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Original Title: Divine Misdemeanors
ISBN: 0345495969 (ISBN13: 9780345495969)
Edition Language: English
Series: Merry Gentry #8
Characters: Doyle, Rhys, Meredith "Merry" Gentry, Sean Galen, Frost (Killing Frost), Mistral, Barinthus, Royal, Bittersweet, Sholto, Kitto
Setting: United States of America
Books Divine Misdemeanors (Merry Gentry #8) Download Free Online
Divine Misdemeanors (Merry Gentry #8) Hardcover | Pages: 333 pages
Rating: 4.05 | 23539 Users | 737 Reviews

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Title:Divine Misdemeanors (Merry Gentry #8)
Author:Laurell K. Hamilton
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 333 pages
Published:November 24th 2009 by Ballantine Books
Categories:Fantasy. Urban Fantasy. Paranormal. Romance. Paranormal Romance. Fairies. Fae. Fiction

Narrative During Books Divine Misdemeanors (Merry Gentry #8)

I'm not really sure why I read this series anymore. The actual mystery of the novel is shoved aside for the better part of the book to make way for arguing, sex, and pissing contests. And if it's not that, then the rest of the book is made up of hair and eye color descriptions for all the various characters. Hamilton's fascination with hair down to the ankles and with the varying heights of the characters is mind-boggling. She seems to spend more time thinking up these various combinations than actually working on the plot.

Merry's decided she's going to be a detective now that she's been exiled to California. She gets called in to help the police with a case where faeries are being murdered and arranged and posed to look like pages out of a fairy tale book. Merry's men don't want her to get too involved since she's pregnant, but Merry is stubborn and wants to know who's killing her people. About 250 pages go by after this initial setup and we arrive at the conclusion of the story. The mystery is figured out and wrapped up within the last 30 pages or so. Just about everything that happens in between is either a rehash of old events, pissing contests between the men, or Merry running around trying not to get herself killed.

Doyle and Frost, Merry's two main men are little more than bodyguards in this book. She doesn't sleep with them and Frost barely says a word at all. Doyle's main phrase throughout the book is; "Once I was the Queen's Darkness ..." while Frost's phrase is; "I was once the Killing Frost ..." They both like to wax poetic on how badass they used to be but it just seems silly now. It's gotten to the point where I honestly like Sholto better, his character is more developed and he actually has a personality. Doyle and Frost seem castrated and I've grown bored with them.

My biggest problem with this book though is the repetition and constant explanations that are unnecessary and bog the book down. There are so many phrases and scenes in this book that feel lifted from the previous novels that at times it feels like Hamilton copied and pasted to fill up the pages. There would be times when someone would say or do something wrong and this would be pointed out to the reader and then someone would say, "what did I miss, why is that wrong?" and then it'd be explained.

Then, if things weren't being explained constantly, Merry was arguing with her men about who was in charge. And if Merry wasn't arguing about who was in charge then the men were arguing with each other. I don't know why Hamilton thinks this moves the plot along because it doesn't. It's frustrating to say the least.

The men Merry sleeps with in this book are mostly secondary characters and it's gotten to the point where it just doesn't make sense anymore. She claims to love Doyle and Frost as her main men but hardly spends any time with them. She's pregnant now so she doesn't have to whore around so much but she chooses to anyway and I don't see the reason for this other than Hamilton wanting to write all the different and strange sex scenes. I have to say that probably without the sex scenes this book would be even weaker than it was though.

This series has so much potential and each book it just seems to be wasted. The main mystery is forgotten for most of the book and then neatly wrapped up within the last few pages. Hamilton's writing suffers more and more with each book and she could really benefit from a new editor, or maybe even a break from writing all together. I'm mostly disappointed because I thought Swallowing Darkness was actually a step-up from the previous books, but now it seems like that was just an anomaly. I honestly don't know if Hamilton will ever change her writing though, because she does sell her books. I can hope though.

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Ratings: 4.05 From 23539 Users | 737 Reviews

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I'm not sure why I keep doing this to myself. I spend money on LKH book and then feel like a shmuck afterwards. Allow me to explain.This is book 8 of a series. 8 books and all that has happened with the Merry, a half breed fairy princess living in the U.S. is:1- Knocked by multiple men (if you are scratching your head, just roll with that idea because it is magic),2-She has killed her sadistic, murdering and raping cousin Prince Cel; and3-The mother/earth goddess has named her queen of fairy but

I am adoring this series. The political intrigue, the inclusiveness, the power games and there's real science fiction in it; oh, and the lovely men folk. It's a shame this is the last book so far, I'll just have to be patient from now on.Given that I'm currently also reading "The Prince" and the dictatorships in the Middle East are changing shape so rapidly the parallels are fascinating in the series overall as well.

Ahh...Princess Meredith's Magical Vagina tour rolls on...Okay we get it - sex is magic - and your girl the princess has such a magical hoo-haw as to invoke all the lost treasures of Faerun. Good for her.This will be the last Meredith Gentry book I read.I wasnt offended by the rampant sex, I expect that. I wasnt shocked by the rough and tumble (accent on ROUGH) aspect of some of the sex. Hell, I like some of that my self.I just had a problem with the NON-STOP part of the sex. Of the 365 pages in

Meredith Gentry is back in LA working as a private detective, living with an unspecified number of exiles from the Unseelie court, and pregnant with twins. Someone is killing demi-fey--the small winged creatures humans think of when they think of "fairies"--and arranging the corpses to copy children's book illustrations. Much of this book is perfunctory--less a novel and more a short story padded out with recaps of previous books in the series and re-introductions of the many different

At the end of Swallowing Darkness, I felt LKH had successfully brought closure to what proved to be an intriguing series. I worried a new arc would only dilute the effectiveness of the universe and its characters. I prepped myself for complete disappointment. The reality was...meh.What held my attention, and will guarantee my continued reading, was the mention of the soldiers Merry saved in SD. The Goddess has taken an interest in those humans, and I'm compelled to find out where it's all

Hamilton has turned into such a lazy writer. This book definitely shows just how lazy she has gotten. There are whole passages of text that are repeated at the beginning and end of this book (completely unnecessary). She has characters explain things that readers already know or should be self-explanatory (also completely unnecessary). And it seems that Hamilton doesn't remember things that have happened in past books. Merry doesn't seem to remember things that I am pretty sure she was

Oh, Laurell.Not sure what to say about this one, other than I read them pretty much out of habit moreso than anything else. Also, this one isn't as much fairy porn as some of the other installments in the series. In fact, this one almost had something resembling a plot--the downside was that plot was quickly abandoned every time Merry put her detecting-and-crimefighting agenda on hold in order to make the sweet sweet lovin' with one of her harem of men.Which is too bad, as there were some really

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