Fever Series: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Compelling Voice]]: The Druid Voice ability. {{spoiler|In ''Shadowfever'', Rowena's ''sidhe''-seer ability is revealed to be mental coercion, which she used to keep a hold on the other ''sidhe''-seers and on Dani to make her kill Alina.}}
* [[Compelling Voice]]: The Druid Voice ability. {{spoiler|In ''Shadowfever'', Rowena's ''sidhe''-seer ability is revealed to be mental coercion, which she used to keep a hold on the other ''sidhe''-seers and on Dani to make her kill Alina.}}
* [[Crossover]]: The books are the same universe as Moning's ''Highlander'' romance novels, with the events of the Highlander books partly to blame for what happened. Says Moning:
* [[Crossover]]: The books are the same universe as Moning's ''Highlander'' romance novels, with the events of the Highlander books partly to blame for what happened. Says Moning:
{{quote| As I was mentally forming a polite but firm refusal, in no mood to put my sexy and successful Highlanders on hiatus, she snapped, "Don't even think of telling me 'no'. You're the one who put me here. If not for you and your MacKeltars and Adam and Aoibheal none of this would be happening to me. Now fix it!"}}
{{quote|As I was mentally forming a polite but firm refusal, in no mood to put my sexy and successful Highlanders on hiatus, she snapped, "Don't even think of telling me 'no'. You're the one who put me here. If not for you and your MacKeltars and Adam and Aoibheal none of this would be happening to me. Now fix it!"}}


{{quote| That got my attention. I sat back and listened for a while. And I discovered Mac was right. While I'd been busy in Scotland, chronicling the tales of the MacKeltars, I'd not thought to consider the ramifications of their exploits on a grander scale. Not once had I looked to Ireland, to the original settling place of the seductive and dangerous Fae. Not once had I checked on the Unseelie prison to make sure it was still holding its prisoners. Nor had I cast so much as a brief glance at the walls between the Fae and mortal realms, or I would have seen the danger we were in.}}
{{quote|That got my attention. I sat back and listened for a while. And I discovered Mac was right. While I'd been busy in Scotland, chronicling the tales of the MacKeltars, I'd not thought to consider the ramifications of their exploits on a grander scale. Not once had I looked to Ireland, to the original settling place of the seductive and dangerous Fae. Not once had I checked on the Unseelie prison to make sure it was still holding its prisoners. Nor had I cast so much as a brief glance at the walls between the Fae and mortal realms, or I would have seen the danger we were in.}}
* [[Dead Little Sister|Dead Older Sister]]: Alina
* [[Dead Little Sister|Dead Older Sister]]: Alina
* {{spoiler|[[Dead Person Impersonation]]: Cruce switched identities with the real V'lane, leaving him to be killed in his place by Aoibheal.}}
* {{spoiler|[[Dead Person Impersonation]]: Cruce switched identities with the real V'lane, leaving him to be killed in his place by Aoibheal.}}

Revision as of 22:59, 7 August 2014

The Fever Series is an Urban Fantasy series by Karen Marie Moning. It stars Mackayla "Mac" Lane, an ordinary young woman who is thrust into a world of magic after the murder of her beloved sister. Determined to bring the killer to justice, Mac soon finds out that not only was her sister not who she thought she was, but neither is Mac herself. The series is comprised of five books, with the fifth and final entry released in January 2011. They are:

  • Darkfever (Book 1)
  • Bloodfever (Book 2)
  • Faefever (Book 3)
  • Dreamfever (Book 4)
  • Shadowfever (Book 5)
Tropes used in Fever Series include:

As I was mentally forming a polite but firm refusal, in no mood to put my sexy and successful Highlanders on hiatus, she snapped, "Don't even think of telling me 'no'. You're the one who put me here. If not for you and your MacKeltars and Adam and Aoibheal none of this would be happening to me. Now fix it!"

That got my attention. I sat back and listened for a while. And I discovered Mac was right. While I'd been busy in Scotland, chronicling the tales of the MacKeltars, I'd not thought to consider the ramifications of their exploits on a grander scale. Not once had I looked to Ireland, to the original settling place of the seductive and dangerous Fae. Not once had I checked on the Unseelie prison to make sure it was still holding its prisoners. Nor had I cast so much as a brief glance at the walls between the Fae and mortal realms, or I would have seen the danger we were in.