A review by felinity
Dark Jenny by Alex Bledsoe

4.0

If Jim Butcher ever decided to write a most enjoyable Dresden-style mystery around King Arthur, it'd be like this. [b:Dark Jenny|8684873|Dark Jenny (Eddie LaCrosse, #3)|Alex Bledsoe|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1312051949s/8684873.jpg|13557123] is familiar and yet different, so you get a little "aha" moment every now and again when another piece falls into place, giving you the opportunity to enjoy a familiar story and setting, but with nothing quite the same as you remember. This also stands alone in the Eddi LaCrosse series; you don't need to have read the others to understand or enjoy it.

Small tip: if you're picky about historical accuracy and can't bear to watch a movie or read a book where "That wasn't even *invented* yet!", you might want to think again. It's nothing major, but the few things I noticed might drive you insane.

If, however, you love something that's tongue-in-cheek, doesn't care about tiny specifics but does care about smart comments and a disinterested hero who nonetheless gets pulled into the middle of a crisis, start reading!