine to her from the very beginning, despite not really knowing who she is. Suddenly, she’s got vampire lawyers and accountants, Bear and Cougar bodyguards, a host of Others who want her to read them stories, and watery ponies eating from her refrigerator. In this respect, she very much seemed like ‘Not-Meg-but-actually-really-Meg’ to me.

Vicki seemed off the get-go to be very ‘vulnerable female main character with sobby backstory full of physical and emotional abuse from male character who is obviously the bad guy here blahdiblah’, and as a character, she seemed rather… like Meg but with a different name and slightly different backstory. I had a hard time staying engaged with her parts of the story because of it. Especially given the fact that she really only gets her anxiety around men who she considers to have – and I quote – a ‘vigorous appendage.’ Given the history, I understand the fear, and the anxiety, but really? Vigorous appendage? Gods above and below. Past the obvious, whatever that is supposed to really mean was inconsequential, as it made me roll my eyes every time, which was counterproductive to feeling for the character I was supposed to feel for in the way I was probably expected to feel for her.

Every antagonist in this book is so over-the-top sleazy that it’s comical at times. The Tie Clip Club. A secret society so ridiculous that the people investigating them named them the Tie Clip Club in lieu of whatever they’re actually named, only to have us find out that they’re actually named the Tie Clip Club. Really? Sigh… okay, I’ll roll with it, I guess. >.> So, we have a group of shady businessmen who either verbally abuse, grope, or fat-shame every protagonist at every opportunity… who then they start trying to undermine the rules placed by the terra indigine. Despite being warned. Repeatedly. And then are totally taken aback when things start going crazy. Okay, I’m reaching my level of believing motivations here. You guys lived through the events of the first five books. You know what happened. You’re supposed to be clever, and this is just idiocy at this point. These guys are clearly just bad for the sake of badness and do only bad things because they’re bad. Ugh. The antagonist of Etched in Bone was bad for the sake of bad in this same way, and it was annoying and ruined much that book for me, but even despite that happening again, can I please just have Meg and Simon back? PLEASE?!

It also didn’t help all of this that out of multiple POVs, only Vicki’s POV is told in first person, while everyone else’s is third person. Not a huge deal, but still, something I noticed as kind of weird and out of place.

So, with all that said, the background characters are what kept me reading this one. Other characters in this book are, at times, pretty interesting. Ilya Sanguinati and his suave vampiric attorney Otherness being just a part of it. He’s obviously a bit over the top himself (and Vicki makes sure we know it by mentally swooning over her ‘yummy attorney’ at every opportunity), but is awfully endearing, just like Vlad was. I have a soft spot in my heart for the Sanguinati, I guess.

Aggie Crowe, the lodger of the Jumble, is a pretty fun character. I have always quite liked the idea of the Crowgard. Jenni Crowgard was one of my favorite background characters from the first five books. We start out the book with Vicki finding out Aggie’s true nature as one of the Others because Aggie is attempting to microwave an eyeball (they get squooshy when they’re cold, apparently). Vicki is quite surprised at at the revelation, which (again) made my eyes roll slightly because… well, she lives in a world where people have been known to change into Crows. The Crowgard seem pretty common, actually. Are you that surprised that someone with the word Crow in their name is Crowgard? Really? I’d be suspicious AF of anyone with any animal in their name, just on principle. Perhaps that’s just me? But, anyway, Aggie herself was a fun character to read about. I think having a Crowgard as a friend would be awesome. Well, any terra indigine friend would probably be pretty awesome if we’re honest here.

There’s also Julian Farrow, who is a former cop, owner of the local book store (there has to be one, obviously, and I’m okay with it) and an Intuit (people in this world who have sort of a sixth sense.). He was pretty interesting, as was Wayne Grimshaw, the local cop who gets called into the dead body situation and sticks around after that to serve as the village’s police chief. Grimshaw and Julian knew each other while they were in police academy, so there’s a bit of history there too, and their relationship was actually one of my favorite things about this book.

So, to sum this all up, while I thought it was a decent enough read to finish it, there were a lot of things about the story and its main character that either made my eyes roll or made me stop with a ‘wait, what?’. While it wasn’t a constant feeling, it happened often enough to make me disappointed in the whole thing, if I’m honest. It almost felt like a hastily put together plan to revisit Thaisia that ended up being mostly fluff. A completely fluffy side-story for the fans of the Others, but with little substance. There are references to characters from the first books, but no real cameos (which is fine, because I have moved on). This one doesn’t go into any more detail about Meg and Simon’s relationship either, so, sorry to everyone looking forward to this one just for the hope of that, lol. It honestly just fell flat for me, which is a shame. I didn’t hate it, but I didn’t really like it either. I won’t give up on the Others though. Perhaps this was just a one-off. I will not give up on you, terra indigine!

I’d like to thank the author as well as Berkley via NetGalley for the review copy.
19 people found this helpful
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I love Bishops writing

I love Bishops writing. Slightly humorous and well paced. Now, Lake silence? There are issues. When i heard that the next book wouldn't be about Meg, i was excited. i thought that it would be a brand new completely unique adventure. Nope. Lake Silence is pretty much a clone of the original.

Protagonist: Woman w/ human relationship issues but who Others love? Check.
Love Interest: Book Shop owner? Check (maybe a stretch).
Police: A new detective to area that interacts well with Others? Check.
Antagonist: Group of humans in a 'society' who believe rules dont apply to them? Check.
Plot Line: Humans attack female and believe they can fool Others without repercussions? Check.
Climax: Protagonist chased, hurt, and saved by elementals? Check.

So what stood out as unique/new?
- Slightly more indepth look on Elders.
- Sproingers. Are these supposed to be wombats? Baby kangaroos? Interesting either way.

Is it worth reading? Yes. If you liked Bishop's other stuff. No, if you want something unique or were on the fence anyway.
9 people found this helpful
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I liked the storyline

Lake Silence is a continuation into the world of the Others, but with different characters than we've met previously. Some characters from the previous books are mentioned or alluded to, but for the most part you're starting from scratch.
I liked the storyline, but there really wasn't much of a plot. Vicki DeVine divorces her ex husband and gets nothing but a rundown lodge/inn that's been in her husband's family for generations. Then her ex husband and his new pals decide they could turn the inn into an upscale resort and will go to any lengths to get it back. That's pretty much it.
I really liked some of the new characters, but felt like they were a little underdeveloped. There's a brief glimpse of a few new Others that I'm hoping we'll eventually learn more about. The bad guys were a little over the top bad. Like not even bothering to hide that they're bad bad.
I both like and am annoyed by Vicki. She's not your typical heroine. She's plump, plain, and laden with emotional baggage making her more relatable and real than your average heroine. She's quirky, which I like, but again it's a little over the top. She easily crosses back and forth from charmingly quirky to that weird person you avoid. The book doesn't quite manage the writing magic of the previous books for me and feels rushed, cutting out a lot of the development of the story and characters. Overall I liked the book, but if I have to read the phrase "vigorous appendage" or "yummy lawyer" one more time I may let the Crows pluck out my eyes.
9 people found this helpful
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Couldn't finish it.

I'm so disappointed that I waited a year for the next book and it was this boring book that didn't inspire me to put my time in to read it. I didn't like the characters, especially the heroine. Compared to the Others in Lakeside, these characters are flat and annoying. And the people scheming against the Others. How can they possibly still be so stupid to not understand how dangerous the Others are? If the next in the series isn't back to Lakeside, I won't be reading it.
8 people found this helpful
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Has semi spoilers be warned

I usually have always loved her books. But it seems the more she writes the worse she gets not the other way around. This has to be the worst book she’s written for me to date. The heroine basically fells like an abused and raped 12 year old mentally. She can’t even call a mans penis a penis, or sex sex. Or handle any kind of conflict or she just shuts down....which she never grows from. This feels like a shadow basic cousin of a book series of hers I love which was shaldors lady. Just taking out any good parts and making it a modern story line. Including the *spoiler*

Needing to be relocated for her own good while the men investigate and try to see what they’ve missed that they should have seen while her broken spirit heals with the natives of the land and learn how she really is the only bridge between everyone that will be accepted by all sides to rule them or one side will just destroy and abolish the other from being able to live there!

Ugh, I would have even taken a basically modern remake but this is like...she didn’t even write it, some new college student just beginning to study writing plagiarized her work.
6 people found this helpful
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Overall story was okay, but bizarre writing style

It seemed like a book written for adults but with strangely juvenile phrases and descriptions. For example, one character points to her abusive ex-husband's crotch, complains about his "vigorous appendage" and then a dog bites that man's groin. So although I liked the overall story premise, the writing style was ultimately too distracting to really become engaged. My favorite book by Anne Bishop is still "Written in Red (A Novel of the Others Book 1)."
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Slightly disappointed

Didn't care for how it jumped around from character to character. Made it difficult to get attached to any. Don't mind that Vicki was described as fat but why was she ugly. Surly she could have one attractive thing about her.
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Interesting but a let down after the initial novels.

The initial chapters were great with the discovery of a dead body, the reluctance of police to become involved, and the revelation that others were living in the community. However the main premise of the book didn't hang together. Why were the others so keen to protect a human, and have her run a shifter focus hotel? If she dies just get another monkey in her place. The others have reached a level of sophistication that they were 'secretly' running the community, were acting as lawyers, surely one of the various gards would be able to act as reader! It is the contrast of the others seeing humans as meat with little liking or empathy against the sheer amount of trouble they put themselves to, keeping one unremarkable human around that doesn't fit. The initial novels in the series had a heroine that was different to normal humans. Creating a link that extended to keeping normal humans around. That isn't the case here. Still an interesting read. I loved Aggie the crow, and the mystery of the sproingers.
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