Posted 29 October 2009 - 12:12 AM
I have to admit that I am huge fan of the Dresden series. I love the development of the paranormal and supernatural worlds within the series. The only thing I dislike, and it is a minor quibble really, is the fact that every book seems to follow the same narrative arc. There are three basic sections: 1. Introduction - Harry gets a case, there is a strange incident and usually a new character is introduced. 2. Development - Harry gets the tar knocked out of him at least once, the various introductory threads reveal themselves to be linked. 3. Ending - Harry pieces everything together, comes up with a plan that he refuses to tell anyone, the million to one shot pays off and nine out of ten plot threads are neatly tied up.
Now I am not knocking Butcher for doing this. As far as I am concerned he can go on churning these out until the end of time. But they are very samey in this regard. On the other hand Butcher is probably the best of the modern urban fantasists I have read and is a delightful counter to the usually moronic Mary-Jane-esque vampire romance series out there (you know of which I speak).
If you can excuse the sweeping gender stereotype, Dresden is like the boy version of the Sookie Stackhouse books or the anti-Twilight. And for this reason I have to admire Butcher. He does modern fantasy by the numbers but he does it well. His universe is well developed, the rules of magic don't change dramatically, the worlds of the faerie and the vampire courts are intriguing and well constructed, the overall plot arcs continue to develop. Characters drop in and out but there is a sense that they change and develop off page and there are only a few Deus ex Machina moments. Even though Harry regularly seems to pull off the impossible, he gets the tar beaten out of him regularly, and there is always a price to pay for his wins. An additional point is that he blends the real world with the fantastic world almost seamlessly, and this should get more respect that it does. The inclusion of magical, supernatural and metaphysical beings into modern-day Chicago could have been handled badly, and yet Butcher makes it look easy.
The dialogue is only occasionally clunky and generally the characters are a delight to read. There is enough witty banter to entertain, as well as enough pathos and emotion to make any sacrifices actually feel like sacrifices. There are few out and out heroes, they all seem to have their own personal flaws and foibles. The villains of the series have been slightly less successful, but usually they are complex and semi-realistic. I can't remember off-hand any Ming the Merciless moments of maniacal laughing and 'curses, foiled again'. So all in all I enjoy the Dresden series and usually look forward to the next one.
I miss the Marlowe-esque detective noir feel of the first few that has disappeared from the latter books, but as the series continues to develop and the arcs grow in complexity and become increasingly inter-textual I can live with that.
Trust me, I'm a doctor.
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