I haven't read any of the Laurel Hamilton books, but then, I find I actually read very little these days. It's not snobbery, either; I've just been on a writing roll of extreme proportions for the past four or so years, and when I write, reading basically moves to the bottom of my "look, 24 hours in the day and I should probably keep five of them for sex and sleep" priorities list.
Also:
It was interesting to write about somebody losing his soul when he wasn't sure he ever had it.
It made for interesting reading, as well. I'd love to see a series of short stories or even novells based on an original character with that level of scepticism, who finds he or she can't let go of it, even after death.
Not to hijack the thread, but I have a London Calling question and I would like the takes of at least a couple of my WIP readers.
I'm thinking about writing a new, very short prologue to the book. Since there's a long lead-up to the crime itself, and since this is a mystery and the crime should be brought to the readers' attention sooner than I've done it, the prologue would follow the theme of the book's hook into the title, and be a phone message.
Except, instead of it being JP checking his phone messages, the way it is for the rest of the book, it would be JP is flat meltdown, getting Lieutenant Patrick Ormand's answering machine on his desk at SFPD, swearing at the top of his lungs, remembering the nine-hour time difference between Cannes and San Francisco, realising it's four in the morning back home, hearing the instruction to call Patrick's cell phone (he's a cop - it's always on), waking Patrick up, letting him know Bree and Dom have just been booked for being implicated in the death of a racist bodyguard, swallowing his mistrust of Patrick and asking for official help.
I think it works, assuming I do it right. And I'm so comfortable with the voices and the characters and the set-up, I can't see myself not doing it right.
Opinions?