Genre

Fantasy, Mystery

Audience

Adult

Author’s Worldview

Catholic

Year Published

2022

Themes

Friendship, loyalty, doing what’s right, sacrifice, courage

 

Reviewed by

Corinna Turner

Private Investigator Vern is the only dragon on the Mundane side of the interdimensional Gap. When an apparently routine job tracking down a damsel-in-distress’s missing brother leads to his Faerie best friend and business partner, Sr. Grace, being shot with a poisoned dart and placed in a coma, he will risk almost anything to save her. But the artifact at the heart of the trouble is a threat to both the Faerie and Mundane worlds. Will Vern have to choose between Sr. Grace and the fate of both worlds?

The Lance of Longinus, neo-Nazis, and high stakes make for an entertaining fifth outing in the Vern series.

Racial bigotry in the form of neo-Nazism is a significant theme in the book. The hatred in the story is directed mostly at Faerie, but through this conflict, Fabian is able to critique racism and prejudice in our own real world.

Friendship is also a key theme. Although I did slightly miss Sr. Grace as an ‘on stage’ character, Vern’s loyalty to Sr. Grace and his attempts to save her are appropriately heart-warming and build to a satisfying moment of crisis for our winged hero, where he must decide whether he will do the right thing no matter the cost.

Fans of the series will find that this is not the very fastest paced of the Vern outings. Vern spends a lot of the book following lead after lead and failing to turn up anything, which gives the feel that our favorite drake is running hard in place rather than moving forward. Ultimately, at the end, it felt somewhat like God simply stepped in and solved all the problems, with little real input from Vern. This was very intellectually satisfying (at least for readers of faith) but less so emotionally. 

Regardless, like all the Vern outings, it’s a good, fun read, bristling with hilarious lines such as: “it was a couple of blocks before I realized I had a tail that had nothing to do with my anatomy.” Sometimes Fabian combines the comedy with more serious faith elements, such as after Sr. Grace’s “angel” wards scare a would-be intruder half out of his mind:

“What was that?” he rasped.

“Angels, kid.” Actually a kind of magical shadow of the real thing, but close enough.

“But I thought angels were…”

“There’s a reason why their first words are usually ‘Fear not!’ whenever they meet a human.” His eyes returned to their unfocused stare.

This book will particularly delight Catholics (church-going dragon sleuth, after all!) but will also be enjoyable to any Protestant or secular readers who don’t mind the odd mention of Catholic practice and the positive presentation of Catholic nuns, religious, and priests. Despite the Almighty’s role in the ending, faith actually plays a fairly backseat role in this Vern tale.

This fifth book in the Vern series puts a heartwarming theme about friendship front and center and will appeal to most fans of fun comic fantasy.

Infernal Affairs by Declan Finn

St. Tommy finally comes face-to-face with the warlock that has been behind the events of the previous two books while fighting off hordes of everything from gangsters to vampires.

Blink and We’ll Miss It by Ginny Kochis

Back amongst her estranged best friends and former love, Mae tries to hide her time-hopping secret.

Shadow of the Bear by Regina Doman

An intriguing story that will enchant with a sweet romance and take you on a thrill ride through the Gothic version of modern-day New York City.

The Exile by Allison Ramirez

Is there hope beyond the Island of Mirror?

Rachel’s Contrition by Michelle Buckman

After the loss of her child, Rachel goes insane but she must pull her mind back together to solve a murder and save her own life.

Good to the Last Drop by Declan Finn

Marco thought his problems were over when he took on the vampire council, until he gets bit by a werewolf. Will this ruin things with his vampire girlfriend?

Shadowmancer by G.P. Taylor

A dark fantasy along the lines of Revelation itself.

See No Evil; A Father Gabriel Mystery by Fiorella De Maria

In Post-WWII England, nearly everyone has something to hide—even kill for. Father Gabriel starts uncovering the truth, bringing souls the chance for redemption.

Where to begin with Dorothy L. Sayers?

A Detective novelist who believes in conscience, and in the reality of redemption.

Lioness Lost by Susan Brinkmann

Can Ari solve a murder, or will a handsome FBI agent distract her?

Hussar by Declan Finn (St. Tommy NYPD Book 8)

It’s been a few years since St. Tommy saved the world. Now his son Jeremy and ward Lena have joined the fight.

Ironcraft by Pedro Gabriel

Giants war in this Genesis-style mythological fantasy.

Jennifer the Damned By Karen Ullo

A story of a teenage vampire without the glamorous tempting allure, trying to really live in the real world.

Where to Begin with C.S. Lewis

When he was four years old, C. S. Lewis renamed himself Jack and refused to answer to Clive Staples. For the rest of his life, he was Jack to his friends.

The Fire of Eden (The Harwood Mysteries Book 3) by Antony Barone Kolenc

The mystery of a stolen treasure might hold the key to Xan’s discernment about whether God is calling him to the priesthood or to Lucy.

Murder of a Runaway (Inspector Sheehan Mysteries – Book 5)

Inspector Sheehan’s Belfast Serious Crimes Unit investigates human trafficking rings.

Misshelved Magic by S.R. Crickard

A non-magical librarian and a student mage discover the secrets of a magical library.

Feel-Good Books For Pandemic Summer

Book Therapy to chase the blues away

Demons are Forever by Declan Finn

Marco flees from his fears of hurting Amanda by taking a job to train Vampire Hunters in San Francisco. Should be a quiet job right?

The Fifth Gospel by Ian Caldwell

This is NOT another DaVinci Code, but it is so cleverly disguised as one it makes the perfect gift for your anti-Catholic friends and family.