The Masqueraders of Spring, by Ben Aaronovitch

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May 20, 2012
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#1
The Masqueraders of Spring, by Ben Aaronovitch (2024) was unexpectedly amusing. I had given up on the series quite a few books ago as they were spiraling down into a direction I don't enjoy. This one was loaned to me by a friend who said it was different, and it was. It's a fairly light-hearted tale set in the 1920s, written in a decent copy of the style of P.G.Wodehouse, except for a few more serious elements (after all, it is an Aaronovitch book). Recommended.
 
Likes: Tonyblack
#2
It was definitely a deviation, but I've liked everything in Rivers of London so far (including the comics, which are great!). Stone and Sky came out recently, which is a full length novel, set back in the modern day, with Peter and Abigail both being first person narrators.

I think since the end of the Faceless Man arc (which was about book 7 or 8, I want to say), everything has been pretty much standalone, with the occasional novella thrown in (The October Man, Winter's Gifts, What Abigail Did That Summer, and Masquerades of Spring) plus comics; There's not really been any sort of "big overarching plot" in the novels themselves. I thought something may have been introduced in "Amongst Our Weapons", but there was no follow up to that in "Stone and Sky", so perhaps it will remain in the background for a while longer.
 

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