The Unnatural Inquirer (Nightside, Book 8)
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Average customer review:Product Description
The publisher of The Unnatural Inquirer—the Nightside’s most notorious rag—has offered John Taylor one million pounds to find a man who claims to have evidence of the afterlife stored on a DVD. The Inquirer made the guy a sweet deal. Then he and the disc vanished. And if Taylor’s not careful, he may be next.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #36614 in Books
- Published on: 2008-12-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Mass Market Paperback
- 272 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780441016679
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
The engaging eighth book in Green's popular offbeat Nightside series (after 2006's Hell to Pay) drops another paranormal mystery in the lap of series hero John Taylor, a PI in the shadowy realm of Nightside. Pen Donavon, who claims to have a DVD depicting actual footage of the afterlife, has vanished shortly after signing an exclusive deal with the tabloid Unnatural Inquirer. Various factions seeking to control the Nightside are leaving a considerable body count behind as they hunt for him. Accompanied by sexy half-demon reporter Bettie Divine, Taylor navigates the treacherous terrain with his typical skill before tracking down the real force behind Donavon's disappearance. Green skillfully blends action and humor, and shows no sign of running out of ideas. This installment will undoubtedly rope in new readers who enjoy his blend of dark humor and the supernatural.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
John Taylor has another one of those days, beginning with a showdown at the defunct Nightside carnival between the Voodoo Apostate, the gods he tried to dominate, and Taylor. Next, a call from the editor of the Unnatural Enquirer asking Taylor to find a man who disappeared en route to deliver an afterlife recording he had just sold the rights to. Teamed with a half-succubus demon-girl reporter, Taylor visits the Nightside’s key players and politics as people jockey to replace the recently destroyed authorities. Meanwhile, some heavy-duty characters also seek the recording. More fast, fun, adventurous detection in a setting in which nearly anything’s possible. --Regina Schroeder
Customer Reviews
It's the Nightside (4.5 stars)
The Nightside is London at its worst, always at 3:00 AM. As PI John Taylor says, "the place runs on irony." Legends, living and dead, walk the streets and lives are cheap.
In this 8th Nightside saga, Pen Donovan has allegedly made an Afterlife Recording on DVD. "The Unnatural Inquirer," Nightside's version of a supermarket tabloid, contracted to buy the recording from him and Donovan disappeared.
It's the Nightside, and there are many people who'd want the recording. Walker, the Voice of the former Authorities, wants the recording destroyed because of the havoc it would wreak. The inhabitants of the Street of the Gods simply do not want to know. The Collector, who'd stop at nothing to get what he wants, would love to add such an item to his hoard.
Scoop Malloy, the second editor, calls John Taylor in to find Donovan and bring back the recording. Only condition: their reporter Bettie Divine, who is a half succubus, must accompany John.
Simple, all John has to do is focus his Powers on finding the recording and they're done. Unfortunately, someone's blocked him, so he has to resort to good old-fashioned detective work, going from place to place interviewing the prime suspects. Ah, this is why detectives earned the name 'gumshoe' in the first place.
In order to find the DVD, John and Bettie practically do a traveloque of the Nightside's hot spots and most nefarious residents, from Hawk's Wind Bar and Grille, home of the 60's in the Nightside, to Kid Cthulhu and his warrior sorcerers, the Buckeroo Gang.
"The Unnatural Inquirer" was a good fun read all the way through. Green's a splendid character writer and humorist and he does keep you reading.
What I found interesting in this case was adding Bettie Divine to the mix. She didn't add much to the story save as a foil for all reporters and a potential love interest for John instead of Suzie Shotgun. That begs the question, do two damaged souls remain together--or can someone start again--if they even should.
Also, the question of the Afterlife and our own connotations was fascinating. Do we really want to know? If so--why or why not?
The Nightside series is stand-alone in that the main issue in each novel is solved within its pages. Stories do continue from the first book and the characters are fascinating to follow, but you can read this book on its own and enjoy it.
Here is the Nightside series in order:
Something from the Nightside (Book 1)
Agents of Light and Darkness (Book 2)
Nightingale's Lament (Book 3)
Hex and the City (Book 4)
Paths Not Taken (Book 5)
Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth (Book 6)
Hell to Pay (Book 7)
A fun tale and an enjoyable read.
_The Unnatural Inquirer_ is the eighth book in Green's Nightside series, and it is a good detective story. For those not familiar with the Nightside, it is the rotten supernatural heart of London, where it is always 3 A.M. and anything and everything is for sale. The Nightside was created to be outside the domains of either Heaven or Hell, and a lot of strange and powerful characters make their home in the Nightside. John Taylor is a cynical and hard-boiled private investigator along the same lines as Chandler's character Philip Marlowe; unlike Marlowe, John has some very powerful abilities of his own and can be quite cold-blooded and ruthless if he's pushed.
The book opens with a brief lost-person and lost-item case for John Taylor to solve. After dealing with that case John gets a call from the offices of the "Unnatural Inquirer", the cheapest and most scandal-mongering tabloid in the Nightside. The Unnatural Inquirer has purchased exclusive rights to a DVD which shows a transmission from the afterlife, but the DVD and its owner have disappeared and it's up to John to find them.
As in "Hell to Pay", something or someone shuts down John's gift for finding things. John resorts to the time-tested P.I. tradition of tracking down and either cajoling, interrogating, or threatening anyone who might have a lead in the case. In their determination to get SOME kind of story out of this no matter what, the staff of the Unnatural Inquirer have assigned Bettie Divine to be a partner for John and follow his every move.
At the end of the day, the DVD and its owner have been located (if you want to know what happens to them you'll have to read the book), John's reputation gets even nastier than it was before, and John's favorite bar is again shot up, incinerated, and just generally trashed (this is a common occurrence, much to the bar owner's irritation).
Some parts of _The Unnatural Inquirer_ seemed a bit too close to plot elements used in _Nightingale's Lament_. And while Bettie Divine's character was enjoyable to have along, she didn't really add a whole lot to the detecting. However, her presence and her temptation force John to decide whether he's happy with his girlfriend Shotgun Suzie, and if not then why should he stay?
As with many of the other Nightside books, the detective cases are just one half of what is going on. The other half is John struggling with questions many of us face (although not on the grand scale he encounters, thank goodness!!!), such as whether it's better to be partners with the cheerful person who likes an idealized version of you, or the taciturn person who sees you as you are and still loves you; how long can self-inflicted guilt last and how much is enough; and if the whole basis of religion is faith, then does anyone really want to KNOW? As one deity on the Street of the Gods remarks, "It's our job to provide mysteries and wonder, not grubby little facts."
Walker, who was formerly the very visible and very powerful voice of the Authorities, is still around and is still hip-deep in the power and politics of running the Nightside. The Authorities all died during the Lilith War, and John has started asking some very pointed questions about who is backing Walker now? I think there is also some foreshadowing that Walker and John Taylor will eventually come to blows.
I'd like to give the book five stars for the religion and free will themes, John's relationship with Suzie, the detective work, the truth about what is really on DVD, and the surprises of Kid Cthulhu and Alex Morissey's new girlfriend. But some of the plot elements were just a little too convenient and there were at least three typographical errors I found, including one where the names of two characters got mixed up. So I'm giving it four stars overall.
Good book ... worth the read!
Green solidly comes through again with this entertaining Nightside novel. Partnering with the demon reporter Bettie Divine, the plot was for the most part fun and fast paced. The ending, however, as usual returned to Shotgun Suzie and John Taylor, the two emotionally damaged and codependent characters. While in earlier novels there was something touching about this pairing, it's beginning to play quite old since it doesn't seem to go anywhere. The John/Bettie interlude was hopeful, but ended up flat. Here's hoping Green takes a new direction in future books. The hardcover format is also distressing. These are not long books, and I'm not sure the cost of the hardcover is justifiable.




