Undead and Unwed (Queen Betsy, Book 1)
Undead and Unwed (Queen Betsy, Book 1) book cover

Undead and Unwed (Queen Betsy, Book 1)

Mass Market Paperback – March 2, 2004

Price
$14.95
Publisher
Berkley Sensation
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0425194850
Dimensions
4.2 x 0.75 x 6.7 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

From Booklist Betsy Taylor--former model, newly unemployed secretary, 30, and still single--wakes up after being flattened by a small SUV in a tacky coffin wearing cheap knock-off shoes. Her mother is glad she is back, albeit as a vampire, but her stepmother is enraged that Betsy has reclaimed her designer-shoe collection. With a wealthy best friend and a newly acquired doctor pal who is not susceptible to her formidable allure, she sets out to right wrongs but is abducted by Nostro, a tacky 500-year-old vampire who rules the undead roost. It seems that Betsy is an anomaly: a vampire who doesn't burn in sunlight, can fight the urge to feed, and is not repulsed by religious articles, all of which may make her the prophesied Queen of the Vampires. Teaming up with gorgeous vampire Eric Sinclair, who is in her opinion a major pervert, she takes on Nostro and his minions. Sexy, steamy, and laugh-out-loud funny, Davidson's chick-lit foray into the paranormal is delightful. Diana Tixier Herald Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved MaryJanice Davidson is the New York Times bestselling author of the Undead novels featuring Betsy Taylor; Derik's Bane , and the new young adult novels featuring Jennifer Scales, written with her husband, Anthony Alongi, among other titles. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 The day I died started out bad and got worse in a hurry. I hit my snooze alarm a few too many times and was late for work. Who wouldn’t hit the snooze to get another nine minutes of sleep? No one, that’s who. Subsequently, I almost always oversleep. Stupid snooze button. I didn’t have time for breakfast. Instead, I gobbled a pair of chocolate Pop Tarts while waiting for the bus. Mmmm…chocolate. My mom would have approved (who do you think got me hooked on the darned things?), but a nutritionist would have smacked me upside the head with her calorie counter. The bus was, of course, late. You gotta love the Minnesota Transit system. Six buses for a population area of a quarter million. When they weren’t late, they were early—I’d lost count of the number of times I’d stepped outside only to see my bus disappearing down the street. Schedule? What schedule? When the bus, late again, finally did lumber into sight, I climbed on and sat down…in gum. At a nine A.M. meeting (to which I arrived at 9:20), I found out the recession (the one the economists have been denying for years) had hit me right between the eyes: I had been laid off. Not unexpected—the last time good old Hamilton & Sons had been profitable I’d been in high school—but it hurt, just the same. Losing a job is the worst. You know, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that somebody doesn’t want you. Doesn’t matter if the reasons are personal, financial, or practical. They just don’t want you. Hamilton & Son, realizing about a year too late that they had to slash costs, decided administrative layoffs were the way to go as opposed to, say, cutting the six figure salaries of senior management. The clerks and secretaries had been deemed expendable. But vengeance would be ours. Without us, those twits couldn’t even send a fax, much less run the company. With this cheerful thought, I cleaned out my desk, ignored the way my coworkers were avoiding looking at me, and scuttled home. I consoled myself by stopping at the Dairy Queen for a blueberry milkshake. Signs of spring: robins, new grass, and Dairy Queen opening for the season. As I walked through my front door, still slurping, I saw my answering machine light winking at me like a small black dragon. The message was from my stepmonster, and from the racket in the background, she was calling from her salon: “Your father and I won’t be able to make it to your party tonight…I’m on new medication and I—we—just can’t. Sorry.” Sure you are, jerk. “Have fun without us.” No problem. “Maybe you’ll meet someone tonight.” Translation: Maybe some poor slob will marry you. My stepmonster had, from day one, related to me in only one way: as a rival for her new husband’s affections. Worse, she never hesitated to play the depression card to get out of something that was important to me. This ceased bothering me about a week after I met her, so I suppose it was just as well. I went into the kitchen to feed my cat, and that’s when I noticed she’d run away again. Always looking for adventure, my Giselle (although it’s more like I’m her Betsy). I looked at the clock. My, my. Not even noon. Time to do the laundry and gouge out my eyes, and the day would be complete. Happy birthday to me. As it turned out, we had a freak April snowstorm, and my party was postponed. Just as well…I didn’t feel like going out, putting on a happy face, and drinking too many daiquiris. The Mall of America is a terrific place, but I’ve got to be in the mood for overpriced retail, rowdy weekend crowds, and six-dollar drinks. Nick called around eight P.M., and that was my day’s sole bright spot. Nick Berry was a superfine detective who work ed out of St. Paul. I’d been attacked a couple of months before, and… Okay, well, “attacked” is putting it mildly. Like using the word “unfortunate” to describe World War II. I don’t like to talk about it—to think about it—but what happened was, a bunch of creeps jumped me as I was leaving Khan’s Mongolian Barbecue (all you can eat for $11.95, including salad, dessert, and free refills—quite the bargain if you don’t mind your clothes reeking of garlic for hours). I have no idea what my attackers wanted—they didn’t take my purse or try to rape me or even babble about government conspiracies. They came out of nowhere—literally. One minute I was yawning and fumbling for my keys, the next I was surrounded. They clawed and bit at me like a bunch of rabid squirrels while I fended them off with the toes of my Manolo Blahniks and screamed for help as loud as I could…so loud I couldn’t speak above a whisper for three days. They stank—worse than my kitchen that time I went to the Cape for two weeks and forgot to empty my garbage before I left. They all had long hair and funny-colored eyes and they never talked to me. Help didn’t come, but the bad guys ran away. Maybe they were rattled by my voice—when I scream, dogs howl. Or maybe they didn’t like the way I stank of garlic. Whatever the reason, they ran away—skittered away, actually. While I leaned against my car, concentrating on not passing out, I glanced back and it looked like a few of them were on all fours. I struggled mightily not to yark up my buffet, ginger tea, and sesame bread—no way was I pissing away that $11.95—and then called 911 on my cell phone. Detective Nick was assigned to the case, and he interviewed me in the hospital while they were disinfecting the bite marks. All fifteen of them. The intern who took care of me smelled like cilantro and kept humming the theme from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Off-key. This was actually more annoying than the sting of antiseptic. Anyway, Detective Nick called and we chatted and, long story shot, I promised to come in to look through the Big Book o’ Bad Guys one more time. And I would. For myself, to feel empowered, but mostly to see Nick, who was exactly my height (six feet), with dark blond hair cut regulation-short, light blue eyes, a swimmer’s build, and dimples! He looked like an escapee from a Mr. Hardbody calendar. I’ve broken the law, Officer, take me in. Making Nick my eye candy would be the closest I’d gotten to getting laid in…what year was it? Not that I’m a prude. I’m just picky. I treat myself to the nicest, most expensive shoes I can get my hands on, which isn’t easy on a secretary’s budget, and never mind all the money my dad keeps trying to throw at me. If I used his money, they wouldn’t be my shoes. They’d be his. Anyway, I save up for months to buy the dumb things, and they only have to go on my feet. Yep, that’s me in a nutshell: Elizabeth Taylor (don’t start! I’ve heard ‘em all), single, dead-end job (well, not anymore), lives with her cat. And I’m so dull, the fucking cat runs away about three times a month just to get a little excitement. And speaking of the cat…was that her telltale Riaaaaoooowwww! from the street? Well, super. Gisele hated the snow. She had probably been looking for a little spring lovin’ and got caught in the storm. Now she was outside waiting for rescue. And when I did rescue her, she’d be horribly affronted and wouldn’t make eye contact for the rest of the week. I slipped into my boots and headed into the yard. It was still snowing, but I could see Gisele crouched in the middle of the street like a small blob of shadow, one with amber-colored eyes. I wasted ten seconds calling her—why do I call cats?—then clomped through my yard into the street, Normally this wouldn’t be a problem, as I live at the end of the block and it’s a quite street. However, in the snow on the icy roads, the driver didn’t see me in time. When he did, he did the absolute worst thing: slammed on his brakes. That pretty much sealed my doom. Dying doesn’t hurt. I know that sounds like a crock, some touchy-feely nonsense meant to make people feel better about biting the big one. But the fact is, your body is so traumatized by what’s happening, it shuts down your nerve endings. Not only did dying not hurt, I didn’t feel the cold. And it was only ten degrees that night. I handled it badly, I admit. When I saw he was going to plow into me, I froze like a deer in headlights. A big, dumb, blond deer who had just paid for touch-up highlights. I couldn’t move, not even to save my life. Gisele certainly could; the ungrateful little wretch scampered right the hell out of there. Me, I went flying. The car hit me at forty miles an hour, which was survivable, and knocked me into a tree, which was not. It didn’t hurt, as I said, but there was tremendous pressure, all over my body. I heard things break. I heard my own skull shatter—it sounded like someone was chewing ice in my ear. I felt myself bleed, felt liquid pouring from everywhere. I felt my bladder let go involuntarily for the first time in twenty-six years. In the dark, my blood on the snow looked black. The last thing I saw was Gisele sitting on my porch, waiting for me to let her in. The last thing I heard was the driver, screaming for help. Well, not the last. But you know what I mean. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • First Betsy Taylor loses her job, then she's killed in a car accident.  But what really bites is that she can't seem to stay dead.  And now her new friends have the ridiculous idea that Betsy is the prophesied vampire queen, and they want her help in overthrowing the most obnoxious power-hungry vampire in five centuries.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(522)
★★★★
25%
(435)
★★★
15%
(261)
★★
7%
(122)
23%
(400)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Ms Davidson does it again! Another creative and fun read!

I first discovered MaryJanice Davison last year when I read and really enjoyed BY ANY ANOTHER NAME. I then was on the lookout for any and all stories by this talented author and read THIEF OF HEARTS and short story collection UNDER COVER all fun and sexy contemporary romances. She's incredibly creative and has also written shapeshifter romantica (CANIS ROYAL) and even young adult stuff (TEEN FURIES). UNDEAD AND UNWED (first released as an ebook in 6/02) is a fun and creative spin on the vampire sub-genre and is really almost parody.
What would happen if, say Cher from CLUELESS woke to find herself a vampire? Elizabeth "Betsy" Taylor is a fashion (especially shoe) obsessed former model who just got laid off from her thankless secretarial job and then is hit by a car and killed - all on her birthday! She wakes in a funeral home and it doesn't take much to figure out that she's not alive but not quite dead either. Being a zombie is NOT and option, but when her several attempts to finish herself off fail, and a weird thirst for blood (eeww!) asserts itself, she has to face it - she's a vampire!
Its just hysterical watching Betsy adjust to her new vampire lifestyle and powers. But there are some ways in which the usual vampire rules don't apply to Betsy. She can still enter churches, crosses and holy water don't bother her and sunlight is not fatal. What's up with that? Her unique abilities bring her before head vamp Nostro who's determined to bring her under his control. And when sexy "tall, dark and sinister" Eric Sinclair offers to become her vamp mentor are his motives good or evil? Betsy is not sure, nor is she interested in getting involved in "vamp politics", she just wants to be left alone. Sinclair is frustrated by her too human compassion, her self absorption and her immaturity, all of which just highlights her need for guidance from the right quarter - he's also very attracted to her. When she's told that she's the prophesied "vampire queen" it's way too much! She's only been a vampire for a week for heaven's sake! Things become more dangerous when Sinclair asks her to join forces with him against Nostro. She resists until he makes an offer she cannot refuse: her support for designer shoes! The vampire world is in for some changes, baby!
Ms Davidson will continue with these characters when UNDEAD AND UNEMPLOYED comes out 8/04. Betsy still needs to find job and also figure out her new place in the vampire world. Sinclair still has a ways to go in proving himself to Betsy. And then there's detective Nick Barry - did he really forget his vampiric experiences? A really fun read that is very highly recommended!! Also look for THE ROYAL TREATMENT an alternative reality erotic romance coming 5/04.
73 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I was laughing so hard, there were tears in my eyes!

I've heard so many good things about this book. However, I must admit, that as strange as this will sound, I didn't remember exactly WHY this book was so awesome. But, I was sucked in instantly and knew I had to read the story myself. UNDEAD AND UNWED is a true winner!

Written totally from Betsy's view, UNDEAD AND UNWED takes place during the week following our intrepid heroines death. She oversleeps, sits in gum, gets fired from her job, then while trying to get her cat out of the road, gets hit by a vehicle, and oh, all this on her birthday! When she wakes up, much to her surprise, she finds herself in her least favorite color, a pink suit with cheap shoes! Discovering she can't die, decides to get on with being a vampire and thus, a member of the undead.

There are so many things that are different with our heroine, Elizabeth Taylor, or Betsy, as she prefers to be called. You always hear how fabulous, how beautiful, or plain but intelligent a heroine is. Well, Betsy has blonde hair, is six feet tall, vain and although not very smart, has what I found to be a very offbeat sense of humor that had me laughing so hard. (I don't think I've laughed this hard since reading Dara Joys' KNIGHT OF A TRILLION STARS.) And she has a shoe fetish, which although slightly strange, seems to lead to Betsy into many of her problems. This ranges from terrorizing her 'step-monster' (gotta get HER shoes back after all!) to falling into the hands of the bad vampires.

Ms Davidson isn't afraid to have our heroine or even secondary characters curse up a blue streak, either. Because it is consistent throughout the novel it flows, adds humor to otherwise stressful (or not so funny) situations and, well, works. Likewise, there is plenty of sexual tension thru the book, with Betsy trying to fight off her attraction from our overbearing hero.

My favorite situations are when conversations would take place with Betsy that were totally over her head and she would say, "Huh? ...Okay, whatever!" Thus totally playing up the vain and not-so-intelligent woman she is. Because Ms Davidson never tried to make Betsy's character smarter than she really was. This helped to add its own form of humor.

If you are looking for a totally new sort of romance, this book is for you. Somehow Ms Davidson has broken the romance formula. After reading some of the other reviews, it seems that both Laurell K Hamilton and Charlaine Harris are on this path, but I have yet to read any of their books. However, I for one am going to order Ms Davidson's next book as well as add her to my auto-buy author list. I can't recommend this book enough!
27 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

really enjoyable

I was prepared for this book to be so-so, which means I was pleasantly surprised when it turned out to be really good. The book begins with Betsy Taylor's fantastically bad day - she gets laid off and dies on the same day. However, she later wakes up as a vampire. Her mother and best friend handle her newly undead status rather well, and it's not long before Betsy is contacted by other vampires. The vampires are composed of two waring groups. Both groups want her, but one believes that she is the prophesied vampire queen, since she can do things no other vampire can do. Betsy's not too happy about the idea of joining either group, even though Sinclair, the leader of the group that believes she's the vampire queen, is really attractive. However, Betsy badly needs help learning how to live as a vampire, so, in spite of the fact that she'd rather go shoe shopping with her best friend, she reluctantly joins Sinclair's group.
Betsy was a fun heroine, although she was a bit dense at times. Had she been a normal vampire, she wouldn't have survived more than 24 hours. I had to be careful not to read this book in public, because parts of this book made me laugh so hard that I'm sure I would've gotten stared at a lot. I wish some of the characters had been better developed, but the book's humor made up for a lot of that. I'm looking forward to reading the next book, so that I can find out more about some of the other characters. If you've read Charlaine Harris' Sookie Stackhouse books and liked them, I definitely suggest that you read this book. There's one thing I need to add, however. Although the spine of this book calls it a paranormal romance, I wouldn't call it a romance. Yes, there are several sex scenes, and, yes, there is a gorgeous guy who alternately annoys and attracts Betsy, but there isn't really any romance. This book is pretty much all Betsy, without any romantic relationship development - that, I imagine, will probably come later. Just a warning for those who might be expecting a traditional quirky romance. I can't wait to get my hands on the next book!
20 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Another dumb heroine

I picked up this, read the first two pages, had a laugh, and said, "Okay, I'll give it a read."

By page 10, I was annoyed. It was as if The Nanny and Lorelai Gilmore's thoughts were combined in Uma Thurman's body.

1. Kudos to the author for NOT writing the overdone petite female lead. (At least Buffy was really clever, and had great symbolism and metaphors.) No, the lead is tall, blonde,...and a long legged thin model type. Oh joy.

2. The heroine is a trophy girl clothes horse that has no other interest other than what she is wearing..and the male lead tempts her with...shoes.

3. The male lead is so wooden, I fail to see any attraction other than the eye candy appeal. In fact, I do not think there WAS any other attraction than the eye candy appeal. And the shoes.

4. The African American best friend was slightly interesting-except one wonders why in the world the two women would even speak to eack other.

5. The most interesting character was the suicidal intern.

Pass and save your dinero-if you want a funny heroine read Evanovich's Plum series. The Plum character can be a little too...passive with the romantic leads, and puts up with some serious chauvinism, but the series is full of great characters and you will laugh aloud. If you want paranormal, read Hamilton's Anita Blake series. The last few books were not good, but the first few were fab- excluding the typos.
18 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Wit can't make up for skimpy plot and filmsy characters

This book came highly recommended to me and I couldn't wait to read it. At first I thought it would be a keeper. It was very funny for the first fifty-sixty or so pages. It was cheeky and irreverant look at the vampire genre told through the eyes of shallow secretary turned vampire Betsy Taylor. Unfortunately, irrations just keep piling on and piling on until I was just happy to reach the end of the books 260 pages. For one thing, the vampire genre cliches just keep coming. I mean it's one thing to poke playful fun at these conventions just Davidson's wit just seems to run out of steam quickly and I'm left with a bunch of scenes I've read before in much better novels. After the the first segment of the story, "Betsy's Random Adventures as a Vampire", when we get to the real meat of the story, Betsy forgets to be funny and just becomes shrill.
Betsy is one of those characters that you can only take in small doses. By the end of the book, she was absolutely grating. Some character development would have been nice, but to this book's determent, Betsy is still a silly, shallow woman, even though her circumstances SHOULD compell her to wise-up and get serious.
As a romance reader, I find the relationship between Betsy and Sinclair so underbaked that it's still muffin batter. Seeing as the events of the book are seen through Betsy's eyes, I have no idea what Sinclair sees in her except as an easy way to grab power. (It's Anita Blake/Jean Claude redux). Betsy is pretty nasty to him most of the time and calls him Sink Lair to irk him and be cute. (Har Har Shoot me!) Sinclair is pretty underdeveloped himself- He's dark,sexy, very blessed below the belt- the usual. How come all the secondary black characters are so militant (that being they're only personality trait too)?
Another problem is still book feels very padded. There are long conversations between Betsy and her friends that don't seem to serve much of a purpose. It's like Davidson was desperate to reach a certain word or page count. Frankly, the book's plot just feels skimpy. Davidson seemed more interested in writing the Random Happening of Betsy: Cutesy Vampire Queen than writing a truly fleshed out story arc where Betsy learns to deal with her new situation, finds love, and defeats Nostro, the evil vampire.
I doubt I'll be checking out the next book. Undead and Unwed is very dissapointed and annyoing start to a new vampire series. It took the Anita Blake series eight books before it self-destructed. Tanya Huff's Blood series waited at least until the end of the second book to shove a grenade down my throat. The Betsy Taylor series wears thin after page 80.
18 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Taps an Empty Vein

The vampire series rose from the dead thanks to "Interview with a Vampire" by Anne Rice back in 1976. They're still going strong, with the dark fantasies of Laurell K. Hamilton and Kim Harrison, but other writers are tapping a vein into vampire lore while aiming for a comic angle.

One of these authors is MaryJanice Davidson. I picked up "Undead and Unwed" on impulse after seeing the Science Fiction Book Club catalog offering a trilogy of her books, and quickly breezed through the first in the series featuring Betsy Taylor, who dies in a car accident, only to be hit with a triple whammy: a) she's still alive, although dead; b) she's a vampire; c) she's considered by some to be the prophesied vampire queen.

Which is quite an accomplishment for a 27-year-old secretary with a passion for designer shoes.

Davidson seems to have written this book on the fly, without considering what kind of world vampires exist in. After rising from the dead, Betsy visits her father and hated stepmother and picks up the pieces of her life, and is later told she can't, but this potential subplot is dropped. There's also something about the vampire leader known as Nostro, but he's treated with such disrespect -- he acts more like Bela Lugosi in "Plan Nine From Outer Space" than "Dracula" -- despite fostering a number of "vampire rebellions" over the last several hundred years, that he's not to be taken seriously. And because this is chick-lit, there's also the boy toy in the form of Sinclair, the handsome guy Betsy's hot for but hates because he's so arrogant.

The humor is limited to Betsy's near-constant bitching and cursing, her unwillingness to act like other vampires and people repeatedly pointing out that Taylor's first name makes her "Elizabeth Taylor."

While "Undead and Unread" is a disappointing book, it's also harmless. You can race through it in a few hours, win a few chuckles and not feel like hating yourself in the morning. It doesn't aspire to much and accomplishes it admirably.
17 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Don't waste your time

This is without a doubt the worst novel I have read in a very long time. Davidson's writing style resembles that of a teenager just learning about stream of consciousness. There is no sense to her dialogue; the actions are hard to follow, and worst of all, the novel is a cliche' from beginning to end. While she may have been attempting to use all of the vampire cliches' to prove why Betsy is NOT one, she failed. I purchased all of the first three of this series at the same time, which proved to be a waste of money. I finished the first one and haven't had the stomach to open the second. If you want something to read just to pass the time on the beach or an airplane, this might be an okay read. Otherwise, invest your time and money in something far more worthwhile.
14 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Some laughs, but.....

In my search to find a series as enjoyable as the Anita Blake vampire books, i have run across several that i would have been better off avoiding. This is probably one of them, along with the Southern Vampire series. I have to admit that early on in this book, I did find it quite funny, even laughed out loud on several occasions. But eventually, Betsy, the lead charachter, turns out to be really rather annoying, juvenile, and immature. Not that those things can't be very entertaining, because they can be (think Napoleon Dynamite). But, in this case, it got old real fast. Betsy does as much whining as she does talking. And when she has the opportunity to say something really funny and instead says, "Ewwww," for the fifty-seventh time in one chapter, you just have to wonder why in the world you are reading this book. However, the author is a genuinely funny woman with a knack for making people laugh, as is apparent in the beginning of the book. Somehow, she just lost track of it. Its as if in the process of making people laugh, she found someone expected her to write a book with a plot and a setting, and all those kinds of boring things. I can't figure out how she let it get away from her so egregiously. Betsy starts out kind of ditsy in a fun, quirky sort of way. By the middle of the book you just want her to shut up. In order to get her to help fight the villain, she is bribed with three or four pairs of shoes. Shoes! The author goes from funny to... just plain not funny. Mary Janice Davidson should write a stand up comedy act. But she shouldn't try to write vampire books. Sheesh!
12 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Such potential...

I loved the idea of these books. It sounded new and fresh and I was excited enough about reading them that I purchased the first two books in the series. What a disappointment.

The ideas are all there and they ARE good ideas, but these are dreadfully, terribly written, and even the greatest ideas are executed so badly that getting through this book was no easy task (and it's a tiny little book too)! I understand why there are so many good reviews of these books - they have a funny theme. If you can get past the writing, and I really don't think I'm a literature snob - I might be wrong, but I really don't think I am - and the, for lack of a better term, "falseness" of the characters, you will enjoy the books. They are exactly what they pretend to be.

Happy reading.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Heroine is a vain, selfish, airheaded twit. Not worth your time

I really REALLY wanted to like this book and had hoped this was a series to sink into now that I've finished all the Sookie Stackhouse books. Wrong. Betsy is nothing like Sookie - no brains, no brawn, no courage, no common sense... there is nothing about this character that earns my respect or interest and she's not really funny.

Scene after scene in the book has Betsy making fun of someone she doesn't know, assuming she is smarter and better than everyone she meets, taking advantage of her true friends, badmouthing her grieving parents after her death and resurrection, disposing of a friend's CDs because she personally doesn't care for HIS musical tastes, and in the end, Betsy essentially sells herself for shoes.

Don't get me wrong, I am all for gorgeous handmade Italian shoes! Betsy's life revolves around her vanity AND she is a nitwit. That drove me crazy for the entire book. I kept hoping Sinclair would just stake her. I will pass on the rest of the books in this series.
10 people found this helpful