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(More customer reviews)Frances Pauli does something in 207 pages that some fantasy authors can't do in 500 and that is layout not one, but two complex worlds, with all the trimmings. She lays out multiple characters that you truly feel attached to midway through. I really enjoyed this book a lot as it shows just how awesome of a storyteller Frances Pauli is. There is so much going on in two vastly different worlds, with several very different characters but there is never once that I felt confused, left behind or short changed by any of it. The flow of the book runs smoothly from start to finish and I found myself fully immersed in the story. I love a story that pulls me in and puts me right beside the characters. I love feeling as if I'm sharing in their adventure and this book truly did that for me. Frances Pauli is one of my all time favorite storytellers and I'm very excited to follow anything and everything this talented author puts out there!
Click Here to see more reviews about: A Moth In Darkness
The boundaries between the worlds have fallen. Forced to integrate the creatures of fantasy into real life, humanity struggles against its disillusionment, prejudice and an inevitable feeling of inadequacy. Once an agent for the embassy that mediates between the worlds, Elizabeth Larson has abandoned her past and slipped into a world of nostalgic addiction to fairy revels, dancing, and the dark lure of her own memories. But when Lockland Sheen, her former partner and lover, goes missing, she is pulled reluctantly back into service. She must venture once more across the borders, into the land that haunts her, facing a string of gruesome murders, the imposing Sidhe rulers and her own addiction in the process.While the Embassy's agents attempt to soothe tensions between the races, Liz and her new partner search the fairy realm for Lockland. Fighting the constant temptation of the revels, they piece together the trail of an unknown enemy. But the longer they follow it, the more it appears that the man they came to rescue is more villain than victim. And the more they rely on Elizabeth's ties to the fairies, the closer she inches toward the madness that lurks behind her fantasies.
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