Book Review: Charlie Huston’s No Dominion

Posted June 20, 2011 by Kathy Davie in Book Reviews

I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Book Review: Charlie Huston’s No Dominion

No Dominion


by

Charlie Huston


urban fantasy in a paperback edition that was published by Del Rey Books on January 1, 2006 and has 251 pages.

Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon


Other books by this author which I have reviewed include Already Dead, Half the Blood of Brooklyn, Every Last Drop, My Dead Body

Second in the urban fantasy series, Joe Pitt, a new kind of paranormal crime fiction. Yup, the name says it all — gritty, pulp noir about a 17-year-old runaway who gets infected with the Vyrus turning him into a vampire.

My Take

This was good! I never saw it coming. The truth about Luthor X. How DJ Grave Digga fits into the whole. The past history between Vandewater, Terry, and Predo. Huston had me going back and forth like a ping pong ball!

How Huston kept getting Joe out of one mess and into another and then the manner in which Huston wrapped it all up. Sneaky bugger. I ever do a job for him, I’m having my lawyer check out the contract! And all the tricks Huston thought up for how the drug is created . . . eeeeyew . . . He is a sick puppy!

The whole plot is a metaphor for how politics work in the real world with their maneuvering and manipulation. With each man’s own private view on how to accomplish their particular goal.

The characters are so, well, true is the only word that works for me. Joe is a smart guy in many ways, but, oh so dumb, when it comes to betrayal, plotting, manipulation. He’s a straight out guy who takes care of the people for whom he cares.

The wrap-up on the Count and his little harem. A brilliant exposé by Huston of a spoiled little sociopath. Sure never saw Joe’s action coming on that one!

If you start this book, don’t plan on putting it down until you’re done.

The Story

It’s been rough in the months since that last job when he rescued the girl from her father, the doc who was experimenting with the thing, spoiling Dexter Predo’s plans. No work means no money for rent, no blood. The most fun Joe’s had was last night when he took care of the drugged-out vamp at Doc Holiday’s.

Joe’ll just have to bite the bullet and go talk to Terry over at the Society. See if there’s any work he can do. Figures that any work Terry’ll dole out comes with problems. Big problems. Figure out where the new drug is comin’ from. Do it on the QT so no one, I mean no one knows Joe is workin’ for Terry.

Wanting to keep himself as safe as possible, Joe uses his own connections to investigate even when the dirt he learns takes him through Coalition territory into the Hood. Where things just get worse the more he learns.

The Characters

Spending the first 30 years, few for a vampire that is, learning the ropes and how to survive in his new unlife. Joe decides to go it alone, as a rogue living a precarious life on the fringe of various clans’ territories. Tolerated for his fairness.

Evie is terrified, demanding, and proud. Either Joe’s gonna be there for her as the HIV gets worse or he’s not. And she wants to know now!!

The gang leaders’ characters were right on . . . and so very similar to our own political leaders.

The Cover and Title

It’s a great cover — gritty, city, rain-slicked streets gleaming in the night with what I’m beginning to think is part of the trademark. A lit cigarette and a partial face showing lip with a fang.

The title is perfect, for no clan has dominion in New York City.