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James Reese

Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
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James Reese
James Reese received an MA in Theatre and is now pursuing a graduate degree in Linguistics. Presently, he splits his time between Paris, France, and Tampa, Florida, where he is and working on a fifth novel. Read excerpts at his website.





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The Herculine Trilogy — (2002-2006) Publisher: Alone among the young girls taught by nuns at a convent school in nineteenth-century France, orphaned Herculine has neither wealth nor social connections. When she's accused of being a witch, the shy student is locked up with no hope of escape ... until her rescue by a real witch, the beautiful, mysterious Sebastiana. Swept away to the witch's manor, Herculine will enter a fantastic, erotic world to discover her true nature — and her destiny.

James Reese The Herculine Trilogy 1. The Book of Shadows (2002) 2. The Book of Spirits (2005) 3. The Witchery (2006)James Reese The Herculine Trilogy 1. The Book of Shadows (2002) 2. The Book of Spirits (2005) 3. The Witchery (2006)James Reese The Herculine Trilogy 1. The Book of Shadows (2002) 2. The Book of Spirits (2005) 3. The Witchery (2006)

fantasy book review James Reese The Herculine Trilogy The Book of ShadowsThe Book of Shadows: Feels unfinished

James Reese The Herculine Trilogy 1. The Book of Shadows (2002) 2. The Book of Spirits (2005) 3. The Witchery (2006)James Reese attempts Anne-Rice-style supernatural fiction with The Book of Shadows, his first novel. It is Rice-like in that it contains gender-bending sexual material, lush detail, horrifying violence, and a set of supernatural beings who have long existed in folklore but are given new "rules" and characteristics by the author. Here, it's witches, but not the sort of harmless neo-pagan witches that are around today. These are witches as depicted in medieval lore, throwing orgies and dealing with demons.

The Book of Shadows tells the story of Herculine, an orphan whose mother died mysteriously, and who is shunned at the convent that took her in afterwards. A strange turn of events leads to Herculine's trial for witchcraft. She is rescued at the last minute by an incubus, a succubus, and a witch/artist named Sebastiana, who takes her in.

Herculine reads Sebastiana's Book of Shadows, her magical diary, and learns more about her kind. At this point it gets a little weird. Sebastiana's diary is heavily drawn from the memoirs of Elizabeth Vigee-Lebrun, real-life court painter to Marie Antoinette. There's witchy stuff added in, but much of "Sebastiana's" writing about painting and court gossip comes straight from Vigee-Lebrun. Vigee-Lebrun's diary is in the public domain, so Reese is in the clear. As a reader, though, I wish he'd either invented Sebastiana's life from whole cloth or else put a fictionalized version of Vigee-Lebrun herself in the story.

Herculine's idyll at Sebastiana's manor cannot last, as one of her hostess's friends has decided Herculine is an enemy. She flees, takes on a new identity, and goes on two quests. The book ends when one of these quests has ended and the other has just begun. It's an abrupt ending and much is never resolved.

I enjoyed The Book of Shadows in places, but I had numerous issues with it. The diary sections go on too long in the middle and bog the plot down. Some of the sex scenes hit my gross-out buttons; your mileage may vary. Some of the metaphysics, especially the rules about how witches can and can't die, confused me. Most frustratingly, The Book of Shadows doesn't seem to go anywhere at the end. I prefer books that stand on their own better, even if a series is intended.

And I thought I'd scream if I saw the word enfin one more time. —Kelly Lasiter

Stand-alone novel:
James Reese fantasy book review The Dracula DossierThe Dracula Dossier
— (2008) Publisher: The Dracula Dossier is an intricately layered novel of literary suspense that imagines a dramatic clash between Jack the Ripper and Bram Stoker, one that would inspire the classic horror novel Dracula. Stalled in his writing career and overwhelmed by his charismatic, successful boss — the renowned actor, Sir Henry Irving — Bram Stoker returns to London in the summer of 1888 determined to turn his life around. Late one night, Stoker decides to take a stroll through the streets of Whitechapel, an impoverished district known for its many "bang-tails," or prostitutes, as well as the citizenry crowding its dark alleys. There, amid the shadows, he spies a familiar figure: a man very much resembling a quack American "doctor" of his acquaintance. But before Stoker can be certain, the man disappears. Little does the writer know that just a few steps away, the crime spree of the century has begun. When Stoker finds himself under suspicion, he enlists some of his illustrious friends — including Walt Whitman, Lady Jane Wilde (mother of Oscar), and the famed novelist Thomas Henry Hall Caine — in clearing his name. Stoker and friends must prove that the elusive American, Francis Tumblety, is the same man terrorizing London as Jack the Ripper. Or, failing that, they must somehow stop Tumblety themselves.


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