Ink Witch
Books | Fiction / Fantasy / Urban
4.2
Lindsey Sparks
Lindsey Fairleigh
The gods are gone. Her brother is missing. One retired assassin must confront her past to save his future…Immortal Kat Dubois has traded in her sword for a flask. Hard drinking helps ease the grisly memories of her former trade: an assassin of immortals. She’s perfectly content to spend eternity in her Seattle tattoo parlor…until the mysterious disappearance of her brother finally brings her out of retirement.With a charmed deck of tarot cards and her trusty sword, Kat sets off to track down her brother and save his soul. A wicked corporation and a laundry list of old rivals stand in the way of her quest. For someone with an eternity to live, Kat's chances of unraveling the mystery become less likely with each passing second…Ink Witch is the first book in the Kat Dubois Chronicles, a tough-girl urban fantasy series set in Seattle, WA. If you like intense action, gritty characters, unconventional magic, and Egyptian mythology, then you'll love this unique, fast-paced adventure!MORE BOOKS IN THE ECHO WORLD:KAT DUBOIS CHRONICLESInk WitchOutcastUndergroundSoul EaterJudgementAfterlifeECHO TRILOGYEcho in TimeResonanceTime AnomalyDissonanceRicochet Through Time***KEYWORDS: urban fantasy gods and goddesses, tough girl urban fantasy series, tough girl urban fantasy, gods and goddesses, egyptian gods and goddesses, egyptian urban fantasy, tarot urban fantasy, mystical urban fantasy, seattle urban fantasy, smart urban fantasy series, urban fantasy series in seattle, urban fantasy tattoos, tarot cards urban fantasy series, urban fantasy series based on mythology, egyptian mythology, first in series, series starter
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Author
Lindsey Sparks
Pages
214
Publisher
Rubus Press
Published Date
2021-06-02
Community ReviewsSee all
"So, what I thought to be just mysteries in the book turned out to be information from the previous series. Even though this is the first in a series but not in the world, you apparently need to read the others beforehand.
Even so, I couldn't connect with the characters. I thought Kat was shallow and good grief, if she never mentioned her 18 year old hormones again, it would be too soon. Also, I know Kat had to wait for the signs and everything, but this book skated around a lot of issues in the moment.
The magic system and the tattoos were really cool. Ink Witch seems like an opening for more stories, which is strange now realizing I missed some things from not reading the Echo trilogy. Also, the book started stating the obvious a lot which got old. Just dont see myseld continuing."