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Philippa (Pip) Ballantine

Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
and Marion Deeds
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Philippa Ballantine
Philippa Ballantine 
was born in Wellington, New Zealand, studied English Literature and Politics at Victoria University, and found herself working in the magical world of libraries. She still lives in Wellington, and is kept company by two Siberian cats, Sebastian and Viola. Here's Philippa Ballantine's website.



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Books of the Order — (2010-2013) Publisher: Between the living and the dead is the Order of the Deacons, protectors of the Empire, guardians against possession, sentinels enlisted to ward off the malevolent haunting of the geists... Among the most powerful of the Order is Sorcha, now thrust into partnership with the novice Deacon, Merrick Chambers. They have been dispatched to the isolated village of Ulrich to aide the Priory with a surge of violent geist activity. With them is Raed Rossin, Pretender to the throne that Sorcha is sworn to protect, and bearer of a terrible curse. But what greets them in the strange settlement is something far more predatory and more horrifying than any mere haunting. And as she uncovers a tradition of twisted rituals passed down through the dark reaches of history, Sorcha will be forced to reconsider everything she thinks she knows. And if she makes it out of Ulrich alive, what in Hell is she returning to?

fantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Books of the Order 1. Geistfantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Books of the Order 1. Geist 2. Spectyr fantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Books of the Order 1. Geist 2. Spectyr 3. Wrayth
Forthcoming: Harbinger

fantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Books of the Order 1. GeistGeist

fantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Books of the Order 1. GeistSometimes you read a book and enjoy it while reading, only to find it falls apart when you think about it later. The inverse happened to me with Philippa Ballantine’s Geist. I enjoyed it, and then the more I thought about it, the more I found to appreciate.

Geist is a secondary-world fantasy, set on the continent of Arkaym. The residents of Arkaym fear the geists, powerful otherworldly spirits that can enter the physical realm and possess people. Standing between the populace and the geists is the Order, which can best be described as a (mixed-gender, non-celibate) organization of warrior monks. The members of the Order are classified by their skill set: Actives have the power to blast geists with offensive magic, but are dependent upon Sensitives to discern the spirit’s presence and strength. Actives and Sensitives work together in pairs, though each camp has some disdain for the other.

Deacon Sorcha Faris, a strong Active, is assigned a new partner after her previous Sensitive (and estranged husband) is rendered out of commission. She and this new partner, the still-green Merrick Chambers, are assigned to investigate mysterious goings-on in the remote city of Ulrich. A disaster crosses their paths with that of Raed Rossin, a pretender to the imperial throne. There are conspiracies afoot, and the geists are behaving in ways believed to be impossible. The three protagonists’ fight to survive leads them to break all manner of protocol and tradition.

Ballantine’s world-building is subtle. Instead of spoon-feeding or info-dumping, Ballantine gives readers exactly the amount of information they need at a particular moment. As a result, reading Geist feels like an extended leap of faith. It’s like walking in a bank of fog, carrying a lantern that illuminates only the next step ahead; we have to trust that Ballantine will make sure the road keeps appearing in front of us. She does — the story never becomes confusing — but it can be a little disconcerting if you’re used to a more heavy-handed style of world-building. In retrospect, though, it’s also really gratifying. I feel the urge to wave the book around and shout, “Hey, writers! Here’s how you build a world without showing all of your work on every single page!”

The characterization is fantastic. Sorcha, in particular, jumps right off the page; an abrasive, snarky, sometimes narrow-minded, yet often endearing woman who is determined to do what’s right and likes her cigars. Merrick is less sharply drawn but also lovable, and Raed — a noble rogue with a dark secret — may just win my award for “Hottest Fantasy Hero Since Joscelin Verreuil.”

The plot moves quickly and is peppered with banter and sexual tension. The ending is not a cliffhanger, but left me eager for more; I just have to know what happens with these characters! Geist will appeal to urban fantasy fans willing to venture into a wholly invented world, and to high fantasy fans that don’t mind a story that’s a little sexy. I thoroughly enjoyed this character-driven novel that isn’t quite like anything else I’ve read. —Kelly Lasiter

Shifted World — (2012- ) Publisher: In a world that is in constant shifting, where mountains can change to plainsand then to lakes, Talyn is the Hunter for the Caisah, and a wreck of a once-proud person. She has lost her people, the Vaerli, and her soul working for the man who destroyed her people. All unknowing, she carries within her a Kindred, a chaos creature from the center of the earth that wants to help bring the Vaerli back to power. However, she has lost the ability to communicate with it. She must also deal with the machinations of Kelanim, the mistress of Caisah, who out of fear will do anything to bring Talyn down. Little does the Hunter know that salvation is looking for her, and it wears the face of gentleness and strength. Finn is a teller of tales who carries his own dreadful secret. He sets out to find answers to his path but ends up in the city of Perilous and Fair where he meets Talyn. He knows the danger and yet is drawn to her. Their fates are bound together. Meanwhile, the Hunter's lost brother Byre is searching for his own solution to the terrible curse placed on the Vaerli. He sets forth on a treacherous journey of his own, which will intersect in the most unlikely place with that of Talyn and Finn. The ramifications of this encounter will be felt by all the people in Conhaero, from the lost Vaerli to the Caisah on his throne.

fantasy book reviews Philippa Ballantine Hunter and Fox Shifted World

As Pip Ballantine with Tee Morris

The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences — (2011-2012) With Tee Morris. Publisher: These are dark days indeed in Victoria’s England. Londoners are vanishing then reappearing, washing up as corpses on the banks of the Thames drained of blood and bone. Yet the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences — the Crown’s top-secret organization whose bailiwick is the strange and unsettling — will not allow its agents to investigate. Fearless and exceedingly lovely Eliza Braun, however, with her bulletproof corset and a disturbing fondness for dynamite, refuses to let the matter rest… and she’s prepared to drag her timorous new partner, Wellington Books, along with her into the perilous fray. For a malevolent brotherhood is operating in the deepening London shadows intent upon the enslavement of all Britons. And Books and Braun — he with his encyclopedic brain and she with her remarkable devices — must get to the twisted roots of a most nefarious plot… or see England fall to the Phoenix!

Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix RisingPip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix Rising 2. The Janus Affair

Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix RisingPhoenix Rising

Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix RisingWellington Books and Eliza Braun are agents in the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences, taking on the uncanny in the name of Queen and country. Agent Books is a straitlaced archivist — don’t call him a librarian — who enjoys mechanical tinkering and his peaceful job among the Ministry’s old files. Agent Braun is an outspoken New Zealand transplant who loves to blow things up. At the beginning of Phoenix Rising, the two agents land themselves in the doghouse with the Ministry and are assigned to work together. The unlikely partners then discover a new lead in a cold case that left Braun’s former partner institutionalized in Bedlam. An evil secret society is on the rise, and only Books and Braun can thwart their dastardly plans.

Phoenix Rising is one of those steampunk novels that’s not too serious. Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris fill the pages with explosions, witty banter, clever fashion, chase scenes, derring-do, and more explosions. The writing style intentionally evokes Victorian writing mannerisms and plays them for laughs. You’ll find plenty of steampunk gizmos, too, ranging from the handy (such as Braun’s armored corset and certain incendiary devices) to the just plain fun (Books’ “difference engine” is set up to have a function similar to that of an mp3 player).

In what may be another homage to Victorian fiction — especially Victorian serial novels — Phoenix Rising is rather episodic. It’s easy to read a quick chapter here and there when you have a break in your schedule.

The only jarring aspect is the darker twist that occurs when our heroes meet one of the villains. Up to this point, while there had been plenty of violence, it had the feel of action/adventure rather than horror. This character has a nasty streak of sadism and his scenes are too disturbing to take lightly. This section is incredibly tense and well-written, so I can’t complain about it too much, but I’m not sure it fits the “popcorn” mood of the rest of the book.

The action/adventure atmosphere does return, however, and the ending promises more Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences cases to come. With the dry humor and crackling chemistry displayed in Phoenix Rising, I’m sure they’ll be fun.

…And explosive.

Kelly Lasiter


Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix RisingPhoenix Rising

Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences 1. Phoenix Rising“The name is Braun. Eliza Braun.” She’s one-half of the “Books and Braun” team who use books and brawn to protect the British Empire and good Queen Victoria from evildoers, in Phoenix Rising, the first book of the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences series, written by Pip (Philippa) Ballantine and Tee Morris.

Phoenix Rising takes advantage of every possible steampunk trope and a kitchen-sink-ful of other influences as well. You’ll recognize The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (the movie, not the comic book,) Warehouse 13, Dark Shadows, Doctor Who, the 1960s British TV show The Avengers, Ian Fleming, Kage Baker, Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe and even a little H. Rider Haggard at the end. There are analytical engines, airships, fancy guns, automatons and amazing chemical concoctions galore, with lots of rivets, studs and leather.

Wellington Books is an archivist for The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences. He is used to working alone but circumstances throw him together with Eliza D. Braun, a field agent with an explosive history. Eliza is haunted by memories of her former partner, who went mad investigating a series of paranormal murders. Originally on the trail of the sinister House of Usher, Braun and Books soon uncover a secret group called the Phoenix Society, whose goal is some kind of British “ethnic purity” and the cleansing of an empire they believe is compromised. While Eliza and Wellington begin a clandestine investigation, the Queen’s private secretary works to suborn another Ministry agent. It isn’t clear yet if the secretary is part of Phoenix, or working for his own wicked ends.

Wellington’s character is developed from the inside out, and it’s plain that he still has inner demons. Eliza is not really developed. Facts are slapped one atop the other like noodle layers in a lasagna. She’s a cheeky colonial — and she’s rich. She likes to blow things up — and she collects art objects. These are not complexities, but frankly, since Eliza provides the energy for the book, she doesn’t need to be too complex.

The book requires Wellington, who is intellectual and observant, to behave stupidly at least once in order for the plot to work. I found the pacing of the novel to be episodic, which was distracting, and once Books and Braun infiltrate one of the secret societies, the tone changes abruptly. Brutality and death that had previously been handled offstage becomes front-and-center action. I thought this was jarring and unnecessary. The explanation of how the ubiquitous “mechamen” (mechanical men) are held together is quite chilling and evil enough.

I give Phoenix Rising a solid three stars. While I wasn’t happy with the wholesale looting of other works, I did yelp with glee when I came across a guest list with the names Barnabas and Angelique Collins on it. I guess one person’s “looting” is another person’s “homage.” Many of the names are puns or wordplays; the Ministry director’s elegant blond secretary is named Shillingsworth, which is darn close to “Moneypenny.” I won’t be marking my calendar to track down the sequel when it comes out, but I probably will read it, if only to see if my guesses about Wellington’s connection to certain shadowy characters are correct. —Marion Deeds

Other Novels:

Philippa Ballantine Chasing the Bard, Digital MagicChasing the Bard — (2005) Publisher: Born into the human world with a gift; a gift that brings him to the attention of powers both dark and light from the World of the Fey, it is his burden to defend all the world. Sive, the goddess of battle, hopes that he may be able to change the fate of her people. The Fey are dying, killed by something beyond the boundaries of worlds, and Sive will do anything to save them. So she enlists the help of her trickster cousin Puck to guard the child, and watch him grow into his gift. But a dark power imprisoned by human and Fey, plots to destroy both worlds, and unmake all that they have created. Can one boy stop the destruction, even if he is William Shakespeare?


Philippa Ballantine Chasing the Bard, Digital MagicDigital Magic — (2008) Publisher: The Fey are gone... and with them, magic. At least, that is how things seem at the conclusion of the award-nominated novel Chasing the Bard. — Lord what fools these mortals be. — Penherem is a quaint, sleepy English village where people go to escape the 21st Century. Hiding from the world of laptop computers, the Internet, and wireless communication, is Ella. A writer, now barren of ideas and drive, she resigns herself to a quiet life of solitude. Everything changes with the arrival of a shapeshifting thief. Suddenly, everyone begins to change — from the local librarian to the lady of the manor — revealing their true natures and dangerous secrets. Something in this sleepy English village is awakening... something that might be better left alone.


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