Felix Castor

Felix Castor

This wonderful series of 5 novels follows the escapades of Felix Castor, an exorcist in contemporary London, who uses the tunes of his flute to bind the ghosts which possess the living and force them back into the shadow-world where they belong. In the London where Felix lives, the dead have made themselves known and are openly moving among the living in a variety of ways and Felix’s skills are in frequent demand. Each of the five books is a wonderful stand-alone novel in which Felix struggles to save both his clients and himself from the ghosts and demons which hide in plain sight all around us, though the overarching arc of the five books describes his attempt to free his friend from the demon Asmodeus (the demon which Felix himself inadvertently linked to his friend’s soul).

This first book in the series, The Devil You Know, introduces us to Felix’s world and characters–both living and departed– that populate it. The author includes fascinating descriptions of how magic and exorcism work and how the dead are able to cross over into the realm of the living.

The author makes one choice at the end of the first book which I would not have made, but it is the only way that makes that character able to have not only a recurring role in the series but a vital one in one of the later books of the quintet. I am happy to suggest that you add the Felix Castor books to your reading list!

Sagittarius

This carving from the Parthenon depicts hand-to-hand (Hand-to-hoof?) combat between a centaur and a human.

This carving from the Parthenon depicts hand-to-hand (Hand-to-hoof?) combat between a centaur and a human.

Sagittarius (the astrological sign of those born November 23–December 22) is one of the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd-century astronomer Ptolemy and remains one of the 88 modern constellations. Its name is Latin for “the archer,” and its symbol is Sagittarius.svg, a stylized arrow.

The Babylonians identified Sagittarius as the god Nerigal or Nergal, a strange centaur-like creature firing an arrow from a bow. It is generally depicted with wings, with two heads, one panther head and one human head, as well as a scorpion’s stinger raised above its more conventional horse’s tail. The Sumerian name Pabilsag is composed of two elements – Pabil, meaning ‘elder paternal kinsman’ and Sag, meaning ‘chief, head’. The name may thus be translated as the ‘Forefather’ or ‘Chief Ancestor’. The figure is reminiscent of modern depictions of Sagittarius.

In Greek mythology, Sagittarius is identified as a centaur: half human, half horse. In some legends, the Centaur Chiron was the son of Philyra and Saturn, who was said to have changed himself into a horse to escape his jealous wife, Rhea. Chiron was eventually immortalised in the constellation of Centaurus or in some version, Sagittarius.

The arrow of this constellation points towards the star Antares, the “heart of the scorpion.”

Sagittarius is undoubtedly one of the most positive of the star signs. If you were born under this sign, you are extremely confident in whatever you do. Being one of the luckiest signs, fortune seems to favor you, whether you plan things or not. That’s also the reason you don’t mind taking the odd risk or two. You feel as if you can’t possibly lose. This almost cocky attitude is something that attracts people to you.

You’re also very enthusiastic, and this is contagious — people can’t help but feel the same way in your presence.

Because people like you so much, they want to help you achieve your goals. But sometimes your life objectives are colossal — those arrows seem to shoot much further than the eye can see. Your philosophy is to bite off more than you can chew and then chew as fast as you can.

People around you will sometimes feel that you’re overly ambitious, and that your aims are pie in the sky. This is not likely to change you: you’d always rather aim high and take on the adventure of life than get to the end of the road regretting that you didn’t have a good go at making your dreams come true.

Midnight Mayor

Madness of Angels

This is one of my all-time favorite series by a fantastic author! A lyric prose-poem that is a love song to London and magic! The word-paintings of London in this first book of the Midnight Mayor series are breathtaking and the way in which Matthew Swift uses the contemporary magic of cities in general –London, in particular–makes us realize how magic is all around us if only we open our eyes to see it, even in the subways! (In an interview, Kate Griffin said that scene in the subway was probably her favorite in the book! It was a good thing I had just passed that scene when I found her interview!) I urge you to add Madness of Angels and the other Midnight Mayor books to your bedside table! 

As the story opens, Matthew Swift finds himself breathing once again, lying in bed in his London home. Except that it’s no longer his bed, or his home. And the last time this sorcerer was seen alive, an unknown assailant had gouged a hole so deep in his chest that his death was irrefutable…despite his body never being found. Matthew realizes that he is not entirely himself when he glimpses his reflection in a mirror and his eyes (which had been brown) are now the “pale, brilliant albino blue of the cloudless winter sky, and I was no longer the only creature that watched from behind their lens.”

Matthew (and the creatures that are also looking through those albino blue eyes of his) goes on to search for his killer and stop the killer and his dark minions, especially the shadow-entity Matthew comes to refer to as Hunger as the being is the killer’s hunger for power and dominion externalized. As Matthew finds each of his killer’s assistants and strikes them down in a variety of impressive ways, we meet the Bag Lady and the Beggar King and the other archetypes that populate the shadows of London. A Madness of Angels and the Midnight Mayor series are exquisite!