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Fiery Magic by Niranjan

Time travel is risky and regulated, but breaking the law could save her life. Audrey is a hunter mage, employed by the largest magical corporation in the country. Temporal Corps has an exclusive license for time travel, but the laws are strict. It’s to be used only for exigencies approved by the government. When she’s sent to the past and poisoned on arrival, the only one Audrey can depend on is her partner Lyle, who is waiting safely in the future. He’ll have to break at least a dozen laws to help her. Unfortunately, getting caught is a life sentence. Changing the past is a serious crime, but when she receives a message from another version of herself, Audrey realises she may have no choice. It’s a race against the clock, each choice possibly changing her future so much she’ll never undo the damage. She might save her life, but she could lose everything and everyone that’s important to her in the process. Fiery Magic is a futuristic science fantasy adventure. If you enjoy fantasy worl...

Sigils of Spring by A.K. Faulkner (Inheritance #7)

We all fall down. 

When Quentin is accosted on the street by YouTube ghost-hunters with a crackpot theory about his mother, he writes it off as nonsense -- until they kidnap him right off the street in broad daylight. Not even his psychokinesis can save him, but Laurence will. He must. 

Except Laurence can't find Quentin. His powers have never failed him like this before. There's only one hope left: a stranger called Angela is willing to teach him more magic than he currently knows. Normally he'd write her off as bad news, but Quentin is running out of time, and Laurence is all out of options. 

He has less than 48 hours to save Quentin's life, and no price is too high. 

The clock is ticking.

CONTRIBUTOR(S): RJ Bayley (Narrator)
PUBLISHER: Ravensword Press
YEAR: 2019
LENGTH: 397 pages (12 hours 15 minutes)
AGE: Adult
GENRE: Fantasy, Romance
RECOMMENDED: Highly

Queer Rep Summary: Gay/Achillean Main Character(s), Bi/Pan Main Character(s), Ace/Aro Main Character(s).

SIGILS OF SPRING weaves together the search for a therapist with the intrusion of a ghost hunter and a side of kidnapping, forcing Quintin to work through some issues in unexpected ways. As per usual, what Quintin and Laurence are trying to accomplish in their personal lives is disrupted by the intervention of someone wildly out of their control, and not at all welcome. Some things happened in RITES OF WINTER that were traumatic for both of them, let alone all the childhood shit that Quentin is newly poised to deal with if only he could get the right tools.

I don’t think I’ve said this nearly as often I should have, the narrator is a delight, easy to listen to, and managing to convey a variety of voices with ease. I'm reading the whole series by audiobook and having a great time.

Quentin is trying to find a therapist he’s comfortable with, one where he can work through his issues and be a better person, a better partner, and perhaps someday stop having nightmares about the abuse he endured as a child. Unfortunately, some guy with a YouTube channel and way too much time on his hands has decided to harass Quintin until he confesses to being haunted by his mother's ghost. The actual answer, that he’s telekinetic, would just make things worse, so Quentin, Laurence, and the kids have to hide away from a crowd of enthusiastic ghost hunters hoping to see proof of something that isn't happening. Quentin can't prove a negative, and the ghost hunters won't take no for an answer.

The kidnapping itself is both introduced and resolved here. Because it’s mentioned in the book's description I was expecting it to happen much earlier than it did. My advice to any other readers in the same position would be to enjoy the story that’s happening, since things take a while to escalate to that point. This is not the last book in the series, far from it, and it leaves several things for later. Some are related to therapy, plus dealing with the aftermath of the kidnapping. The teasing nature of the epilogues are leading toward something far more substantial with Rufus, but that hasn’t fully materialized yet.

It’s technically possible for things to make sense to someone who tried to start with SIGILS OF SPRING, partly because Quentin's need to find a therapist means that we get convenient summaries of much of what has happened that he’s trying to work through. Because the series is organized into distinct arcs, grouped by the titles, this is the second book in the second sequence, and anyone determined to jump into the series partway through would do much better with RITES OF WINTER as their starting point.

As is usual for this series, SIGILS OF SPRING is a very character-driven book. The setting is grounded in a particular part of California (with brief forays elsewhere in the last two books), and the generally realistic setting allows for fun specificities to come through without  trying to explain all the details of this place. I've never been to California and don't need to in order to get what's happening. The worldbuilding as to place is light, but specific. The worldbuilding around psychic abilities, magic, and deities unfolds gradually throughout the series, letting each book carry only as much as is relevant. This method generally avoids infodumps, except when one of the characters is the one learning the information for the first time. Even then, the specifics are paired with explanations of relevance in a way that generally keeps the details from feeling like a lecture. 

In many respects, Quentin and Laurence's relationship has gotten to a much more comfortable stage, it’s everything else that gets stressful. At least as far as the big questions of "do they want to be together for the long term" and "do they have the goal of trying to make this work", the answers seem to be "yes and yes", they're just figuring out what that looks like. In RITES OF WINTER, Quentin made a commitment involving Laurence that's more serious and binding than even marriage would be, and Laurence is trying to process that and take it as the declaration of sincerity that it is. I didn't discuss it in my review of RITES OF WINTER because it's towards the end and would be too much of a spoiler, but I love the way that Quentin bound himself to sharing an afterlife with Laurence without needing to stop being an atheist. It lets him stay true to himself while also taking seriously the fact that Laurence's belief system features unequivocally extant deities. It's also part of him accepting how much he'd been abused, understanding that he'd need an afterlife's respite to deal with as much as he could instead of being immediately reborn as a new person who didn't remember the damage but held on to the pain. Since he lived two decades of his life in a state very much resembling that possibility, he's especially determined not to inflict that state of pain without memory on any future version of his soul.

Graphic/Explicit CW for kidnapping, confinement, disassociation, stalking, emotional abuse, physical abuse, torture.

Moderate CW for religious bigotry, child abuse, mental illness, blood, violence, murder, death.

Minor CW for ableist language, sexism, eating disorder, sexual abuse, self harm.

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