Review
Claire and Leo are now in more modern times but facing the same adversaries from the past, the same evil wolves in sheeps clothing, still up to their age-old efforts to enslave all of humanity. For good measure Baird incorporates the stories of the 18th century French Beast of Gevaudan and the 1898 Kenyan killer lions and alludes to Ogopogo and the sasquatch to add authenticity to the narrative. But whatever guise evil chooses to shroud itself in, Claire knows prophetically that even as she lives the life of an ordinary school girl with gossiping chums and a mother who has mysteriously disappeared, she must battle her former enemies and their witchcraft, potions and spells. She finds allies (although sometimes through circuitous routes) in her older friend Dr. Myra Moore and the doctors menagerie of pets; in Leo, of course; in a great horned Owl; in an African gray parrot; and in a peregrine falcon that hovers nearby. She gains solace from the scribblings of Al Ramsey, Dr. Moores uncle and a probable revenant too. And she escapes when she can to the warm memories of her former lover, William Macfarlane. Theres the love of her current father despite his over protectiveness, as she sees it, and edging into her life is a new-found flame, Brian Andrews, potentially able to make her forget William.
Opposing her are the Van Burens, uncle and nephew reincarnates of Mamba and Phobetor, their assorted rogue daimons from captured crows to attack dogs, and a wannabe witch, a schoolmate named Josie who finds she has more than she can handle when she falsely confesses to being the revenant of Alice Ramsay and the Van Burens sic their killer dogs on her.
Baird has done a masterful job of mixing and matching story elements-Claire and her supernatural foes juxtaposed with Claire and her tussles with her human nemesis, Josie. The background characters and Claires tiffs with her dad are realistically rendered. And theres white-knuckle tension when Claire, in the shape of a crow, narrowly escapes being shot by the elder Van Buren. The ending of the book is neat and tidy but there are teasers for the next book too: more dangers to come, a mother to find, a father to be told about past lives and a puzzle to be solved about a peregrine falcon.
Youll need to read the book to find out why a witch phones a nun, but the read will be well worth it.
M. Wayne Cunningham (Books in Canada)
-- Books in Canada
Book Description
Claire Norton is a revenant-the reincarnation of a 17th- century noblewoman found guilty of witchcraft. While this amazing discovery explains some of the strange vision-memories she's experienced, it doesn't explain what she's supposed to do with these visions or how she'll battle the forces that have been against her since even before she was Mistress Alice Ramsay.
Claire is not alone on her journey. She is guided by Leo, her familiar, an ancient spirit in an animal's body. Leo helps her battle the Dark Circle coven, the black witches and warlocks. As Claire tries to come to terms with who she is, who she was, and who she must be, she also struggles to understand why her mother left her and her father three years ago. Could she have known her daughter's power and destiny? Claire wonders if her mother also visits the alternative dimension Leo has revealed to her. And as she prepares for future battles with the evil coven, Claire begins to wonder if she has the strength and knowledge to fight the terrible threat of their dark powers.