Summer Knight (The Dresden Files, Book 4)
Summer Knight (The Dresden Files, Book 4) book cover

Summer Knight (The Dresden Files, Book 4)

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Praise for the Dresden Files “Think Buffy the Vampire Slayer starring Philip Marlowe.”— Entertainment Weekly “Fans of Laurellxa0 K. Hamilton and Tanya Huff will love this series.”— Midwest Book Review “Superlative.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review) xa0 “One of the most enjoyable marriages of the fantasy and mystery genres on the shelves.”— Cinescape “Butcher...spins an excellent noirish detective yarn in a well-crafted, supernaturally-charged setting. The supporting cast is again fantastic, and Harry’s wit continues to fly in the face of a peril-fraught plot.”— Booklist (starred review) xa0 “What’s not to like about this series?...It takes the best elements of urban fantasy, mixes it with some good old-fashioned noir mystery, tosses in a dash of romance and a lot of high-octane action, shakes, stirs, and serves.”— SF Site “A tricky plot complete with against-the-clock pacing, firefights, explosions, and plenty of magic. Longtime series fans as well as newcomers drawn by the SciFi Channel’s TV series based on the novels should find this supernatural mystery a real winner.”— Library Journal “What would you get if you crossed Spenser with Merlin? Probably you would come up with someone very like Harry Dresden, wizard, tough guy and star of [the Dresden Files].”— The Washington Times A martial arts enthusiast whose résumé includes a long list of skills rendered obsolete at least two hundred years ago, #1 New York Times bestselling author Jim Butcher turned to writing as a career because anything else probably would have driven him insane. He lives mostly inside his own head so that he can write down the conversation of his imaginary friends, but his head can generally be found in Independence, Missouri. Jim is the author of the Dresden Files, the Codex Alera novels, and the Cinder Spires series, which began with The Aeronaut’s Windlass . From AudioFile If Harry Dresden is familiar to you from The Dresden Files on the Sci Fi Channel or from other books in the series, you will find him once again up to his neck in trouble. If new to you, Harry is easy to get to know. A bit unorthodox as wizards go, he finds his wisecracking gets him into trouble with just about everyone. James Marsters helps make extraordinary events and characters seem a part of ordinary life, even gatherings where Latin is spoken. He uses accents and tone to good effect in conveying the attitudes and personalities of the characters. Maintaining control of the story, he skillfully heightens the suspense as necessary but also ratchets down the intensity when appropriate. J.E.M. © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the audioCD edition. Highly recommended SFFWorld.com Fast paced and tightly plotted, Summer Knight delivers the kind of action-packed adventure Jim Butcher's fans have come to expect SFSite.com Arguably the finest urban fantasy series being written at the moment Bookgeeks.co.uk --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One It rained toads the day the White Council came to town. I got out of the Blue Beetle, my beat-up old Volkswagen bug, and squinted against the midsummer sunlight. Lake Meadow Park lies a bit south of Chicago's Loop, a long sprint from Lake Michigan's shores. Even in heat like we'd had lately, the park would normally be crowded with people. Today it was deserted but for an old lady with a shopping cart and a long coat, tottering around the park. It wasn't yet noon, and my sweats and T-shirt were too hot for the weather. I squinted around the park for a moment, took a couple of steps onto the grass, and got hit on the head by something damp and squishy. I flinched and slapped at my hair. Something small fell past my face and onto the ground at my feet. A toad. Not a big one, as toads go — it could easily have sat in the palm of my hand. It wobbled for a few moments upon hitting the ground, then let out a bleary croak and started hopping drunkenly away. I looked around me and saw other toads on the ground. A lot of them. The sound of their croaking grew louder as I walked further into the park. Even as I watched, several more amphibians plopped out of the sky, as though the Almighty had dropped them down a laundry chute. Toads hopped around everywhere. They didn't carpet the ground, but you couldn't possibly miss them. Every moment or so, you would hear the thump of another one landing. Their croaking sounded vaguely like the speech-chatter of a crowded room. ``Weird, huh?'' said an eager voice. I looked up to see a short young man with broad shoulders and a confident walk coming toward me. Billy the Werewolf wore sweatpants and a plain dark T-shirt. A year or two ago the outfit would have concealed the forty or fifty extra pounds he'd been carrying. Now they concealed all the muscle he'd traded it in for. He stuck out his hand, smiling. ``What did I tell you, Harry?'' ``Billy,'' I responded. He crunched down hard as I shook his hand. Or maybe he was just that much stronger. ``How's the werewolf biz?'' ``Getting interesting,'' he said. ``We've run into a lot of odd things lately when we've been out patrolling. Like this.'' He gestured at the park. Another toad fell from the sky several feet away. ``That's why we called the wizard.'' Patrolling. Holy vigilantes, Batman. ``Any of the normals been here?'' ``No, except for some meteorological guys from the university. They said that they were having tornadoes in Louisiana or something, that the storms must have thrown the toads here.'' I snorted. ``You'd think `it's magic' would be easier to swallow than that.'' Billy grinned. ``Don't worry. I'm sure someone will come along and declare it a hoax before long.'' ``Uh-huh.'' I turned back to the Beetle and popped the hood to rummage in the forward storage compartment. I came out with a nylon backpack and dragged a couple of small cloth sacks out of it. I threw one to Billy. ``Grab a couple of toads and pitch them in there for me.'' He caught the bag and frowned. ``Why?'' ``So I can make sure they're real.'' Billy lifted his eyebrows. ``You think they're not?'' I squinted at him. ``Look, Billy, just do it. I haven't slept, I can't remember the last time I ate a hot meal, and I've got a lot to do before tonight.'' ``But why wouldn't they be real? They look real.'' I blew out a breath and tried to keep my temper. It had been short lately. ``They could look real and feel real, but it's possible that they're just constructs. Made out of the material of the Nevernever and animated by magic. I hope they are.'' ``Why?'' ``Because all that would mean is that some faerie got bored and played a trick. They do that sometimes.'' ``Okay. But if they're real?'' ``If they're real, then it means something is out of whack.'' ``What kind of out of whack?'' ``The serious kind. Holes in the fabric of reality.'' ``And that would be bad?'' I eyed him. ``Yeah, Billy. That would be bad. It would mean something big was going down.'' ``But what if — '' My temper flared. ``I don't have the time or inclination to teach a class today. Shut the hell up.'' He lifted a hand in a pacifying gesture. ``Okay, man. Whatever.'' He fell into step beside me and started picking up toads as we walked across the park. ``So, uh, it's good to see you, Harry. Me and the gang were wondering if you wanted to come by this weekend, do some socializing.'' I scooped up a toad of my own and eyed him dubiously. ``Doing what?'' He grinned at me. ``Playing Arcanos, man. The campaign is getting really fun.'' Role-playing games. I made a monosyllabic sound. The old lady with the shopping cart wandered past us, the wheels of the cart squeaking and wobbling. ``Seriously, it's great,'' he insisted. ``We're storming the fortress of Lord Malocchio, except we have to do it in disguise in the dead of night, so that the Council of Truth won't know who the vigilantes who brought him down were. There's spells and demons and dragons and everything. Interested?'' ``Sounds too much like work.'' Billy let out a snort. ``Harry, look, I know this whole vampire war thing has you jumpy. And grouchy. But you've been lurking in your basement way too much lately.'' ``What vampire war?'' Billy rolled his eyes. ``Word gets around, Harry. I know that the Red Court of the vampires declared war on the wizards after you burned down Bianca's place last fall. I know that they've tried to kill you a couple of times since then. I even know that the wizards' White Council is coming to town sometime soon to figure out what to do.'' I glowered at him. ``What White Council?'' He sighed. ``It's not a good time for you to be turning into a hermit, Harry. I mean, look at you. When was the last time you shaved? Had a shower? A haircut? Got out to do your laundry?'' I lifted a hand and scratched at the wiry growth of beard on my face. ``I've been out. I've been out plenty of times.'' Billy snagged another toad. ``Like when?'' ``I went to that football game with you and the Alphas.'' He snorted. ``Yeah. In January, Dresden. It's June.'' Billy glanced up at my face and frowned. ``People are worried about you. I mean, I know you've been working on some project or something. But this whole unwashed wild man look just isn't you.'' I stooped and grabbed a toad. ``You don't know what you're talking about.'' ``I know better than you think,'' he said. ``It's about Susan, right? Something happened to her last fall. Something you're trying to undo. Maybe something the vampires did. That's why she left town.'' I closed my eyes and tried not to crush the toad in my hand. ``Drop the subject.'' Billy planted his feet and thrust his chin out at me. ``No, Harry. Dammit, you vanish from the face of the earth, you're hardly showing up at your office, won't answer your phone, don't often answer your door. We're your friends, and we're worried about you.'' ``I'm fine,'' I said. ``You're a lousy liar. Word is that the Reds are bringing more muscle into town. That they're offering their groupies full vampirehood if one of them brings you down.'' ``Hell's bells,'' I muttered. My head started to ache. ``It isn't a good time for you to be outside by yourself. Even during daylight.'' ``I don't need a baby-sitter, Billy.'' ``Harry, I know you better than most. I know you can do stuff that other people can't — but that doesn't make you Superman. Everyone needs help sometimes.'' ``Not me. Not now.'' I stuffed the toad into my sack and picked up another. ``I don't have time for it.'' ``Oh, that reminds me.'' Billy drew a folded piece of paper out of the pocket of his sweats and read it. ``You've got an appointment with a client at three.'' I blinked at him. ``What?'' ``I dropped by your office and checked your messages. A Ms. Sommerset was trying to reach you, so I called her and set up the appointment for you.'' I felt my temper rising again. ``You did what?'' His expression turned annoyed. ``I checked your mail, too. The landlord for the office dropped off your eviction notice. If you don't have him paid off in a week, he's booting you out.'' ``What the hell gives you the right to go poking around in my office, Billy? Or calling my clients?'' He took a step in front of me, glaring. I had to focus on his nose to avoid the risk of looking at his eyes. ``Get off the high horse, Harry. I'm your freaking friend. You've been spending all your time hiding in your apartment. You should be happy I'm helping you save your business.'' ``You're damned right it's my business,'' I spat. The shopping cart lady circled past in my peripheral vision, cart wheels squeaking as she walked behind me. ``Mine. As in none of yours.'' He thrust out his jaw. ``Fine. How about you just crawl back into your cave until they evict you from that, too?'' He spread his hands. ``Good God, man. I don't need to be a wizard to see when someone's in a downward spiral. You're hurting. You need help.'' I jabbed a finger into his chest. ``No, Billy. I don't need more help. I don't need to be baby-sitting a bunch of kids who think that because they've learned one trick they're ready to be the Lone Ranger with fangs and a tail. I don't need to be worrying about the vamps targeting the people around me when they can't get to me. I don't need to be second-guessing myself, wondering who else is going to get hurt because I dropped the ball.'' I reached down and snatched up a toad, jerking the cloth bag from Billy's hands on the way back up. ``I don't need you.'' Naturally, the hit went down right then. It wasn't subtle, as attempted assassinations go. An engine roared and a black compact pickup truck jumped the curb into the park fifty yards away. It jounced and slewed to one side, tires digging up furrows in the sunbaked grass. A pair of men clung to a roll bar in the back of the truck. They were dressed all in black, complete with black sunglasses over black ski masks, and their guns matched — automatic weapons in the mini-Uzi tradition. ``Get back!'' I shouted. With my right hand, I grabbed at Billy and shoved him behind me. With my left, I shook out the bracelet on my wrist, hung with a row of tiny, medieval-style shields. I lifted my left hand toward the truck and drew in my will, focusing it with the bracelet into a sudden, transparent, shimmering half-globe that spread out between me and the oncoming truck. The truck ground to a halt. The two gunmen didn't wait for it to settle. With all the fire discipline of an action-movie extra, they pointed their guns more or less at me and emptied their clips in one roaring burst. Sparks flew from the shield in front of me, and bullets whined and hissed in every direction as they ricocheted. My bracelet grew uncomfortably warm within a second or two, the energy of the shield taxing the focus to its limit. I tried to angle the shield to deflect the shots up into the air as much as possible. God only knew where all those bullets were going — I just hoped that they wouldn't bounce through a nearby car or some other passerby. The guns clicked empty. With jerky, unprofessional motions, both gunmen began to reload. ``Harry!'' Billy shouted. ``Not now!'' ``But — '' I lowered the shield and lifted my right hand — the side that projects energy. The silver ring I wore on my index finger had been enchanted to save back a little kinetic energy whenever my arm moved. I hadn't used the ring in months, and it had a whale of a kick to it — one I hardly dared to use on the gunmen. That much force could kill one of them, and that would be basically the same as letting them fill me full of bullets. It would just take a little longer to set in. The White Council did not take kindly to anyone violating the First Law of Magic: Thou Shalt Not Kill. I'd slipped it once on a technicality, but it wouldn't happen again. I gritted my teeth, focused my shot just to one side of the gunmen, and triggered the ring. Raw force, unseen but tangible, lashed through the air and caught the first gunman with a glancing blow across his upper body. His automatic slammed against his chest, and the impact tore the sunglasses off his head and shredded bits of his clothes even as it flung him back and out of the pickup, to land somewhere on the ground on the other side. The second gunman got less of the blast. What did hit him struck against his shoulder and head. He held on to his gun but lost the sunglasses, and they took the ski mask with them, revealing him to be a plain-looking boy who couldn't have been old enough to vote. He blinked against the sudden light and then resumed his fumbling reload. ``Kids,'' I snarled, lifting my shield again. ``They're sending kids after me. Hell's bells.'' And then something made the hairs on the back of my neck try to lift me off the ground. As the kid with the gun started shooting again, I glanced back over my shoulder. The old lady with her shopping basket had stopped maybe fifteen feet behind me. I saw now that she wasn't as old as I had thought. I caught a flicker of cool, dark eyes beneath age makeup. Her hands were young and smooth. From the depths of the shopping basket she pulled out a sawed-off shotgun, and swung it toward me. Bullets from the chattering automatic slammed against my shield, and it was all I could do to hold it in place. If I brought any magic to bear against the third attacker, I would lose my concentration and the shield with it — and inexpert or not, the gunman on the truck was spraying around enough lead that sooner or later he wouldn't miss. On the other hand, if the disguised assassin got a chance to fire that shotgun from five yards away, no one would bother taking me to the hospital. I'd go straight to the morgue. Bullets hammered into my shield, and I couldn't do anything but watch the third attacker bring the shotgun to bear. I was screwed, and probably Billy was along with me. Billy moved. He had already gotten out of his T√shirt, and he had enough muscle to ripple — flat, hard muscle, athlete's muscle, not the carefully sculpted build of weight lifters. He dove forward, toward the woman with the shotgun, and stripped out of his sweatpants on the fly. He was naked beneath. I felt the surge of magic that Billy used then — sharp, precise, focused. There was no sense of ritual in what he did, no slow gathering of power building to release. He blurred as he moved, and between one breath and the next, Billy-the-Naked was gone and Billy-the-Wolf slammed into the assailant, a dark-furred beast the size of a Great Dane, fangs slashing at the hand that gripped the forward stock of the shotgun. The woman cried out, jerking her hand back, scarlet blood on her fingers, and swept the gun at Billy like a club. He twisted and caught the blow on his shoulders, a snarl exploding from him. He went after the woman's other hand, faster than I could easily see, and the shotgun tumbled to the ground. The woman screamed again and drew back her hand. She wasn't human. Her hands distended, lengthening, as did her shoulders and her jaw. Her nails became ugly, ragged talons, and she raked them down at Billy, striking him across the jaw, this time eliciting a pained yelp mixed with a snarl. He rolled to one side and came up on his feet, circling in order to force the woman-thing's back to me. The gunman in the truck clicked on empty again. I dropped the shield and hurled myself forward, diving to grip the shotgun. I came up with it and shouted, ``Billy, move!'' The wolf darted to one side, and the woman whipped around to face me, her distorted features furious, mouth drooling around tusklike fangs. I pointed the gun at her belly and pulled the trigger. The gun roared and bucked, slamming hard against my shoulder. Ten-gauge, maybe, or slug rounds. The woman doubled over, letting out a shriek, and stumbled backward and to the ground. She wasn't down long. She almost bounced back to her feet, scarlet splashed all over her rag of a dress, her face wholly inhuman now. She sprinted past me to the truck and leapt up into the back. The gunman hauled his partner back into the truck with him, and the driver gunned the engine. The truck threw out some turf before it dug in, jounced back onto the street, and whipped away into traffic. I stared after it for a second, panting. I lowered the shotgun, realizing as I did that I had somehow managed to keep hold of the toad I had picked up in my left hand. It wriggled and struggled in a fashion that suggested I had been close to crushing it, and I tried to ease up on my grip without losing it. I turned to look for Billy. The wolf paced back over to his discarded sweatpants, shimmered for a second, and became once more the naked young man. There were two long cuts on his face, parallel with his jaw. Blood ran down over his throat in a fine sheet. He carried himself tensely, but it was the only indication he gave of the pain. ``You all right?'' I asked him. He nodded and jerked on his pants, his shirt. ``Yeah. What the hell was that?'' ``Ghoul,'' I told him. ``Probably one of the LaChaise clan. They're working with the Red Court, and they don't much like me.'' ``Why don't they like you?'' ``I've given them headaches a few times.'' Billy lifted a corner of his shirt to hold against the cuts on his face. ``I didn't expect the claws.'' ``They're sneaky that way.'' ``Ghoul, huh. Is it dead?'' I shook my head. ``They're like cockroaches. They recover from just about anything. Can you walk?'' ``Yeah.'' ``Good. Let's get out of here.'' We headed toward the Beetle. I picked up the cloth sack of toads on the way and started shaking them back out onto the ground. I put the toad I'd nearly squished down with them, then wiped my hand off on the grass. Billy squinted at me. ``Why are you letting them go?'' ``Because they're real.'' ``How do you know?'' ``The one I was holding crapped on my hand.'' I let Billy into the Blue Beetle and got in the other side. I fetched the first aid kit from under my seat and passed it over to him. Billy pressed a cloth against his face, looking out at the toads. ``So that means things are in a bad way?'' ``Yeah,'' I confirmed, ``things are in a bad way.'' I was silent for a minute, then said, ``You saved my life.'' He shrugged. He didn't look at me. ``So you set up the appointment for three o'clock, right? What was the name? Sommerset?'' He glanced at me and kept the smile from his mouth — but not from his eyes. ``Yeah.'' I scratched at my beard and nodded. ``I've been distracted lately. Maybe I should clean up first.'' ``Might be good,'' Billy agreed. I sighed. ``I'm an ass sometimes.'' Billy laughed. ``Sometimes. You're human like the rest of us.'' I started up the Beetle. It wheezed a little, but I coaxed it to life. Just then something hit my hood with a hard, heavy thump. Then again. Another heavy blow, on the roof. A feeling of dizziness swept over me, a nausea that came so suddenly and violently that I clutched the steering wheel in a simple effort not to collapse. Distantly, I could hear Billy asking me if I was all right. I wasn't. Power moved and stirred in the air outside — hectic disruption, the forces of magic, usually moving in smooth and quiet patterns, suddenly cast into tumult, disruptive, maddening chaos. I tried to push the sensations away from me, and labored to open my eyes. Toads were raining down. Not occasionally plopping, but raining down so thick and hard that they darkened the sky. No gentle laundry-chute drop for these poor things, either. They fell like hailstones, splattering on concrete, on the hood of the Beetle. One of them fell hard enough to send a spiderweb of cracks through my windshield, and I dropped into gear and scooted down the street. After a few hundred yards we got away from the otherworldly rain. Both of us were breathing too fast. Billy had been right. The rain of toads meant something serious was going on, magically speaking. The White Council was coming to town tonight to discuss the war. I had a client to meet, and the vampires had evidently upped the stakes (no pun intended), striking at me more openly than they had dared to before. I flipped on the windshield wipers. Amphibian blood left scarlet streaks on the cracked glass. ``Good Lord,'' Billy breathed. ``Yeah.'' I said. ``It never rains, it pours.'' — Reprinted from Summer Knight by Jim Butcher by permission of Roc, a member of Penguin Putnam Inc. Copyright © 2002, Jim Butcher. All rights reserved. This excerpt, or any parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In the fourth novel in the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling series featuring everyone's favorite wizard for hire, Harry Dresden is suckered into the tangled—and dangerous—affairs of Faerie...
  • Ever since his girlfriend left town to deal with her newly acquired taste for blood, Harry Dresden has been down and out in Chicago. He can’t pay his rent. He’s alienating his friends. He can’t even recall the last time he took a shower. The only professional wizard in the phone book has become a desperate man.   And just when it seems things can’t get any worse, in saunters the Winter Queen of Faerie. She has an offer Harry can’t refuse
  • if
  • he wants to free himself of the supernatural hold his faerie godmother has over him—and hopefully end his run of bad luck. All he has to do is find out who murdered the Summer Queen’s right-hand man, the Summer Knight, and clear the Winter Queen’s name.   It seems simple enough, but Harry knows better than to get caught in the middle of faerie politics. Until he finds out that the fate of the entire world rests on his solving this case. No pressure or anything...

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Love Dresden

I don't usually leave reviews when they number in the thousands but I wanted to add my voice to the chorus. This is a great series, some are better then others but that is to be expected with a series with this many volumes. It would be far too lengthy to list all of the things I like about this author, the world he has, and Harry as a character. I will list the two minor complaints that I would make for almost every Dresden book. The author really should have educated himself on both firearms and the layout of Chicago (even though I know it was not his first pick for a city). His description of firearms is inaccurate and borderline embarrassing at times. He refers to guns either inaccurately or ones that just don't exist. However if that is my only major complaint then it is really understandable. Great work I am a big fan and supporter. I am going to list this review for almost all volumes of the Dresden files as I feel it is mostly consistent throughout. I still love it but the Fey are not my favorite foe of Harry's but it is still done well. Happy reading.
10 people found this helpful
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One of the high points in the Dresden Files

Summer Knight is the fourth book in Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files series of novels. It was originally published in 2002.

Things haven't been going well for Harry Dresden, Chicago's resident wizard. Ever since the events of Grave Peril, the Red Court of vampires has been pretty much out to get him and he's been juggling trying to find a way to save his sometime girlfriend from fully turning into a vampire and staying alive despite the Red Court's assassins. To make matters worse, he is visited by a client who later turns out to be Queen Mab of the Winter Court herself. She has purchased Harry's debt from his godmother and is prepared to grant him his freedom for as long as he fulfills three favors, the first of which is to investigate the murder of on Ronald Reuel, who turns out to be the Knight of the Summer Court. He's initially reluctant to make any sort of a deal with the Sidhe, but then the White Council of wizards obligates him to assist the Winter Court or he'll be stripped of his title as a wizard.

This book truly has it all. We have the intricacies of the Faerie realms in the Nevernever and the politics of the Summer and Winter Courts. We have a murder mystery that only magic can get to the bottom of. We have intrigues and complicated plots both in the White Council and the Faerie Courts. And we have a good mess of werewolves, vampire agents and other magical creatures out to make Harry's life a living hell.

Now I was beginning to get a little worried that the books were starting to follow a sort of formula with Harry always being brought to a point of physical exhaustion that later affects his ability to use magic while fighting the bid bad guy. And while Harry had a lot to deal with in this book, the situation didn't quite follow that exact same path of plot development. And things certainly got pretty hairy at the end.

The book had a lot of characters to juggle, especially with some folks from Harry's past coming into the mix. But I never felt overwhelmed with all the names and such since Butcher has a way of breaking down scenes so you only have maybe 3-4 talking heads at most. Bigger sequences like fights and moments of action tend to not have much dialog and focus more on Harry's thinking when he deals with challenges in his way. I envy the seeming ease of his writing. We're reading about Harry dealing with some pretty fantastical stuff and it yet it feels like it's just another afternoon in the city.

I really enjoyed this book. You get a sense that the Dresden universe and the characters in it are really maturing and by this time Butcher has a good idea of what he wants to accomplish and he knows what each of the characters would do given this or that situation. And the fact that the characters are so well-developed and fleshed out is really where the strength of his writing lies.

Summer Knight is a great book that further explores the role of Faerie in this world and also reveals more about Harry's past. The action is great and the the detective piece was very well done and the ending will just blow you away.
8 people found this helpful
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A great big fae war is brewing and Harry may be the only one who can stop it

Dresden just can't let go. Susan may have become a vampire because of him and he will not rest until he finds a way to cure her. However, not eating, not paying the rent and not showering is not the image of a respectable wizard of the White Council. Billy the werewolf is worried about Dresden and finds him a client that turns out to be the Winter Queen, Mab. To get his freedom back, Dresden has to work for her and the first of three tasks is to find the murderer of the Summer Knight. To make it a more pressing matter, his status as a wizard is also in jeopardy.

This book is so good! I tried to make it last but in the end I was just rushing page after page and completely ignored the pace of the narrator - James Marsters is an excellent narrator, by the way. This book did not have a pause, everything was happening at the same time and I could hear the time running in my head: "tick-tock, tick-tock". What a wonderful magical book! Meep meep!
4 people found this helpful
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Good but not great.

So here's the deal . . . I saw a lot of improvement in SUMMER KNIGHT. A LOT.

I was introduced to several new characters whom I instantly loved: Ebenezar, Listens to Wind, the Gatekeeper, Meryl . . . a couple old favorites made appearances: Billy the Werewolf and Toot, but better than the well-loved characters, both old and new, was the dramatic rehabilitation of Murphy.

I know I mentioned in my review of FOOL MOON that I was not a fan of Murphy . . . that was a gross understatement. She was obnoxious and mistrustful. She was violent and irrational. She was just unlikable. I wrote her off as one more attractive female who Harry made himself an idiot over.

Normally when there's as dramatic a change as what happened with Murphy, it's unbelievable and feels forced. You don't trust it and you wait to see what their game is . . . but Butcher made it work. Her brand of snark blends well into the mix that makes up a person who can lose their mind when pushed too far. Her violent response to having information withheld in dire circumstances paves the way to a cease fire when Harry finally begins to reveal the secrets of his world, and even if those things weren’t true, giving us insight into her emotional state made me want to cut her some slack anyway.

Which is good b/c this new, improved Murphy is friggin' hilarious. And Murphy and Harry together . . . well, I could get used to this:

“You did what?”
“Put on the boots,” Murphy said. “I put on the boots and kicked some monster ass. I dropped the ghoul, and I’m the one who rammed a chain saw through the head of that plant monster thing. Crippled the ogre, too. What did you do? You threw a can of Sterno at him. That’s barely an assist.”
“Yeah, but I soaked him in gasoline first.”
She snorted at me, around more pizza. “Shutout.”
“Whatever.”
“Murphy three, Dresden zero.”
“You didn’t do all of it.”
“I put on the boots.”
I raised my hands. “Okay, okay. You’ve . . . got boots, Murph.”
She sniffed and took an almost dainty sip of Coke. “Lucky I was there.”

And we all know that I love the Fae. The Dresdenites who already make a habit of telling Dresden noobs that the series starts "getting good" at book 4 were full of Harry-like glee in anticipation to my reaction to Butcher's Fae.

And they were good Fae. They were. I liked them.

BUT.

Butcher somehow managed to make them wonderfully tricksy Fae . . . without making much use of their tricksy Fae-ness, and Harry, despite having years of knowledge from study and experience with the denizens of the Nevernever . . . seems quite hapless about them in many ways.

I mean, COME ON. An unbelievably beautiful woman with WHITE hair (who isn't old) and WINTER coloring who smells of flowers and WILDNESS walks into your office, and you don't figure out she's Fae until you cobble together something about your office door being unlocked, and ultimately it's built on suspicions about your Faerie Godmother?

He should have just looked at her and thought, "FAE." He didn't need to make up reasons why, who cares why? An obviously Fae woman is in your office. The end.

But that was just irritating. The real problem was the plot line.

There are half a dozen good options for Bad Guys that I can name off the top of my head, and (view spoiler) isn't one of them.

Not only was Bad Guy a seriously lame choice for the Bad Guy, but the reason behind he/she/its Bad Guy-ness . . . didn't hold water for me. (view spoiler)
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So good

Oh yeah! Now this is more like it. Fairies, ogres, and other things that go bump in the night all wrapped around a very cool mystery that has a time limit on getting solved. The Red Court of vampires and the Wizards' White Council are going to war and it's up to Dresden to get the wizards an edge.

Billy and the rest of the Alphas are around to give Harry a hand and we meet some more new and interesting denizens of 'fairyland'.

This is the second or third time I've read this and I still get surprised by the ending.
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Kindle Users Beware

Regarding the use of this book on Kindle - it USED to be speech enabled, allowing a Kindle user to play the book in your car so you could hear it while you drove (or any other place, if you wanted to give your eyes a rest). Now, all of a sudden, it's no longer speech enabled (text-to-speech). What gives? Did the publishers suddenly change their minds? Is the support for text-to-speech disappearing from our Kindles? I bought Kindle BECAUSE it had the text-to-speech ability, and now that seems to be getting more and more useless for the books I want to buy. Horrible.
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Harry Just Can't Have a Good Week

Susan Rodriguez left Chicago as she was a vampire and her feelings for Harry Dresden made her too confused. Ever since she left Harry has been in a downward spiral and his mind is focused only on finding a cure to make his girlfriend human once again. But his mind is stable enough to know making a deal with a faerie is not something a sane person does. However, Harry finds himself having to find who killed the Summer Knight for Queen Mab because if he doesn't the White Council will hand him over to the vampires as a peace offering.

The book really goes into detail to show the reader how much Harry has changed for the worse. There is still a good person inside of him but he is extremely apathetic at the start. Billy and the other good werewolves from Fool Moon provide him with much needed support. It was really good to see how the werewolves had become much more experienced.

It turns out that Harry's faerie godmother sold his debt to Queen Mab. This, therefore, allows Mab to get Harry to do what she wants. She says he can refuse to solve the mystery of the Summer Knight's murder, but she leaves out the part about the White Council wanting to sell out Harry. Therefore the only way he can live is by solving the mystery.

This book really focuses on faerie politics. As the Summer Knight has been killed everyone is suspicious of Mab who is the Queen of Winter. While faeries can't tell lies, they can hide the truth. Which forces Harry to use all of his wits to figure out what is actually going on.

As Harry had to solve the mystery of a murder, readers got to see how faerie hierarchy works in the series. Excuse me, Sidhe. Sidhe appear to be very high ranking faeries. So calling them faeries is a really big insult.

Anyways...there are two faerie courts: Summer and Winter. Each representing their seasons so that Winter appears mostly cruel and Summer appears mostly kind. But that doesn't mean Summer is all good and Winter is all bad. It's much more complicated than that.

This book introduces the idea of changelings who are half-human and half-faerie. Eventually they have to decide whether to become mortal or faerie. This ends up providing both an interesting sub-plot as well as making the mystery even more complicated.

In this book we finally encounter Elaine Lilian Mallory. What we knew of her before Summer Knight was she was Harry's first love and betrayed him leading him to kill her. However, there were hints in the previous books that indicated she wasn't actually dead.

Elaine was not how I had pictured her in my mind. I thought she'd be an outright villain and would use Harry for her own purposes. Yet in parts of the book she seemed kind and I could see how Harry would fall for her. This book does a good job with having her not be evil and not good either.

And before I finish this review: Murphy was a total badass in this book! She's not in it much but she is able to fight along side Harry in one scene!

I would recommend Summer Knight to fans of The Dresden Files and lovers of urban fantasy mysteries.
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Winter vs Summer

Probably my favorite book of the series so far. I love the idea of there being a supernatural world right next to ours, and the author has done a great job of exploring it. This time it's the creatures of fairyland going to war - Summer vs Winter - with Dresden stuck in the middle. The overall story arc of the Vampire Red Court's war with the White Council continues and Butcher does a great job of wrapping that around the conflict. Lots of action and a satisfying conclusion - so happy the author doesn't mess around with cliffhangers like others do.

Only negatives I can say is Michael is missing from this book - with so much conflict it seems built for a Knight of the Cross to have a place, but he doesn't. Susan is also MIA, replaced by Elaine who I find whiny, selfish, and manipulative - can't stand her. Susan is much more interesting, especially after what transpired the previous novel. Still a great read though
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Do you like Martyrs? Then you'll love this book.

I feel like Harry Dresden is constantly in a near-death state. I'd like to see Butcher mix it up a bit. The constant "martyrdom" appeal is getting a bit weary.
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Finally, one I don't have reservations about

I've been rereading this series because it's been years since the most recent book and I had forgotten how much trouble I had with the way Harry Dresden treats women. This book was much different. I didn't realize it before but I think this series is at its best when the Fae are involved. So many of the most important characters in the series are introduced in this book and I really feel like this is where Jim Butcher hit his stride. And this is the first book where I love what he did with Murphy. Now if only we could get him to stop describing women based on how much he can see pressed against their shirts...
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