White Trash Warlock
Jun. 7th, 2023 12:31 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book came so highly recommended by friends, I had to dive in. I did not regret it in the least. Adam Binder is down on his luck and alienated from most of his family, except an elderly aunt. They live together in a trailer park in Oklahoma. His father disappeared when he was young and all he really knows of his father is that's where his magic came from. His mother and elder brother left him behind in a juvenile mental hospital years ago, leaving him with no schooling and not much in the way of skills. He is, at least, talented with cars.
Robert (Bobby) has been living in Denver working as a doctor with the perfect house, perfect wife, Annie, except they've been unable to conceive. The effect on Annie has been profound until one day even Bobby with his lesser amount of magic (he's buried it deep along with his hatred of their abusive father) sees the monster hooked into Annie. He has to do what he hasn't done in years: contact his kid brother for help.
While very reluctant to help after being abandoned to abuse by his brother and mother, Adam feels Annie - who treated him kindly via email - deserves to be helped. Turning his rat trap of a car northwest, Adam goes to help, getting drawn in by monsters, gods and goddesses even by death herself. With the help of a cute police officer whose life he entangled, Adam needs all his tricks to save Annie if he can.
There is so much emotion in this. This is a highly dysfunctional family, with Mom bordering on homophobia and definite neglect of her youngest son. Robert acts more like dad than big brother and while he might want the best for Adam he does it in the worst way possible. There are real stakes in this and all the characters feel so very real. I generally don't dive into the next book in a series right away but I am tempted here. I will certainly be reading it. Also while the story wrapped up the plot, its last chapter is a cliffhanger for book 2, not my favorite way to end but it works here.
View all my reviews