Trailer Park Fae (Gallow and Ragged), by Lilith Saintcrow
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Trailer Park Fae (Gallow and Ragged), by Lilith Saintcrow

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New York Times bestselling author Lilith Saintcrow returns to dark fantasy with a new series where the faery world inhabits diners, dive bars and trailer parks. Jeremiah Gallow is just another construction worker, and that's the way he likes it. He's left his past behind, but some things cannot be erased. Like the tattoos on his arms that transform into a weapon, or that he was once closer to the Queen of Summer than any half-human should be. Now the half-sidhe all in Summer once feared is dragged back into the world of enchantment, danger, and fickle fae - by a woman who looks uncannily like his dead wife. Her name is Robin, and her secrets are more than enough to get them both killed. A plague has come, the fullborn-fae are dying, and the dark answer to Summer's Court is breaking loose. Be afraid, for Unwinter is riding...Gallow and Ragged Trailer Park Fae For more from Lilith Saintcrow, check out: Blood Call (e-only) Bannon and Clare The Iron Wyrm Affair The Red Plague Affair The Ripper Affair The Damnation Affair (e-only) Dante Valentine Novels Working for the Devil Dead Man Rising Devil's Right Hand Saint City Sinners To Hell and Back Dante Valentine (omnibus) Jill Kismet Novels Night Shift Hunter's Prayer Redemption Alley Flesh Circus Heaven's Spite Angel Town Jill Kismet (omnibus) A Romance of Arquitaine Novels The Hedgewitch Queen The Bandit King
Trailer Park Fae (Gallow and Ragged), by Lilith Saintcrow- Amazon Sales Rank: #569105 in Books
- Brand: Saintcrow, Lilith
- Published on: 2015-06-23
- Released on: 2015-06-23
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.25" h x 1.00" w x 5.50" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
Review "Trailer Park Fae is what you'd get if you mixed a Bourne film, a political thriller, and a weepy Lifetime movie about abusive, drunken trailer park fathers together, and shook vigorously."―B&N Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog on Trailer Park Fae"Lilith Saintcrow spins an incredibly imaginative and delicious tale with vivid language and a story you will not be able to put down. I loved every minute!"―Darynda Jones on Trailer Park Fae"A true faery story, creepy and heroic by turns. Love and hope and a touch of Midsummer Night's Dream. I could not put it down."―Patricia Briggs on Trailer Park Fae"Saintcrow deftly mixes high-minded fantasy magic with rough, real-world rust using prose that veers between the beautiful and the bloodcurdling. Honestly, I wish I'd written it."―Chuck Wendig on Trailer Park Fae"Unique, twisted, lovely, and raw. Just fabulous."―Faith Hunter on Trailer Park Fae"Saintcrow's urban fantasy series launch is expertly crafted with heartbreak and mistrust, far darker and lovelier than the title suggests... Saintcrow's artful, poignant descriptions remain with the reader long after the tale's end, as does the persistent sense of dark, unsettling unease."―Publishers Weekly on Trailer Park Fae"Lilith Saintcrow's foray into steampunk plunges the reader into a Victorian England rife with magic and menace, where clockwork horses pace the cobbled streets, dragons rule the ironworks, and it will take a sorceress' discipline and a logician's powers of deduction to unravel a bloody conspiracy."―Jacqueline Carey on The Iron Wyrm Affair"Innovative world building, powerful steam punk, master storyteller at her best. Don't miss this one....She's fabulous. "―Christine Feehan on The Iron Wyrm Affair"Saintcrow melds a complex magic system with a subtle but effective steampunk society, adds fully-fleshed and complicated characters, and delivers a clever and highly engaging mystery that kept me turning pages, fascinated to the very end."―Laura Anne Gilman on The Iron Wyrm Affair"Lilith Saintcrow spins a world of deadly magic, grand adventure, and fast-paced intrigue through the clattering streets of a maze-like mechanized Londonium. The Iron Wyrm Affair is a fantastic mix of action, steam, and mystery dredged in dark magic with a hint of romance. Loved it! Do not miss this wonderful addition to the steampunk genre."―Devon Monk on The Iron Wyrm Affair"...Loaded with action and starring a kick butt heroine who from the opening scene until the final climax is donkey kicking seemingly every character in sight."―Harriet Klausner on Flesh Circus
About the Author Lilith Saintcrow was born in New Mexico, bounced around the world as an Air Force brat, and fell in love with writing when she was ten years old. She currently lives in Vancouver, WA.

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Most helpful customer reviews
35 of 37 people found the following review helpful. No humour, just dark By RabidReads Let me just start out by saying that this book wasn’t what I expected. Dark Urban Fantasy—most definitely, but the title and blurb led me to believe that there would also be a generous helping of humour, or snark which there wasn’t. The male protagonist lives in a trailer park, and he & Robin eat a meal at a diner; however that’s pretty much the full extent of this story’s ghetto vibe. Lilith Saintcrow’s writing style was heavy on the Fae court speak, and the plot was rather humdrum until the halfway mark. Still, I enjoyed it once the ball got rolling.The author’s prose was the largest hurdle for me having not read anything by her before. I wasn’t deterred by the Fae politics or by the formal discourse because both go hand-in-hand whenever the Sidhe are involved. My problem was with the amount of it; there was no break in the flowery words whether it was the dialogue, descriptions, or mortal exchanges. It made the plot threads difficult to spot because I was too busy trying to figure out what the heck Saintcrow was trying to convey, and the fact that nothing really happened until page 160 made it worse.The remainder of my review will focus on what happened after the pre-excitement hump considering that it was the second half that merited the four star rating. The novel was actually shockingly uncomplicated once all of the key characters, and their motivations were identified. The twists were carried out nicely, and the author nailed the ambiguity of Fae word play, as well as their creepy / magical natures. The Fair Folk were pretty standard as far as their mythology goes, so once the language was no longer an obstacle, I was able to find my bearings.I liked Jeremy; he had an interesting back story, and there was way more to him than his construction worker facade. Former Armormaster, and ex-lover of Summer who gave it all up for a mortal woman, and refuses to serve any court (anti-hero FTW!). Robin did everything right; she set off to save a human boy, mostly had Gallow’s back, and she’s powerful, but I just couldn’t bring myself to care for her. Also, I’m hoping the romance doesn’t pan out because, well… spoiler. Puck Goodfellow was the quasiessential mischievous Fae, and the catalyst of many things I suspect. Yup, I will be reading book 2.TRAILER PARK FAE required a bit of patience, but I’m glad that I stuck it out.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful. LilyElement Book Reviews - Trailer Park Fae By LilyElement Jeremy Gallow, a half human/half fae is in the mortal world working as a construction worker. He turned away from the fae when he married a human woman and decided to live a normal mortal life with her. Unfortunately, after awhile together, she died in a car accident and he's left to continue living his life like he had been, though filled with sorrow. So when a fae girl walks into the bar that he's having drinks with his coworkers at and she looks uncannily like his dead wife, he gets up and follows her. This starts the journey of Gallow and Robin.You see, Robin is the fae queen of Summer's errand girl. In their world, the fae are getting a plague like illness that affects the fae that are more pure blooded. It's not effecting the half bloods or less quite as badly. Robin is sent to get a cure from one of Summer's human playthings in the mortal world. On the way, Unwinter's minions cause issues and that's when Gallow steps in to help his dead wife's lookalike. This continues on until the end of the book. There are discoveries along the way, but I'll leave that quiet in case you want to read this book.I will however mention a few things if you are planning on reading the book. I had several issues as I was reading and feel like I should just put this out there. It quickly changes both of the main character's names depending on who is speaking. Gallow is known as Jeremy, Jeremiah, as well as Gallow. Robin is called Robin, or Ragged. Initially both of these character name changing so often confused me, until I figured out some random guy didn't just show up, it was still Gallow. Secondly, it's extremely slow at the beginning. I'm not sure if that was just an issue for myself, or it others will have this issue as well. I had trouble until about the 25% mark, then it got a bit interesting and at the 75% mark I was fully invested in the story. My last complaint is that Gallow's dead wife is mentioned a bit too much as well. I understand that having a girl that looks just like her will bring up the subject, but I felt it was mentioned almost every few pages.All that being said, there were positive things about the book as well. The fae had me intrigued, and I hope for the characters to spend a bit more time there vs on the human side in the next book. I liked Robin's character, and her powers intrigued me. And I seem to have a weakness for the nonstop running until we work everything out type books. So all that being said, I did enjoy Trailer Park Fae, but had a difficult time getting into it. I would however read book two just to see what happens next. I'd suggest this if you like dark fae books.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Perfect for those of us who like fae that are dark, creepy, duplicitous, and somewhat hard to understand ;) By Kristin M. Clifton For a while now I have been distracted by straight up romances and anything of the young adult variety. I was missing my roots, where I started. So I began looking for new urban fantasy titles and “Trailer Park Fae” caught my eye for several reasons.First, and probably the obvious one for me, is the cover. If I see Daniel Dos Santos cover-art, I’m immediately interested in whatever book it’s gracing. Or at the very least, I’ll take a second look. I’ve been a fan of his work for some time now.Second, the fae. I love those quirky, full of themselves, otherworldly, brutally vicious, non-sense talking fae. Dark court, light court, summer or winter court – I’ve seen them all and you never know which is the bad or good. Ms. Saintcrow’s world is especially unique because the halflings (half-human, half-fae people) played such a huge role in the story.If you can get past the legendary, cryptic fae-speak in the beginning of the book, you will be treated to an anything goes story of intrigue, trust, and family dynamics. You wouldn’t think those go together. But there are a lot of things that happen in this book that I never imagined could ever happen! We’re talking maiming and killings, frying people in the sun. It’s absolutely fantastic! And Ms. Saintcrow does a fantastic job capturing those images and putting them into words on the screen/paper. Ms. Saintcrow’s writing is extremely visual.Going into this story, I thought it was all about Jeremy Gallow. Turns out, my favorite character is Robin Ragged, somewhat the other half of the story. After how everything went down in the end, I absolutely cannot wait for the next book in the series.If you’re a fan of the fae, you’ll enjoy another view of the culture. If you’re new the fae world, you may want to sit this one out and go for something a wee bit easier. I can help if you need suggestions!I received this book for free from Edelweiss in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
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