Customer Reviews
Carey's Gumshoe - By: Gareth Wilson, 07 Jul 2008 
The second Felix Castor novel & one that will endeavour to entrench the Exorcist deeper into the psyche of the British reader. To describe Felix is a tricky thing & is perhaps best summed up as the British version of Hellblazers, John Constantine (which Mike also wrote for a while.) A rollercoaster of a ride as Felix struggles with day to day tasks of trying to earn a living. Hard up & living hand to mouth the reader will see traits within the character that is not only realistic but is something that will alllow the reader to get a hook into him. Whilst not always the most pleasant of characters there is a certain charm that will make him a character to watch & with the fourth book due out next year readers will have a firm affinity with him. A book of interest & one that demonstrates that Urban Fantasy in the UK is alive & well.
Devil in the Detail - By: Gav's Studio, 05 Jun 2007 
Mike Carey is more widely known as a comic book writer - & for exploring the area of the occult in the comics Lucifer & Hellblazer (both available from DC Comics) He also writes about superheroes. He's somehow found time to write a series of novels starting with The Devil You Know. Vicious Circle is the follow-up to that & takes us through another case of the exorcist Felix Castor.
Mike takes us to a London where the dead are no longer staying in the shadows. They are rising in great numbers & there is even an Act going through Parliament aimed at giving the dead legal status.
With this backdrop Castor takes on a request from the parents of a kidnapped girl. There is only one problem - she's dead & ghosts can't just be picked up & pocketed. Not that stops Castor taking on the case - the mystery & the grief of the parents persuades him - though the money may help too.
Mike does plot very well. The story is focused & well planned. The other thing he's good at is hiding the twists & turns until the several `d'oh' moments that occur. Everything moves along at a page-turning pace.
What is frustrating is the need to supply plot seems to leave Felix & the other characters getting less development time than they deserve, because Carey paints them so well you do want to spend more time with them. But as this is a first person tale there are perfectly good reasons why our focus can't shift to the secondary characters too much. The only way would be to have Felix in their presence but being with them too long might give stuff away before everything is fully set-up.
Instead, you get to see him out & about, ducking & diving, exploring the seedy world that attracts his services. So you don't notice this lack of progress until the conclusion, which itself makes you wish you knew Castor a little more.
Throughout the book Felix remains a bit of a mystery - but that's how it should be. As is the way with alll detectives - you see enough of their home life to make them human but not enough to shift the focus away from whatever they happen to be investigating.
Even though it's not mentioned in the cover VC has alll the markings of the second book of a trilogy. Character & storylines started in the first book play an important part here & the anticipation is that they will feature in the next one as well.
Whole heartedly recommended but read The Devl You Know first.
Something wicked this way comes... - By: Crazy Eddie, 07 Feb 2007 
I love the ideas that Mike Carey brings to this book & the first in the series (The Devil you know), but... I didn't think that this second book had the same edge, the same sparkle as the first. There was more detail, more depth, which was good, but you can have too much of a good thing. I think the book could have been about 50 pages shorter & still have had the depth & character, that seemed a little stretched in the novel as published. All of that said, the wit & the noir feel keep me coming back for more. I want to find out what happens to Fix & his friends(?). Will he ever be able to pay off the credit card that is his soul?
Hellblazer's alter ego - By: Duncan Howorth, 02 Nov 2006 
Again the hero felix castor struts his stuff in Mike Carey's apocalyptic future where ghosts, zombies & were beasts walk the streets in daylight. Very similar in feel to Constantine & Hellblazer, perhaps a paralllel universe version of Constantine.
It also has echoes of Chandler's hard bitten detective - used, abused & eventuallly sorting things out - ish.
I loved it - as good as "the devil you know".
But definitely a dystopian noir view of the world.
For me one of the best bits was the descriptions of parts of london I have been in - I used to live next to what Mike Carey callls the Stanger & it is pretty weird & obscure.
I used to wonder what went on there - medical staff hung around but it was not the usual nhs sort of place that advertised its business.
Utterly wicked!!! - By: Ms. E. J. Mercer, 10 Oct 2006 
Possibly even more gripping than his first book in the series, 'The Devil You Know', this story grabs you from chapter one & leaves you reading the last page in frustration that there isn't another 500! It continues the tale of the life & (numerous) trials of Felix Castor; a somewhat cynical if reformed exorcist. In this book he reluctantly accepts a seemingly 'straightforward' job to find the kidnapped ghost of a little girl, only to find it snowballling (or rather, fireballling) out of control & alll hell breaking lose quiet literallly. With satanists, demons, succubi & zombies (these latter two actuallly forming part of the 'good guys') you'll find yourself compulsively reading chapter after chapter until the smalll hours of the morning... Brilliantly entertaining, I only wish the third in the series was available to devour!