
Tied to that was: figuring out how Charley became the amalgation of beings and powers that she is at present, and who’s telling her the truth about it learning what all can Charley do, power-wise, and what all she’s allowed to do according to Jehovahn’s “rules” and Amber being a prophet and getting stalked and threatened. The main overarching plot was Charley finding a way to defeat the last god of Uzan to ensure Beep’s safety/destiny. When I say a book is trying to tell too many stories at once, I’m referring to one of two situations: Either the connection between the two plots is so loose as to have obviously been contrived, or the plot connections are strong/justified, but there are just too many limbs on the tree. This isn’t the first book I’ve complained about trying to tell too many stories at once, but this is probably one of the best examples. While I love this book as much as I love all the others, I can still acknowledge that this novel was either a little too full of itself or scrambling to add length. The other books in the series have tread this line, but this is the first one I feel steps over it. But the forces of hell are determined to see Charley banished forever to the darkest corners of another dimension.The eleventh Charley Davidson book is a good example of too much plot. Now, Charley is learning to make peace with the fact that she is a goddess with all kinds of power and that her own daughter has been born to save the world from total destruction. With the son of Satan himself as her husband and world-rocking lover, will Charley be able to defeat the ultimate evil and find a way to have her happily ever after after all? But the forces of hell are determined to see Charley banished forever to the darkest corners of another dimension.




As a part time Private Investigator and full-time Grim Reaper, Charley has to balance the good, the bad, the undead, and those who want her dead. My entire life can be summed up in one sentence:Ī typical day in the life of Charley Davidson involves cheating husbands, errant wives, missing people, philandering business owners, and, oh mons, hell hounds, evil gods, and dead people. Grim Reaper Charley Davidson is back in Eleventh Grave in Moonlight, the latest installment of Darynda Jones' New York Times bestselling paranormal series.
