May 102013
 

Home Improvement: Undead Edition

Home Improvement: Undead Edition

First time in paperback!

14 TALES BY PATRICIA BRIGGS • VICTOR GISCHLER • HEATHER GRAHAM •
JAMES GRADY • SIMON R. GREEN • CHARLAINE HARRIS •
STACIA KANE • TONI L. P. KELNER • E E KNIGHT •
ROCHELLE KRICH • MELISSA MARR • SEANAN MCGUIRE •
SUZANNE MCLEOD • S J ROZAN

The editors of the New York Times bestselling Death’s Excellent Vacation bring home a captivating collection—including a Sookie Stackhouse story.
 
There’s nothing li

List Price: $ 16.00

Price: $ 8.21

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  3 Responses to “Home Improvement: Undead Edition”

  1. 53 of 53 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    3.5 – 4 stars – If you thought remodeling your home was hell, you ain’t seen nothing yet., August 12, 2011
    By 
    melindeeloo (sb,ca) –
    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

    Home Improvement the Undead Edition is a pretty varied collection of stories some urban fantasy and a few horror. Many of the authors here offer shorts connected to their long running series, which is fun for us fans. On the whole though, this is a pretty mixed bag, there are some stories that I just slogged through side by side with some that I really enjoyed. I found that my favorites on the whole were ones by authors that were already my favorites – well they are my favorites for a reason.

    <<<——–These were my favorites——–>>>>
    “Through This House” by Seanan McGuire – a Toby Daye connected short. The first step in Toby’s remodel of the Knowe she inherited, get the house to recognize her ownership – Liked this one, looks like a lot has happened to Toby since I read the first book, I really need to move the rest of the series to the top of the TBR pile

    “Rick the Brave” by Stacia Kane – A Downside connected short. Electrician Rick is gonna earn his big paycheck during this Downside remodel – I enjoyed this one even though I’ve only read Kane’s demons and not her Chess books. There’s a bit of Chess and Terrible for Downside fans.

    “Full-Scale Demolition” by Suzanne McLeod – A Spellcrackers connected short. A Pixie hunting gig, lands magical troubleshooter Genny in some scaly trouble – this one was really fun.

    “The Brightest Day” by Tony Kelner – A woman contracted to raise the dead has to keep reanimating an architect’s revenant or his final project will never be finished – The irreverent voudou practitioner and the funny ending made for a humorous wrap up to the anthology.

    <<<—-These were pretty good too ——–>>>>
    “Gray” by Patricia Briggs – Seems to be set in another part of Mercy’s world – A woman returns to rebuild her home – There was a nice amount of pathos to the setup and I liked the resolution, so this one worked for me.

    “Blood on the Wall” by Heather Graham – A cult leader must now seek help from the detective he’d enjoyed harassing.

    “The Strength Inside” by Melissa Marr – This one is suitably creepy but anyone who’s had run ins with an Architectural Review board will appreciate the ending – Ok, creepy horror with humor, that I can handle – guess I am just twisted.

    “It’s All in the Rendering” by Simon Green – The Custodians of a multidimensional safe house must cut through the red tape when bureaucrats from more than one dimension demand improvements – Less bizarre than his usual fare, Green’s offering still has enough of the feel of his offbeat style to entertain.

    <<<—–These were okay, but didn’t really grab me ——>>>>
    “If I Had a Hammer” by Charlaine Harris – A Sookie connected short. Even the easiest remodeling projects take on a life of their own as Sookie, Sam, Tara and JB are soon to discover – As much as I normally enjoy wandering through Sookieville, this one was just okay – now if Harris had Eric and Pam in on a remodel project that could have been really amusing.

    “Wizard Home Security” by Victor Gischler – A wizard learns it’s a mistake to skimp on a home security system, when magic is involved.

    “The Path” by S J Rozan – A timid guardian spirit seeking to reclaim a lost artifact, will set another spirit free for its next turn on the ‘wheel’.

    “Woolsey’s Kitchen Nightmare” by EE Knight – this one was really oddball, not sure where the house theme comes in though since basically there’s a change in management to a restaurant that caters to clientele with very specific tastes – I was on the verge of being offended by the chef’s ‘special’ which turned to be a made up character and not the real one who it was obviously based on.

    <<<<—-These ‘house of horrors’ themed stories just didn’t do it for me at all—–>>>>
    “Squatter’s Rights” by Rocelle Krich – A couple moves into their new home, a home in which the past owners died, and now the wife is hearing noises…

    “Mansion of Imperatives” by James Grady – Two couples can gain squatter’s rights by spending some time in an abandoned house.

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  2. 11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    nothing special, September 5, 2011
    By 
    J. Allingham (NY) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

    I bought this becuase it had shorts by both Patricia Briggs & Charlene Harris. Overall I thought there were really only a couple of stories that were particularly good and none of the stories grabbed me enough to convince me to go find more by the same author, unlike several other short story collections I’ve read recently, one of which pulled me into Eileen Wilks Lily & Rule series which I really enjoyed.

    While I quite enjoyed the Patricia Briggs story, it wasn’t an addition to the Mercy Thompson series, although it could have been in the same world. The Sookie story was very much a stand-alone story that didn’t flesh out anything in the series. If you don’t read it you won’t miss anything of relevance.

    I won’t go through each story individually – I think they will be very much a matter of taste for people.

    All in all there are much better books out there for the money. I waffled between 2 & 3 stars (2.5 would be perfect) but finally gave it 3 because I did actually finish it so it wasn’t so bad that I gave up on it so I guess that qualifies it as “ok”. If I had known in advance how irrelevant the Sookie story was I probably wouldn’t have bought this.

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  3. 15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Okay at best, August 26, 2011
    By 
    JLW

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

    If your desire to purchase this book is because of the Sookie Stackhouse story – don’t. It’s the most boring piece of writing from Harris she’s ever written regarding the Sookie world. There were some other stories that were okay and so if you need to kill time on a plane, this has a consistent okay level for stories. This collection doesn’t have the same highs/lows of Wolfsbane and Mistletoe nor Many Bloody Returns.

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