Laura Anne Gilman, Hard Magic (Luna, 2010)

What do you do when you're fresh out of college, unable to get a job
that doesn't involve a hairnet and a spatula, and magically talented?
Well, if you're Bonnie Torres, you get recruited by an enigmatic pair
of magicians to help start the world's first forensic paranormal
investigation agency. That's right, Bonnie and four strangers have
just been tapped to start PUPI -- Private, Unaffiliated, Paranormal
Investigations -- dedicated to investigating and handling crimes
within the magical community. Unaffiliated with either the hidebound
Council or the fractious lonejacks, answering to no one, neutral in a
world where the tension between factions is increasing steadily.
It won't be easy. Bonnie and the others have to learn to work with
one another, trust each other, hone their specific strengths and blend
their styles to work as a team. They have to create an entire system
of magical forensics from the ground up, and earn the trust of a great
many people unused to trusting anyone. They have to prove their worth
and hold strong against those who'd shut them down before they ever
get started. And when their first case comes, it's a trial by fire
for the unready, untested group, and it might just be their last.
If you're familiar with Gilman's Retriever series, you may already
know where some of this is going; Bonnie and the PUPIs appear in the
latter half of that series and become semi-regular secondary
characters. Hard Magic serves as the background and origin story for
PUPI, and gives us in-depth introductions to the various members of
the team and their various specialties. It's an interesting look at
the world of the Casa Nostradamus from an all-new viewpoint, and it
gives us some more understanding of a setting where Talents
(magic-users) and fatae (non-human beings of all sorts) walk among us
in secret. Gilman's clearly having a lot of fun here as she walks her
characters through the invention of a whole new (for them, anyway)
system of magical investigation and analysis, something we haven't
seen much of in the urban fantasy genre. (The closest comparison I
can make is to Jes Battis' Tess Corday series, which is much more
high-tech and organized in its execution.)
The mystery is solid, the characterization strong, the plot
fast-paced, and the final product solid. This is a great start to a
new series, a perfect jumping-on point for new readers and a
satisfying expansion of the world first visited in the Retrievers
series. I loved Wren and Sergei's story, and I'm now hooked on Bonnie
Torres and the PUPIs.
[Michael M. Jones]


