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Moonburn [Mass Market Paperback]

Alisa Sheckley (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 19, 2009
Some instincts are too powerful to deny.

In the past year, veterinarian Abra Barrow has gone through some major changes: She’s left Manhattan for the deceptively quiet small town of Northside, ditched her cheating husband, and discovered that he has infected her with the rare werewolf virus. Now Abra is finally beginning to feel as if she has her life under control–except when the moon is full.

But then, all of a sudden, Abra starts losing her temper–and her inhibitions–even when the sun is shining. Her new man, shape-shifting wildlife expert Red Mallin, seems to know more about her condition than he’s letting on, but he’s a little preoccupied with strange creatures that have been crossing the dimensional border.

With her hormones in overdrive, Abra finds herself releasing the beast in all the men around her. As life in Northside becomes increasingly more peculiar–and more perilous–she must decide whom she can trust . . . when she’s not even sure she can trust herself.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Alisa Sheckley is a native New Yorker. After years working as an editor at Vertigo, the mature/dark fantasy imprint of DC Comics, and working on the phenomenally popular Sandman series, she is now a full-time writer. She is the author of several novels, including The Dominant Blonde, Flirting in Cars, and her first book for Del Rey, The Better to Hold You. She lives just north of New York City with her husband and two children.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One



Manhattan is not the center of the universe. It only feels that way. But outside of the immense gravitational pull of that small island, there are whole other realms of existence.

For the past year, I’ve been living in the town of Northside, which is two hours from the city but subscribes to an alternate reality. Winter arrives earlier and tests your resourcefulness. The moon is more of a presence. Your regular waitress not only knows exactly what you’re going to order, she also knows how much money you have in the local bank, the status of your divorce negotiations, and your entire medical history, down to the name of the prescription cream you just called in to the pharmacy.

Yet there are also secrets that are easier to conceal here, buffered by trees and mountains and distance. The city may offer a kind of intimate anonymity, but the country permits other freedoms.

The freedom to run around naked in the woods, for example. Which I do about three days a month, when the moon is at its fullest. Having lycanthropy, like having children, forces you to reevaluate the advantages and disadvantages of apartment living. Of course, I’m not talking from personal experience here—I don’t have children.

But even though I accept that I’m better off in the country, it’s been a bit of an adjustment. Before I moved out here, trying to save my doomed marriage, I’d had a coveted slot as a veterinary intern at the Animal Medical Institute on the Upper East Side. And while the education I got there was top of the line, I’ve had to unlearn a fair chunk of it.

In the city, people don’t purchase pets, they adopt substitute children to carry around in big handbags, or rescue surrogate soul mates who will wait uncomplainingly at home all day, then greet each homecoming with frenzied affection. If Basil the basset hound gets cancer, nobody blinks an eyelash at spending thousands of dollars on medical care, physical therapy, a specially designed prosthesis.

Around here, it’s a different story.

Northside dogs are considered animals, and they spend much of their day outside and unattended, having adventures that their humans know nothing about. There are exceptions, of course, but in general, country people love their dogs, though they don’t regard them as quasi-humans covered in fur. Northsiders acknowledge the wolf that resides within the breast of every canine, no matter how outwardly domesticated. “It’s no kind of life for a dog” is the verdict for most serious illness.

Looking at the massive, gore-spattered rottweiler stinking up my examining room, I had to wonder who had it better: the beloved city pets who received constant attention and care, or their country counterparts, who had the freedom to follow their instincts and roll in decomposing deer entrails.

“I don’t see or feel any cuts or abrasions,” I told the dog’s owner, a lean woman with work-roughened hands, leathery skin, and brittle, teased black hair. Her name was Marlene Krauss and she ran a hair salon out of her home. I could feel her sizing up my long brown braid the way a lumberjack sizes up a redwood.

“In fact,” I said, double checking the pads of the rott- weiler’s large paws, “I don’t think this is her blood at all. Queenie’s probably just been frolicking in something dead.”

“Oh, I don’t care about that,” said Marlene. “She’s always getting into something.” When she moved, I caught a whiff of stale cigarette smoke and some drugstore version of Chanel No. 5. If I’d been completely human, the combination would have been strong enough to mask the usual vet’s office odors of cat urine, bleach, rubbing alcohol, and frightened dog. If I’d been completely wolf, I wouldn’t have made any olfactory value judgments. As it was, I was smack in the middle of my monthly cycle, which meant that the scent of Marlene was getting up my nose and on my nerves.

“So what was the reason you brought Queenie in today?”

Marlene tapped her manicured fingers impatiently on the steel operating table. “Because I think she’s pregnant.”

“Oh,” I said, momentarily nonplussed. There I was again, making urban assumptions. In Manhattan, most people didn’t know that most dogs’ dearest wish is to roll in a putrid corpse. The experts theorize that dogs do it to disguise their own predator’s scent from potential prey, but watching dogs, you can see that there’s a wild, abandoned joy to be had from rolling around in something truly rank.

Of course, I knew this from personal experience as well. But I try not to think about that part of my life during my working day. Compartmentalize, that’s the trick.

“Well? Aren’t you going to check her?” Her voice sounded like it had been fed a steady diet of cigarettes and broken glass.

“Of course.” Crouching back down, I looked at Queenie, who instantly licked me on the lips. Maneuvering my face so it was out of tongue range, I put my hand on the dog’s abdomen and palpated. Her mammary glands were swollen. “Were you trying to breed her?”

“Not to a damn coyote.”

“You think she was bred by a coyote?”

“I could hear them howling, and when I went out to bring Queenie in, I found her rope had been bitten clear through.” Marlene went on to explain how she had just shelled out good money to fix Queenie up with a pure-blood rotty male, and the stud fee wasn’t refundable just because Queenie had hooked up with a no-good-thieving lowlife who wasn’t even from the same subspecies. I had to bite the inside of my cheek to keep from laughing, because I wasn’t sure whether Marlene was talking to me or her dog, or both.

And then it wasn’t amusing anymore, because Queenie started to whimper. She gave Marlene a particularly pathetic look, equal parts hurt and confusion. It probably affected me more than it should have, because I’d worn that look myself for the better part of a year, while my ex-husband criticized and cheated and infected me with a little something he’d picked up in the Carpathian mountains.

I suppose I hadn’t been much savvier than Queenie, who didn’t understand what she’d done wrong by following her instincts, and certainly couldn’t make the connection between that long-forgotten afternoon with Mr. Wile E. Coyote and her owner’s current cold disapproval. I ran my hand over the short, filthy black fur on Queenie’s thick neck. It struck me that a woman who had time to apply little flower decals to the back of each nail ought to be able to hose off her dog before bringing her into the vet. I wondered if Marlene had been neglecting her dog in other ways as well.

I was still crouched down next to Queenie, but I’d stopped petting her for a moment. She nudged me with her tan and black muzzle, then pressed her full weight against my shoulder and arm, knocking me back on my heels. Like a lot of big dogs, rottweilers have an inbred desire to lean on the unwary. “You’re a good girl,” I told her.

Then, before Marlene could disagree with this diagnosis, I added my medical opinion: “She feels like she’s about two months along.”

“Damn. I’d meant to come by a few weeks ago, but I just couldn’t find the time. Well, nothing else for it. How long will it take for you to clean her out?”

I straightened up so that I could look Marlene in the eye, trying to decide how to respond. I had terminated animal pregnancies before, usually with a morning-after pill or hormone injection. Sometimes the mother is too small or too young to whelp a litter successfully. At other times, I had performed the procedure because there were too many unwanted puppies and kittens in the world, and the world isn’t kind to the unwanted. Nobody picketed the clinic or called me a killer: When it comes to veterinary medicine, the controversial is commonplace.

But like most vets, I have my own moral code. I don’t believe in performing euthanasia on animals that aren’t incurable and in pain. I’m sorry you’re moving and can’t find a good home for Captain, but that’s not really sufficient cause to kill a perfectly good young dog whose only crime is being too big for your new apartment.

I don’t dock the ears or tails of puppies, because I consider it mutilation, pure and simple. I don’t declaw cats until I explain that I’m basically amputating finger bones. And I do not abort puppies that are already viable outside the womb.

“The problem here,” I said, “is that a dog’s gestational period is usually around sixty-three days . . .” I trailed off, managing not to add as you should know, since you were planning on breeding Queenie.

“Yeah? So?”

“Well, it’s just a bit late to do it now. Queenie’s due in about a week.”

Marlene gave an exasperated huff. “Damn it.”

“I’m sorry, but if you need help with the whelping or placing the puppies in good homes . . .”

“That won’t be necessary.” Marlene snapped a leash onto Queenie’s collar. “How much do I owe you?”

I looked back over at Queenie, who had the kind of broad, large-muzzled face that a lot of people consider frightening, but who struck me as a big, genial barmaid of a girl. “What are you planning on doing with the litter?”

Marlene gave me a cold, hard look. “Since you won’t help, I’ll have to deal with it on my own, won’t I?”

Queenie gave two quick thumps with her blunt stub of a tail, probably eager to b...

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Del Rey; Original edition (May 19, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345505883
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345505880
  • Product Dimensions: 4.2 x 1 x 6.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,688,854 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author


Alisa Sheckley is a native New Yorker. After graduating Columbia University's MFA program in writing, she worked as an editor at Vertigo, the mature/dark fantasy imprint of DC Comics. As Alisa Kwitney, she has written several novels, graphic novels and non-fiction titles. She lives in the wilds to the north of Manhattan with her family, a large dog, two cats and a bearded dragon.

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Weak werewolf Novel, June 3, 2009
This review is from: Moonburn (Mass Market Paperback)
I love paranomal books on werewolves and vampires, and saw this at the airport before a flight. I became very excited, and the back of the book sounded interesting. However, I was dissapointed. (I will not repeat the sysnopsis of the book, as it has already been done in the review before.)

I never read the first book, and I am glad I did not. From the Back of the book it sounds like Abra is on her way to a new life, learning to live with what she has been dealt, yet has a little set back of 'heat'. In the second book, Abra was bitter, shallow, and self-absorbed. She blamed it all on her mother who did not pay proper attention to her when she was young and an exhusband who treated her like dirt and cheated on her. The book descend quickly into a self-absorbed bitter female who lets her 'heat' rule her and this justifys all her actions. /pfft

Before I go into what really disturbed me about the book, I will say that the author was engaging in her writing. She had many influctions of sequences that kept you wondering how they were going to pan out. She also has many different takes on paranormal that were refreshing to see a different twist. I was very excited when we found out her City friend was paranormal too, but she never develops this character or this twist. She actually does not do well developing several secondary characters.

***SPOILER ALERT***
Abra rants on on on about her cheating husband and how dispicable he is/was, while not appreciating the man/male/mate she is with in the Book (Thinking Red might not be intelectual or 'man enough' for her.) She becomes the epitome of what she hated her husband for, cheating and not treating her mate well. Not only does she cheat on Red by having fast and very lousy sex with her Ex (of course 'trying to help him') she ends up cheating with Marlarky (a drivel of a man too). She lets the 'heat' saddle her up with these poor excuses for men while she has Red at home whom she she has become 'mated' to at home. Of course you find out they are not truly mated and try to justify everything in the end by saying Red was not a very ethical man himself.

Ugh. The book just was awful. After she had sex with her Ex, I just wanted to throw the book out the window. to even ALLOW that man into her house, you knew she had no self-respect for herself. I know it's just a book, but I lost all respect for her after that. The book did not get any better, even the ending was anticlimatic.

My opinion only, please judge the book for yourself. It is a fantasy, and it did help get me from the East Coast to the West Coast rather quickly.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More MORE!!!, April 9, 2010
By 
Chives (NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Moonburn (Mass Market Paperback)
What a GREAT ride! Alisa Sheckley has an amazing touch--Moonburn delves boldly into the paranormal but with a savvy sense of humor that is not often found in this genre. These aren't comic book characters--their surprising complexities, secrets, and flaws (whether likeable or not) get entagled in lust and love in an all too-human fashion as the chapters fly by. A great story in a surreal setting that kept me up reading way too late. The frequent twists and turns were pure fun and left me astonished at the author's creativity. Moonburn dives into the unusual with glee--and wait till you 'meet' the sheriff...More Ms. Sheckley, MORE!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes!, October 23, 2009
This review is from: Moonburn (Mass Market Paperback)
Witty, funny, and sexy, Moon Burn is a winning, arrr-rousing example of furry fantasy. It's a sequel to The better to Hold You, but unlike some sequels, it never leaves you at a loss, because the author gives a good précis in the first chapter or so, before digging deeply into the new story.
Abra Barrow is a veterinarian and a recently turned lycanthrope, living in Northside, a small town outlying New York City. Northside is a good place for a lycanthrope; it is situated on a supernatural fault line, so the inhabitants don't turn a hair at shape-shifters or other uncanny manifestations. On the other hand, they do get upset when their prize dogs breed with wolves - or worse, coyotes. So there's enough work to keep an animal doctor very busy.
Whereas Abra's transformations are controlled by phases of the moon, her lover Red Mallin is a true shape-shifter, able to morph into a wolf more or less at will. He is another caretaker of animals, dealing with the wild ones while Abra tends to the domesticated. Red also monitors the supernatural boundaries, so when a Bear Sprit gets disturbed by a new upscale housing development, Red is the first to notice - but by no means the last. Abra has her own run-ins with Bruin, and it nearly costs her life.
But Bruin is pleasant and civil compared to Abra's not-quite-ex husband Hunter and his paramour, Magda. Both are werewolves - Hunter had turned Abra after being turned and claimed by Magda. They are mean and manipulative, and go to extreme lengths to sabotage Abra's relationship with Red. The fact that Abra is going into heat for the first time since her changeover makes her very susceptible. It also makes her irresistible to most males - and a few females. She makes an ill-timed visit to Manhattan to confer with a friend and starts a full-scale pheromone-driven riot.
Abra is trying to sort through her ambivalent relationships with her lover, her husband, and her boss while the Manitou spirits are reclaiming their old territory. Townsfolk who used to worry about mongrel pups now find their ornamental lap dogs evolving into full-throated wolves, while housecats are becoming cougars and pumas. It comes to a showdown between the arcane powers of the Manitou and the mere weirdness of shapechangers, an empath, the three grey sisters of Greek mythology, and a sheriff with a significant tattoo on his forehead who likes to impersonate John Wayne.
Action-packed as this book is, primarily it is a story about Changes. Abra is a very different person by the end of the book. That in itself makes this an uncommonly satisfying, gratifying book to read. I also liked that so many of the secondary characters, including Abra's mother and her friend Lilliana, are fully as interesting as the protagonists.
The reader learns a wealth of information about wolves in the course of reading this adventuresome romp, as well as a thing or two about entities most of us only encounter in fairy tales. Sheckley's skill as a writer is such that you wonder if maybe they are more than merely fictional... Strongly recommended.
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