5/5 stars on Goodreads
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| Turns of Fate by Anne Bishop |
Turns of Fate starts the Isle of Wyrd, a new urban fantasy series by Anne Bishop. It’s set in modern US, though the exact time or location aren’t given. It’s a great start, but a tad difficult to review.
A town of Penwych stands by a river, closest to Isle of Wyrd, which is a weird, supernatural place where the arcana—the fae, maybe—live and interact with humans in Destiny Park. During the day, they look like human, but they’re anything but. People visit the Destiny Park to have their future read or to bargain with the arcana to change their fate. You pay the price, which is seldom money, and if you betray them, you’re punished according to your fate.
Sometimes the punishments catch up with them on the human side of the river where they are investigated by the 13th precinct, which consists of people who aren’t afraid to visit the island and its odd and scary occupants. Beth Fahey is the newest detective there, and she’s thrown in the deep end from the start. But to her captain’s surprise, she gets along with the arcana surprisingly well. Suspiciously well. She’s sort of the main character, although she’s mostly on the background, her story unravelling slowly.
This was an episodic novel consisting of several cases that the 13th precinct investigates. There’s a case of a ghost gun, for example; bullying teenagers disappearing in the island, and a woman fleeing an ex. All were about abuse in some way, parental abuse, bullying, spousal abuse etc. It made for a heavy reading at times, even if the details weren’t dwelled on. The cases are told from several points of view, the perpetrators included, and while they conclude in one manner, they affect the other cases too, or are returned to at a later stage when the fate catches up with the perpetrators.
All cases were interesting, even if they weren’t traditional mysteries as such. The arcana emerge more helpful than humans believe them to be, although they are thoroughly alien in their nature, and they never help in a straightforward manner. The bad people are always humans. The atmosphere is similarly dark and mysterious as in Bishop’s The Others series, where humans are a small minority at the mercy of ancient gods. The conflict between humans and the arcana isn’t imminent here, but I’m guessing that’s where the story is headed to.
The episodic narrative worked, but it also meant that the story had several smaller high points without a larger arc, and it ended kind of abruptly, at the conclusion of one of the cases. The main characters were interesting, and the stories never went where I thought they would go. There’s no romance, but maybe a possibility of one. Beth found new things about herself and her past, but her story is only beginning. I’ll definitely continue.

































