Out with vampires, in with other-worldy romance, writes Nicky Pellegrino.
I had absolutely sworn off angels, vampires, witches and any other fantastical creature you care to mention after reading a surfeit of them in the past couple of years but Daughter Of Smoke And Bone by Laini Taylor (Hodder & Stoughton, $34.99) somehow worked its magic on me.
I think a large part of this novel's charm is its fantastic "girlpower" heroine, Karou, who has bright blue hair and a secret other life. And yes, it is a fantasy romance, complete with angels and devils, but Taylor's prose is fresh and sassy enough to blow away any ennui with the genre.
Karou is an art student in Prague. She has a sketchbook full of strange drawings and a tendency to disappear so all her friends think she is eccentric. The truth is Karou lives between two worlds - the human one and another place, Elsewhere, where she was raised.
She has no family beyond a horned beast called Brimstone who runs a mysterious underground shop where he trades in teeth and creates magic. Karou knows nothing about herself or where she came from, but on her hands are tattoos designed to ward off the evil eye. When Brimstone calls on her to collect teeth she drops whatever she's doing and disappears through a secret portal.