Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
super fantastic read!, 10 Aug 2005
LOVE IT!!!! LOVE IT!!! This is the ultimate example of immaginative and creative writing. If you have difficulty in finding a book that has everything like me then stop looking you've found it. This book has it all, Joanne is good looking, has powers and has a delish Djinn boyfriend that can do anything for and to her. If you like the supernatural mixed with a bit of romance VOULA, this is it, where Rachel Caine gets her ideas, Lord knows, it's full of twists and turns and goes places that you would never have thought of. GREAT!!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This series just gets better and better, 4 Jun 2006
This third instalment of Rachel Caine's Weather Warden series is a brilliant continuation of her story. Joanna Baldwin has been a human Weather Warden, a Djinn, and she's now back to being human again and, once again, doing her best, despite blundering around not knowing what's going on, to save the world.
What's been really interesting about the way Rachel Caine is building these stories is that it's not just the same or similar story rehashed each time, but she's introducing new elements with each book. In book 2 we had the Ifrit; now in Book 3 we are introduced to a whole new secret society working against the Weather Wardens. Once again Joanne's past catches up with her and influences the situations in which she finds herself - old enemies come back to haunt her.
Rachel Caine has very effectively built the love affair between Joanne and David in these three books. They are learning to trust each other, and although the time they actually spend together in this book is very limited, you get a real sense of closeness between them. Of course Joanne's other potential beaux are still out there - Lewis, Paul, even perhaps Jonathan... but it's nice to read, for once, of a sassy, modern woman being consistent and committed to her man. Even if he isn't a man but a Djinn.
Like book 2, this one ended with a definite idea of where the next book is going to go. All is not well in Joanne's world and she evidently has a lot of work to do in book 4 to rescue David from the fix he's found himself in. However, these books probably do work OK as standalone books, although I think this one might have been a little confusing if you hadn't read the previous two.
I love the way that Rachel Caine portrays her heroine - she's just so much fun. Long may she continue writing!
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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Joyride - Pure Joy!, 19 Jan 2005
Having read Ill Wind and Heat Wave (the first two books in the Weather Warden series), I knew this was going to be good. I just had no idea how good.Every bit as fast, imaginative, and sharply observed as shoe-addict Jo Baldwin's first two outings, Chill Factor vastly transcends the parameters of the genre. There's a trick to this, of course. Author Rachel Caine can write. And by that I mean, she REALLY can write. In fact, she puts the vast majority of bestselling authors to shame. As Weather Warden aficionados have come to expect, the plot has more twists than you can safely steer a Viper around - not without seriously burning rubber anyway. Caine combines it with rich and astute characterisation and a language that, equally sure-footed, not only crackles with wit but, at its most intense, assumes poetic quality. Best of all, like the previous books, Chill Factor never completely leaves the realm of the present-day USA - Las Vegas, with all the CSI special effects thrown in for free - and succeeds in delivering a wonderfully skewed look at what is reality rather than fantasy. In other words, there's not a cliche in sight. If you love the Weather Warden books, this is the most exciting yet. If you don't usually read fantasy, shed the preconceived notions and prepare for an amazing urban myth. Either way you'll get far more than you could possibly expect.
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