Sunday, March 13, 2011

Dark Oracle (Oracle #1) by Alayna Williams

Publisher: Pocket
Publication Date: May 25, 2010
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Status: The first in the Oracle series, followed by Rogue Oracle.
Source: Received from my Secret Santa on LibraryThing's SantaThing
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Oracle
Location: Many places. Tennessee, New Mexico...
Other Info: Dark Oracle was Williams' debut. Under the name Laura Bickle, she's the author of the Anya Kalincyzk books: Embers and Sparks.
Description (from Goodreads): 

As a criminal profiler, Tara used science and her intuitive skill at Tarot card divination to track down the dangerous and depraved, including the serial killer who left her scarred from head to toe. Since that savage attack, Tara has been a recluse. But now an ancient secret society known as Delphi’s Daughters has asked for her help in locating missing scientist Lowell Magnusson. And Tara, armed with her Tarot deck, her .38, and a stack of misgivings, agrees to try.
Tara immediately senses there is far more at stake than one man’s life. At his government lab in the New Mexico desert, Magnusson had developed groundbreaking technology with terrifying potential. Working alongside the brusque but charismatic agent Harry Li, Tara discovers that Magnusson’s daughter, Cassie, has knowledge that makes her a target too. The more Tara sees into the future, the more there is to fear. She knows she has to protect Cassie. But there may be no way to protect herself—from the enemies circling around her, or from the long-buried powers stirring to life within. . . .

     Dark Oracle is a mystery novel, interwoven with paranormal elements. In particular, foretelling the future. The heroine is an oracle, and in the past she used her skill with the tarot cards to solve cases. At the beginning of the story, Tara has retired from a life of fighting crime for very personal reasons. She's scarred physically and emotionally. Worse, she's lost her mother, and severed her connection with the Daughters of Delphi, the women she formerly regarded as family. Tara's seclusion ends when her mother's friend, Sophia, comes to plead for Tara's help in the case of a missing scientist. Though reluctant (that's not quite a strong enough description), Tara at last agrees to help.
     The case proves to be as important as the Pythia has predicted. It also brings Tara back into the real world, and it forces her to face everything she's simply eliminated from her life, rather than deal with. It also brings FBI agent Harry Li into her sphere. The romance between them isn't as intense as I generally like. There's a lot of tenderness and sympathetic feeling. Harry's a sort of beta hero. He has emotions and he reflects on them. As someone who generally prefers an alpha hero--who would rather join a sewing circle than even admit he had emotions--Harry didn't really do it for me. It's not that I didn't like him--it's that I didn't get that fluttery, swoony feeling I get over heroes I lurve. I want to say, though, that Harry's reaction when he finally discovers that Tara uses Tarot cards is totally right on. He doesn't flip out and think she's crazy (or, in the case of certain heroes, decide that he loves the heroine despite her insanity). What really flips him out is the idea that Tara might have let the cards decide how intimate she was willing to be with him.
     Williams does a great job of creating the paranormal part of the story. Mostly, it takes place in the real world--our world. But within that world, there's a group of women, known as the Daughters of Delphi, that can predict the future. Each woman within the organization has her own way of seeing the future. For Tara, our heroine, it's the tarot cards. For her nemesis, it's the art of geomancy, of using the ground to divine the future. For the Pythia, the head of the Daughters of Delphi, it's pyromancy. Tara's reading of the cards reminds me of a certain period of my life when I thought Tarot cards were the coolest thing ever. I remember sitting in my bedroom with my door locked (because I didn't want my brothers or my parents to know what I was doing) and laying out the cards, trying to tell my fortune. You can imagine how well a fourteen-year-old girl can do that.
     I'm looking forward to Rogue Oracle because the end of Dark Oracle gave me definite hope for the future. Oh, and I'm hoping to see lots more of Harry's Pops, Martin.

4 comments:

Alayna Williams said...

Thanks so much for taking the time to read and review DARK ORACLE, Ruby! I'm thrilled that you enjoyed it. :-)

Jenny said...

Fabulous review Ruby! Harry doesn't sound like he's in the same swoon worthy realm as Hawke, but that's kind of a difficult bar to reach:) Sounds like a really interesting read though, I like the tarot card aspect!

Rubita said...

Alayna: I'm totally fainting that you've read my review. How awesome is that?

Jenny: Yeah, Hawke's bar is so ridiculously high that he's in another realm. Sigh. Now that his story is over, I need a replacement. Got any suggestions?

Alayna Williams said...

Ruby, I'm in a swoon that you enjoyed it! :-D