Book Review: Charlaine Harris et al.’s Indigo
After exploring the world and being steeped in the mysticism of Nepal, Nora Hesper dove into investigative reporting using her shadow skills as a brutal vigilante.
After exploring the world and being steeped in the mysticism of Nepal, Nora Hesper dove into investigative reporting using her shadow skills as a brutal vigilante.
An ancient and forgotten cult has allied with Quinton’s mad father. And their goals are far more nightmarish than Harper and Quinton—or even Purlis—could ever imagine.
A comatose woman awakens with skills she’s never had, and even her doctors believe she’s possessed. A case for Harper Blaine with gruesome connections to history.
Detective Rey Solis and Harper Blaine clash over an insurance investigation into the return, 25 years later, of the Seawitch reappearing in her old berth in Seattle.
After dying, again, Harper lost many of her powers…if she dies one more time, she won’t be coming back. So investigating Blood Lake and its terrible powers is…tricky.
A Greywalker, Harper Blaine walks between worlds, three if you count the police. It makes searching for the ghost of her “killer” a trick and a half.
Discovering why she came back from the dead, Harper Blaine gets entangled in her dark past and ultimate destiny as a Greywalker through a case she’s forced to take in London.
Pioneer Square’s homeless are turning up dead and mutilated with zombies roaming the underground. Quinton believes he may be implicated and persuades Harper Blaine to investigate.
A university research group hires Harper Blaine to discover if someone is faking the poltergeist until she discovers the truth, one that leads to murder.
She was murdered, but came back as a Greywalker, able to move between our world and the mysterious, cross-over zone where things that go bump in the night exist.