Godhunter - Amy Sumida

Godhunter

By Amy Sumida

  • Release Date: 2013-04-29
  • Genre: Paranormal Fantasy
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 235 Ratings

Description

The first time I met a god, I killed him.
I've kept killing ever since that day; striking down the impostors before they could do anymore damage. Then he showed up; eyes full of lightning, a jawline that could cut glass, and the body of a Norse god... which is exactly what he is. One of them. He represents everything that I fight against. Everything that I fear. I should kill him, but I have the strangest feeling that he's telling the truth when he says he's on my side. As a witch, I always trust my gut but as a woman, I know that this time my strange feeling might be coming from somewhere a little lower.
This rest of this series is available on Amazon, the second book "Of Gods and Wolves" is available as an ebook or paperback and more of the series is coming soon(7 so far)so keep an eye out for them on Amazon.

Reviews

  • Godhunter

    5
    By Cindy Wittmann Jones
    I loved this book! I laughed all the way through it. Vervain’s character is laugh out loud funny. I can’t wait to find out what happens next!
  • God hunter

    5
    By Wickedabby62
    I really enjoyed this book I hope to see more books just like it very entertaining ty so much for giving me chance to read it
  • Great idea, but fails in execution

    3
    By Seattle Portista
    I don't know if this was a first novel, but it feels like one-- albeit the first novel of an author with a fine imagination. It's a good story with an interesting protagonist. Her two primary male characters-- the Norse and Aztec gods-- could use some better back stories: their being originally from Atlantis thousands of years ago is hardly an explanation for neither having adopted the cultures or languages with which they supposedly were immersed for centuries. In fact, all of the characters seem to share the same 21st Century American culture, allowing for individual variations within it. It has other issues, though, most of which could be dealt with by a good editor. The grammar is deplorable, leaving the reader to wonder why neither witch nor gods speaks educated English. Even in the sample pages of the sequel, she writes that the werewolf was holding the heroine's leg "where the slip had rode up", when she meant 'had ridden up'.errors such as these (and, sadly, there are many, along with comma splices and run-on sentences) are easily discovered and corrected by either an editor or, in the manner of so many indie authors, a skilled 'beta team'. As her plot, although an equal opportunity offender of pretty much every religious group she could think of, is fun and imaginative, I hope that in future books she does avail herself of a beta team, and maybe of a plot that is less atheistic than she, thus being attractive to more readers.

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