As the title says, Quicksilver: Book Two of the Looking Glass Trilogy (An Arcane Society Novel), is the sequel to the excellent contemporary romance In Too Deep. A few points make this a most unusual sequel.
- There is no continuity in the characters. The two leads Virginia and Owen have a tenuous connection to Jones and Jones and the Arcane Society. Virginia mistrusts Arcane as she feels they view people like her who make their living via their paranormal skills as frauds. Jones and Jones contracted Owen to solve the murders of two glass readers.
- The author writes under different names, Jayne Ann Krentz for In Too Deep and Amanda Quick for Quicksilver
- Quicksilver is set in Victorian England, some 130 years before In Too Deep. Quicksilver included a short teaser for the third book, Canyons of Night which is by Jayne Castle and set several hundred years in the future and on a different planet. (I have read several of Jayne Castle’s science fiction/paranormal romances and enjoyed every one).
Certainly an unusual combination for a sequel! It’s actually the second book that includes paranormal weapons made by Millicent Brightwater. The “quicksilver” is a mirror that makes a cameo appearance at the very end of In Too Deep and then used for attempted murder in Quicksilver.
Overall
I liked Quicksilver and will continue to read books by Jayne Ann Krentz (and her other two names Amanda Quick and Jayne Castle), but I think she is an author best read in small doses, say a couple books now and then a couple more in a month or two. I find this is true for most authors in fact.
The dialogue felt real, you could feel the gloom in the setting, and the characters’ motivations and feelings were plausible. I didn’t care for these characters or the Victorian setting nearly as much as the contemporary In Too Deep. The limitations that Victorian women worked under (and through) were real, but tiresome to read about. It would have been interesting to read more about the credulous clients and those who found the paranormal – whether real or fraudulent – so popular.
The plot had a few eye-rolling moments, especially the set up at the end with the two villains.
Overall 4 Stars.
Here is my review of the earlier In Too Deep:
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