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Blood Kin (Blood Lines, Book 3)
 
 
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Blood Kin (Blood Lines, Book 3) [Mass Market Paperback]

Maria Lima (Author)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 27, 2009
The perils of power...

Keira Kelly has come into her full powers, and they are frighteningly strong, creating a distance between her and her human friends in her beloved Rio Seco. It is time to obey her great-great-grandmother Gigi's orders and rejoin her family in northwest Canada, where Keira can learn to handle her dangerous new skills. She'll have friends with her every step of the way -- her shapeshifter brother Tucker, his beloved Niko, and, to Keira's dismay, her cousin on her mother's side, Daffyd ap Geraint, the Sidhe prince who suddenly appeared in her life and now refuses to leave -- but her vampire lover Adam has insisted on staying in Texas. And while there are certainly perks to being Family, such as a private Learjet for the flight to Canada and a fabulous penthouse condo overlooking Vancouver, there are threats looming that nobody, not even Gigi, anticipated. Keira's Sidhe inheritance from her mother is far more important than anyone ever realized, and the fate of the Family may depend upon what she does next....


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Sometime before the Revolution, Maria Lima was born in Matanzas, Cuba, to a family of voracious readers and would-be writers. After her family emigrated to the United States, Maria discovered the magic of books. She started writing her own stories and has been at it ever since. Her writing turned corporate as she used her journalism degree and cranked out marketing copy, feature stories and book reviews. The fiction muse kept calling and in the spring of 2005, was finally fed as Maria's first published short story, "The Butler Didn't Do It" was published in Chesapeake Crimes I and garnered an Agatha Award nomination for Best Short Story. Maria spends most of her days working as a Senior Web Project Manager in the DC area. Her evenings and weekends are spent writing.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

CHAPTER ONE

I summoned a demon once. At least at the time, that's what I'd thought it was. I could probably chalk up both the summoning and my hesitation about its result to the fact that I'd been drinking and smoking a wee bit -- okay, a lot -- of something not quite so legal. One thing for sure: the damned beast had smelled rotten, like it'd been rolling in a thousand dead skunks or a few not-so-fresh corpses.

In my world, demons were nothing more than tangible evil.

And right now, evil was about to raise its stinking, ugly-ass head again -- in the form of my former lover, Gideon.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not talking metaphorical he-done-me-wrongness or a badass boy who turned his back on my loving redemption. Gideon was neither the heartbreaking villain of a country-and-western song nor the hero of a romance novel gone amok. No, Gideon was evil. He had chosen the darkside. His power lay in darkness. He could speak to the shadows, call the shades.

I'd been in love with him and trusting and he'd convinced me to drop all my barriers, to open my naive self to him completely so we could truly be "one." I fell for it like an egg from a tall hen.

When I touched his soul, what I saw and felt inside him scared me so badly I ran from London all the way back to Texas.

But Gideon was also family. Not closely related, but all Clan were cousins, aunts, uncles, all connected. Clan blood begat Clan blood. He was blood kin.

So when Aunt Isabel showed up declaring she needed my help because Gideon was dying, that I had to leave immediately for the family compound in British Columbia -- I knew I had to go.

Of course Gideon wasn't the only reason I had to skedaddle to Vancouver. I'd also Changed yesterday, and not solely the capital-C Clan Change we all undergo when we come into our true Talent. I had to be special. I'd become the Kelly heir -- yeah, that one, the one who only came along every so many blah-blah generations, etc. The one who didn't have only a single Talent, but got the whole supernatural shebang, all the Talents from astromancy to weather witching. Not something I'd ever imagined, nor wanted. Leave it to me, Keira Kelly, to be genetically unique...or maybe a genetic freak.

The previous couple of days had been insane in other ways, too -- missing people, the one person I'd found that I could truly be myself with in a coma, my best and oldest human friend nearly raped and murdered...

The craziness had turned downright depressing, though. Said best friend, Bea, wouldn't even speak to me on the phone.

After yet another failed speed dial, I slammed the phone Bea would not answer shut and shoved it in the pocket of my backpack. A yelp came from behind me as I tossed the pack aside.

"Ay, watch it!" Bea's nephew, Noe, a gangly just-turnedeighteen-year-old loped into my living room, avoiding the pack, which had landed next to him.

"Damn. Sorry, Noe. I didn't hear you come in."

"No prob. I didn't exactly knock," he answered.

I kept my back to him as I tried to compose myself. Had Bea sent him to talk to me? To tell me to stop bugging her? I just wanted to explain to her why I'd done what I'd done. Why sentencing a man to death at the hands of a Sidhe instead of turning him over to proper human authorities had been my only choice. Noe knew none of this, however, only that his aunt and I were in the midst of some sort of disagreement.

"So, packing, huh?" Noe said as he settled onto a nearby chair. "You gonna keep calling Bea?"

I nodded and fiddled with the fastenings on a rolling suitcase I'd pulled out of the hall closet. Most of my clothes were at Adam's, but some of the cooler weather gear that I expected to need for my unexpected and unwanted trip to Canada were still at my house. The temperatures would most likely be mild, but I'd probably need warmer outer gear for nighttime.

"How'd you know I've been calling her?" I managed to say after a moment.

"You've only been calling the house and the café over and over for the past few hours," he said, leaving off the obvious "duh."

I rubbed my eyes, trying to avoid the tears that threatened. Thirty years and I still had no clue how to handle a fight with my best friend...and this one was a doozy. Less of a fight, really, and more of a complete dissonance in moral systems.

"You're heading to Canada?" Noe prodded.

"How'd you hear that?"

"I listened to the messages you left on the answering machine," he said.

"Yeah, of course you did," I muttered and put aside a pile of receipts and other detritus that I'd dug out of my duffle bag. Last time I'd used this, Adam and I had gone on a trip to a fancy vampire hotel.

"You stopping by the house first?"

Noe tried to make the question sound casual, but failed miserably. Sorry, kid, I thought, you're too damn young to dissemble. Ignoring him for the moment, I turned to search through the center drawer of a small chest I used for storage. It was a pretty cool item, picked up at a craft show last spring. The vendor claimed it was some sort of antique Asian-style chest. I didn't care about its provenance and had bought it because it was unusual. Instead of hiding it away in my bedroom, I'd installed it in my living room, its washed-out red paint and metal accents complementing my other furniture.

"Damn it, where the hell's...there you are." I slid three passports out of the back of the top center drawer, found the red one and tucked it into a travel wallet, which I then placed inside the front pocket of my backpack. Nothing like doing busywork, pretending I needed to be more prepared, even though at this point, I was as ready as I'd ever be. No need for packing much as I had plenty of clothes at the family homestead. I wasn't planning to take more than this small duffle bag and my carry-on backpack, private plane or not.

I liked to travel light. Besides, if I really needed anything while I was there, it was a good excuse to take a day or two trip to Vancouver.

"All those different passports yours?"

"What -- oh, yeah," I said, trying to keep my brain on what I was doing. Did I want to stop by their house? Bea was there, sure. No doubt getting some much-needed rest and recuperating from what happened last night...well, early this morning.

"Didn't know you could have so many. You a spy?"

I stared at the boy, all six-foot-something of him sprawled across an armchair, body spare and rangy, whipcord lean in the way that only teenagers can be. "Spy?"

"Thought only spies had more than one passport."

I laughed despite my mood. "Only in the movies," I said. "I'm a citizen of the UK by birth, U.S. by family and Canada, well...I'm not really sure about that one, but I've had all three since I was a kid. Since I'm going to Canada, I'm going to travel on my Canadian passport."

"Huh. That's kind of cool." He threw a long leg over the arm of the chair and started to swing it, his natural nervous energy needing some sort of outlet. One hand toyed with the pull on the reading lamp.

"So what's up, Noe? You need something?" I tried to keep it light, keep my voice from breaking. I managed, but just barely.

"I came by because I didn't want her to...you know...she's -- " Noe shrugged in that boneless way teenagers do. "I came by to tell you Tia told me to come see you and tell you that she's gonna talk to her."

Despite the run-on sentence and lack of pronoun attribution, I didn't have a problem parsing his message. "Yeah, thanks," I said roughly and turned away.

"You ready, sis?" My brother Tucker stuck his head through the door, one hand on the frame as he leaned in.

"Yeah." I picked up my backpack and slung it over my shoulder, trying to avoid looking at Noe. He'd done a good thing, coming out here to talk to me. Bea was the de facto matriarch of her small family, despite the fact she was about my age. Even her elderly aunt, Tia Petra, and uncle, Tio Richard, bowed to Bea's need to lead. She ran the house as well as she ran the café.

Bea and I had been friends for most of our lives. She'd been my first real friend, human and more accepting of my oddities than anyone outside my family. This estrangement was killing me.

"You leaving now?" Noe asked. "Without talking to Bea?"

Tucker started to say something, but I held up a hand. "We'll actually be here until tomorrow. Tucker's here to take me out to the ranch where we're spending the night."

"We were supposed to be leaving now," Tucker added. "But the pilot's delayed because of weather and can't get here until sometime tomorrow."

Noe stood up, brightening. "So you can come by, then, now that you have time?"

Surely Bea wouldn't turn me away in person, would she? "I'll be there in a while," I said.

"You got someone to take care of the house while you're gone?"

"We do if you're willing," Tucker answered for me as he picked up my larger duffle and hoisted it over his shoulder. "It'd be a big help if you could stop by every once in a while."

"Oh, cool. You mean me. Sure." Noe beamed. He was a good kid, mostly. Just a teenager with few prospects and very little money. He attended school part-time at the University of Texas at San Antonio and worked part-time at Bea's café, but there were few other legal ways to make ready cash around Rio Seco.

Tucker grinned at the boy's enthusiasm. "Excellent." My brother dug out his wallet and slipped Noe some bills. "Thanks, kiddo. You'll save me some worry."

"You know when you're coming back?"

Not a clue, I wanted to say, but didn't really want to go into all the reasons I was leaving so suddenly. "I'm not sure exactly," I said, "but I'll call, I promise."

I damned well intended to come back as soon as I could, but so much was up in the air, I couldn't predict anything right now.

Noe nodded and in an unexpected move, he wrapped his arms around me in a hug. "I'll tell Tia." With that, I took one last look at the house that I'd sort of called home for the past couple of years and walked away. <...


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket Books; Original edition (October 27, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 143915676X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1439156766
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #647,316 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Maria Lima is a writing geek with one foot in the real world and the other in the make-believe. Her role models include Tanya Huff, Joss Whedon, Christopher Golden and Charles de Lint amongst many others.

Her love of reading began with discovering Scholastic Books in the first grade, and her love of storytelling from her father's dinnertime tales of derring-do. In this was mixed a love of both fictional and non-fictional worlds, of history and splendor, dragons and them that slayed 'em.

It's no wonder that she grew up composing stories.

Maria's Blood Lines series, set in the Texas Hill Country, is published by Pocket Books. You'll also find her in various genre-based essay anthologies from Smart Pop Books among other collected works. She loves to mix mystery, fantasy and magic in everything she writes.

 

Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Wanted to like it but truly disappointed...*spoilers included*, January 25, 2010
This review is from: Blood Kin (Blood Lines, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
The first two books in the series were captivating with a good storyline, intriguing subplots, and insightful details. They were cohesive and made sense, sort of like a good sherlock holmes story where all the pieces fall into place at the end. However, from start to finish, Blood Kin was an exhausting effort to finish. While I'm a fan of Marie Lima's work, this novel fell far short of what I would have expected. I had been expecting this newest addition to the series for some time and upon completing it, I was surprisingly disappointed.

*spoilers*
To begin with, Keira, the main character in the series, is a non stop whiner throughout the novel. Following her change in the last novel and discovering her role as the new heir to the Kelly Clan chieftainship, Blood Kin unrelentingly highlights her desire to shy away from her new responsibilities. She is written as a constant whiner in the vein of a spoiled teenager who does not want to grow up when she knows she has no choice. I kept wanting to mentally slap the character for her constant boohooing over the notion that she is the heir to immense power, fortune, and political standing but wants to stay in Texas to be with her vampire lover. We get it! Life is not fair but you would think a 38 year old woman even in fiction would quit moaning and just figure out a solution to her circumstances instead of constantly complaining about them.

Secondly, the whole story can be summed up as this: Keira and entourage are summoned by the all powerful Kelly clan chief, Minerva (aka Gigi), to go to the the clan's enclave in British Columbia to announce her as the heir. They are delayed in Vancouver due to the mysterious deaths of a few people and an unseelie bard. After a bunch of long, drawn out and uninteresting searches, they figure out in the end that, Adam is the half unseelie crown prince, Gideon, is also a Kelly clan heir, the half brother of her current lover, Adam, and also the son of the Unseelie king, Drystan. At the end, they get sent back to Texas while Gigi waits to see what happens.

The whole story was just one meandering disjointed waste of time that could have been resolved by common sense communication between characters and Keira resolving her infantile emotional and psychological issues.

In short, I would highly recommend NOT buying this book. It was one long filler that could have been summed up in a few pages. If you must read the events, then I strongly suggest borrowing the book from your local library. This book was not worth the money it was printed on. If I could rate it 0 stars I would have.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Events do not a story make, November 18, 2009
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This review is from: Blood Kin (Kindle Edition)
I'm just as likely the wrong audience for this series, but since I did enjoy the first book some what I feel I should comment on this one. While I was not enthralled with the first book it showed some potential. The best part being the characters are very likeable and you can enjoy reading just to see what happens to them. Since then however the books have had issues. In this book the first being that there is no real story. It was more like the author just strung together a bunch of moments that meant absolutely nothing. The characters would have achieved more by washing their clothes. The actual plot events could have been covered in one chapter.

The characters are likeable still but the heroine keeps becoming an idiot at moments. She lives in a world where the supernatural happens every day yet in the second and this book it isn't something she considers until her face has been rubbed in it. That is when she isn't acting childish. If the author didn't keep giving her a "get out of jail free" card if you will then she wouldn't have any supporting characters left. It is fine to have a powerful character but the situations shouldn't be created just so the character can use the powers. Give some plot meaning to these events not just another blind stupid decision that she can then three pages later just pull out the mojo card just to say it is all better.

I say if you are desperate for a book like I was then read the first book it really isn't bad read and worth the money. Then stop. Nothing is developed in the next books that are even worth the reading let alone the money.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Really?..., May 11, 2010
This review is from: Blood Kin (Blood Lines, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
After the first two books in this series I was scrambing to get the third. What a waste of time and money. I had to keep my attention on the book through sheer determination to finish. I was looking through Netflix in between chapters to see if I could seek entertainment elsewhere.
The problems I had with this book are simple. Kiera does not act like a real person. She has in the last two which is why this seems totaly like a character shift...
SPOILER: She gets angry with Adam for keeping HUGE secrets from her and then forgives him two seconds later claiming to be an adult, yet she continually whines throughout the book like a pre-teen.
M. Lima subtly insults the Twilight series(Of which I am not a fan)apparently for laughs; of which it gets none..it felt kind of jealous and catty...
This book could have easily been a novella in that there were no real action or true revelations about her. No real growth. Another reviewer already said what I was thinking about her use of Cousin, and nephew in everyday speech. Fake.

I probably will give the next book a try but I am not hoding my breath..

Do yourself a favor and read the Mercy Thompson series or Kate Daniels for some real characters, exciting action, true romance, and real urban fantasy.
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