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Shadowchasers #1

Shadow Blade

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For Kira Solomon, normal was never an option.

Kira’s day job as an antiquities expert, but her true calling is as a Shadowchaser. Trained from youth to be one of the most lethal Chasers in existence, Kira serves the Gilead Commission dispatching the Fallen who sow discord and chaos. Of course, sometimes Gilead bureaucracy is as much a thorn in her side as anything the Fallen can muster against her. Right now, though, she’s got a bigger problem. Someone is turning the city of Atlanta upside-down in search of a four-millennia-old Egyptian dagger that just happens to have fallen into Kira’s hands.

Then there’s Khefar, the dagger’s true owner-a near-immortal 4000-year-old Nubian warrior who, Kira has to admit, looks pretty fine for his age. Joining forces is the only way to keep the weapon safe from the sinister Shadow force, but now Kira is in deep with someone who holds more secrets than she does, the one person who knows just how treacherous this fight is. Because every step closer to destroying the enemy is a step closer to losing herself to Shadow forever. . . .

344 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 4, 2010

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About the author

Seressia Glass

37 books634 followers
Seressia Glass is an award-winning author of urban fantasy, contemporary romance and paranormal romance. Her current series include the Shadowchasers urban fantasy series and the Sons of Anubis paranormal romance series.

Seressia lives south of Atlanta with her guitar-wielding husband and two bulldozer cane corsos and a senior poodle. When not working on her next story, Seressia spends her free time watching way too much anime and Kdramas.



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Displaying 1 - 30 of 187 reviews
Profile Image for carol. .
1,724 reviews9,545 followers
February 4, 2013

First book report card:

Creativity: above average. Ancient Egyptian and general anthropology knowledge is a bonus.
Magical system: above average. Based partly on relationships with Egyptian deities, with nary a werewolf in sight.
Female heroine: above average. Slightly Mary Sue in physical abilities, I suggest meeting with counseling regarding emotional issues.
Pacing: needs focus on balancing action with investigation, flashbacks and information-sharing.
Plotting: acceptable. Light versus Shadow plot shows signs of tropism, so will bear watching.
Attitude: acceptable. While there is some tendency towards self-pity, it is a relief to not have minimal snark or witticisms while facing conflict.
Language: needs work, particularly in dialogue with a 4,000 year old character that sounds inconsistently like a twenty-year old American
Relationships: Able to focus on issues at hand and not be unduly distracted by male physique, however, has tragic first-love backstory. Kissing appropriately put on hold to save humanity.
Attire: above average. Does not focus on midriff tops or high heeled boots.


After awhile, parts of the UF/ paranormal fantasy start to look remarkably similar. Shadow Blade stood out for me with an interesting underlying magical system, willingness to flaunt convention--at least in the first book--and well-developed multi-culti characters, without making a deal about it. (As a complete aside, one review I read commented on how odd it was that everyone was 'black,' or at least, non-white, and they didn't think that was very realistic in an American city. I will now pause to let city-people roll their eyes). Seriously, it is nice to read a UF that doesn't focus on the scrappy white chick character.

Side characters are mixed; some get a chance to shine, like Mr. Nansee, while others are lacking the chance to distinguish themselves. His scene making breakfast was priceless ("and that apron? Yeah, that strains my brain a bit") and I admit I might have smiled at the thought of him rousing people on the subway. I also rather like the morally ambiguous psychic vampire; he has a developed essence of creepy/skeevy where you aren't sure if he's dangerous or just needs a slap with a sexual harassment lawsuit. At times the writing is able to convey the alienation and age of Khefar, the four millennia old Nubian, and at times he is surprisingly and perhaps inappropriately modern. I will say that despite inconsistency, Glass is able to better convey age than Hearne with the Iron Druid series.

Shadow Blade does suffer a little from first-book syndrome, that collection of symptoms that so many series-intent authors are prone to develop. Those tantalizing hints at past issues, more tantalizing hints at future issues ("made a mental note to check that out when she had time"), the excessive explaining of self-evident decisions ("The sooner she got back to the scene of the crime, the more likely the chances she'd find some sort of lead").

I suspect a few of my problems come indirectly from the author's background in romance novels. Here's hoping she can individualize the conflict and romance so it doesn't have the whiff of cardboard about it.

Overall, it was reasonably enjoyable. In my UF scale, it rates above Chicagoland Vampires, and below Kate Daniels. I've already borrowed the sequel from the library, so I look forward to seeing if the series grows.

Cross posted at http://clsiewert.wordpress.com/2013/0...
Profile Image for Madison Warner Fairbanks.
3,095 reviews466 followers
November 30, 2021
Shadow Blade by Seressia Glass
Shadowchasers book 1. Urban fantasy with minor romance plot line.
Kira is a Shadowchaser with no real knowledge of her personal history. She is also traumatized by not being able to touch anyone without harming them. That all changes when she finds a historically significant dagger that talks to her.

Blended history and Egyptian and African mythology are included in this plot heavy story that starts slow but is soon immersed with gods, magic daggers and a 4000 year old immortal trying to balance the scale of the deaths he caused - by killing more? Innocent vs. deserved.

My favorite scene was Mr Nansee making breakfast the first morning after Khefar has come back to life by the sun coming in from the east window. Kira isn’t sure where he got the food. She knows there is only some old cheese in the refrigerator and not much more. He says “If you believe the food is there, it is.” That’s some fancy magic!

Lots of open questions at the end of the book that lead to the second in the series.
3.5
Profile Image for Tracy.
933 reviews71 followers
January 31, 2011
The first thing I did when I finished reading Shadow Blade was make sure that my memory was correct, and that it was the beginning of a series and not a standalone novel. Not because I didn't like how it ended, but because I was so impressed with Seressia Glass' fully developed and vibrant world rich with ancient Egyptian and Africa history, not to mention the three dimensional characters, zippy narrative, and intriguing plot.

I'm thrilled to say that Shadow Blade hit all my happy spots. All of them. I loved it.

I'm not going to summarize the plot here, as it's been done sufficiently in the product description and can be accessed through several links in this review (and frankly, I'm not totally sure I could do the job justice myself). I need to express, though, what I most enjoyed about it. I loved the setting, Atlanta. I was really impressed with the flawless blend of history and mythology that never - for me - bogged down the story or stuttered the plot. I found the lead character, Kira Solomon, to be a stunning blend of intelligence, confidence, and aptitude with her work (both jobs), devotional commitment to her calling, and refreshing innocence and sense of yearning with everything else. Some reviews have criticized that dichotomy, but for me, it made perfect sense. The poor girl has been able to touch exactly no one in her entire life without it ending in coma or death or pain. Twenty-six years of complete physical solitude unless she's killing. The wounds on a person's psyche under those conditions are unimaginable, horrifying, and entirely well represented by Kira's responses to events in Shadow Blade. I believed it utterly and I sympathized completely with her, as my admiration for her as written grew and grew. And kudos to Glass for the masterful development of Kira through the arc of the story. And for me personally, the development of the relationship between Kira and Khefer not only worked and was realistic and believable, but it was laden with both tenderness, hope, and at one point, one of the most sizzling kisses I've read in any novel this year. Exceptionally well done, I thought.

Also tremendously well done - and refreshing for the very sense it made - was Khefer's reaction to Kira's inquiries and curiosity about his four thousand years on the planet. Brilliant scene and truly...finally addressed one of the most niggling issues I've always had when books include long-lived races or individuals. I've gotten so used to just accepting that a thousand year old vampire has perfect recollection of his time as a human because that's how it almost always seems to be written. But it doesn't make sense if you think about it. A four thousand year old Nubian warrior who didn't even need to learn to read or write prior to the Roman empire?? Excellent! I can't remember what I was doing fifteen years ago on this day. Why should Khefer remember what he was doing fifteen hundred years ago? Brilliant! And I absolutely loved that line about history happening when you're just living your life. There were some real truism gems in that whole scene.

And while I was being impressed by the deft storytelling, the world building, and the character development, I also appreciated that the book included humor. Nansee (Anansi is my favorite secondary character in a book in ages) was a perfect foil in that regard, but even Kira had a sardonic sense of humor that tickled me.

All together, Shadow Blade is definitely standing out as one of the most thoroughly satisfying - on every level, from technical to emotional - books I've had the pleasure to read this year. I had one...not complaint, really, more like an issue. I felt the final conflict with the Avatar was never fully realized. It seemed a bit short and underdeveloped for all the build up. That one issue is not enough to dim my deep appreciation and admiration for Shadow Blade as a whole, however. If you're interested in a genuinely unique and richly pleasurable urban fantasy series, I'd highly recommend you give Seressia Glass' Shadow Blade a try.

~*~*~*~
Reviewed for One Good Book Deserves Another.
Profile Image for Alex (HEABookNerd).
2,272 reviews
August 7, 2021
I had high hopes for SHADOW BLADE and it did not disappoint! Kira Soloman is a Shadowchaser, trained to hunt and kill the Fallen and other agents of Chaos to keep the Balance of Light and Shadow in the world. When an old Egyptian dagger ends up in Kira’s possession she finds herself dealing with it’s owner, a 4000 year old immortal Nubian warrior, Khefar.

- The world building was outstanding for this and I loved all the Egyptian and African mythology that was incorporated. I’ve read a few other books that tried to use Egyptian history as a reference point but it was always so surface level. SHADOW BLADE really digs into the mythology and brings it to life and as a huge ancient Egypt nerd myself, I loved it! The Balance of Light and Shadow and the different entities that work on both sides created an interesting world to read about.

- Kira was a kick butt heroine and while her life has been anything but easy she’s still strong, compassionate, and determined to remain on the Light side of the scales. In addition to some huge losses in her life, she also has a rare psychic ability that makes it near impossible for anyone to touch her without causing them pain. I found this part of Kira’s story really interesting and I hope it’s origins get explored more in future books.

- We also got some POV chapters from Khefar and I loved his character. He’s not exactly a “good guy” as his history is filled with some pretty terrible things but he’s spent the last 4000 years trying to make up for his crimes. One of the things I appreciated about Khefar is that he has a very modern feel, and I know some readers probably won’t like that, but I did. Khefar hasn’t been in hiding, he lives among humans as he works to save them and it makes sense that he’d adopt and evolve to changing trends, fashion, and culture.

- While this is pretty solidly in the Urban Fantasy genre, there is a small romance between Kira and Khefar that begins to develop in the second half of the book and my romance loving heart was thrilled. Kira deserved someone who could stand beside her and take care of her when she needed someone to lean on and Khefar is the perfect, swoony hero to take on that role. I can’t wait to see where the relationship goes.


Content Warning: brief mention of one instance of child abuse; violence, death, murder
Profile Image for fleurette.
1,534 reviews159 followers
August 17, 2018
It was nice to read about Egyptian mythology instead of usual Greek or Roman. Still, the book is rather middling. I am not grabbed enough by the story to read the rest of the series.
Profile Image for Mike (the Paladin).
3,148 reviews2,072 followers
December 25, 2012
I've "read" 3 books fairly closely together this week all of the supposedly action or UF genres. This is the first of the 3 that didn't turn out to a romance with elements of some other genre thrown in to suck in unsuspecting readers. I put "read" in quotes as these have all been "audio reads" it's Christmas season and one can listen to books while doing other things.

This book was not bad, I'd even put it in the pretty good category. If we had the much lamented half star system I'd probably go 3.5 stars here. It only misses a 4 star rating because "FOR ME" that's "FOR ME" it seemed to bog down badly in a few places. There were a couple of times when I "laid it aside" that I wasn't really in a hurry to get back to it. There were other books I wanted to start. I did however get back to it, mostly I suppose to see how it tied up. The ending was fairly predictable but okay. We have a bit of action and a bit of magic here while there is a big dollop of romance in the book for you who need that. It just doesn't completely overwhelm the rest of the novel.

Our protagonist is another in the long line of people born with extraordinary talents and totally misunderstood. She doesn't know anything about her parents (the parental mystery...who is she, where does she come from) she had trouble controlling her powers and almost killed someone. She ends up being raised by a mysterious person and ends up part of a mysterious group in which she's known to be a rebel and very powerful. There's concern at times from her allies about which side she'd on..etc., etc., etc.

The book itself is centered very heavily in ancient Egyptian mythology with touches of other older and more pagan religious systems. Our hero/heroine interacts with the deities and the climax of the book leans on a fairly well known part of the Egyptian mythology.

All in all a fairly interesting story with a fairly well done set of characters. I may not run right out and grab the next book but next time I find myself wanting a UF and not having one handy I'll probably pick up the second in this series. Try it for yourself, it's pretty good.
Profile Image for Maja (The Nocturnal Library).
1,017 reviews1,948 followers
July 28, 2016
I’m not used to my urban fantasies being written in third person. I realize this is an odd thing to start a review with, but it’s the first thing that really stood out for me. Shadow Blade is told in third person from two perspectives: that of Kira and the Nubian warrior Khefar, and the transitions between them aren't neat or clearly marked, but rather random and messy. This is the second time I’ve come across something similar lately and I enjoyed it both times, although I’m not the biggest fan of third person narrative in general.

For the most part, Kira Solomon was an admirable heroine. She was strong, decisive and competent, not very trusting, but with good reason. Psychometry is only one of her gifts, but it’s the one that marked her more than all the others combined; it made her weary of people and their secrets. I think my failure to form a proper connection with Kira was mostly due to her story being told in third person, even though, as I already pointed out, it had its advantages. It changed things for me – while I knew what was going on inside her head, I still wanted to see things through her eyes. It’s a subtle difference, but it’s a difference nevertheless.

As far as worldbuilding goes, Shadow Blade is one of the good ones. Rich and imaginative, if a little rough around the edges, Kira’s world of Shadows, Avatars and Chasers pulled me right in. There are many details I needed to remember if I was to follow the story properly, but the abundance of information I had to absorb never weighed on me. I just figured things out as I went and I liked it that way. The worldbuilding was mostly based on the Egyptian myths, and I really loved how it was done. I know very little about ancient Egyptian deities, but urban fantasy in general has already taught me so much, I’ll undoubtedly catch up soon enough.

Ohh, but the love interest was truly something. A four thousand year old Nubian, ancient warrior, worshiper of Isis and accompanied by a demigod on his road to redemption. He only needed to save two more people to earn his place in the afterlife, and Kira Solomon was one of them. She didn’t make it easy, of course, and things that mattered to both of them at the beginning didn’t matter as much by the end. The only thing I didn’t like was that Khefar happened to be the only one in the world able to touch Kira without consequences. Due to her psychometry, she was never able to touch another human being without hurting them in the process, but somehow, she is able to freely touch the Nubian. To me, this somehow belittled their romance. Would she have liked him so much if she had other options?

She laughed, a true laugh of unadorned delight that shook her entire frame. Khefar wasn’t prepared for it – the laugh, the bright mood, his reaction to it. It made him careless.

This is a series I’ll gladly continue. It’s been a long time since I truly enjoyed urban fantasy and I’m so happy I finally found one worth reading. Although by no means perfect, Shadow Blade is a decent enough read that left me eager to find out more about the world and our two heroes.


Profile Image for Marshall Stephens.
Author 8 books21 followers
August 24, 2012
Too many stories about monster hunters are just carbon copies of one another. Shadow Blade, however, does a good job of distinguishing itself from others. Certain familiar elements are here: strong female protagonist, trenchcoats and motorcycles, impossibly sexy immortals and a shadow organization who brings the toys but is never sure if the protagonist is an asset or drawback. That said, these pieces that regular additions to the genre are shuffled together with a great deal of original plot, character exploration and vibrant settings such that the story becomes its own thing, a tale the will keep the reader interested and ready for more.

The novel's strongest points are in building strong settings and characters with unique voices, all of whom have a part to play in the story, without any stragglers just acting as filler. I feel like I got to know these characters well as I was reading.

The novel's weakest point is pacing; the time taken to weave together a world sometimes leaves the reader waiting to get to the next fast paced part. The imagery and settings are enough to keep one entertained, but occasionally I felt that detail slowed the reading down a bit in places.

It also helps to remember that this is the first of a series and that the last third of the novel will raise as many questions as it will answer. The second novel the series was much tighter in this regard and if I were taking them together as a whole, I would argue they were much tighter as a pair than individually.

It's definitely worth a read and definitely worth following up on.
Profile Image for Ezi Chinny.
2,647 reviews534 followers
October 4, 2015
The world building in the story was top notch. The author took her time to set up an interesting world with great detail. The writing was very descriptive and the mystery was well woven. My issue is that I didn't feel drawn to the characters and it lacked that humanizing effect that love adds to these type of UF stories.
There seemed like an emotional attachment was forming between Kira and Khafuer, but it didn't materialize. I will read book 2 because there is great potential here.
Profile Image for Jess.
3,418 reviews5 followers
May 11, 2021
I liked this but it definitely suffered from super plotty/do i want to engage in world building that most first books in PNR/UF suffer from. I think that if someone were more familiar with African mythology (this is my own failing and the book definitely made me more curious), that the onboarding to the world would have been much easier.
Profile Image for Michelle.
616 reviews150 followers
February 25, 2010
Kira had never been a normal child, but until the night when she almost killed her beloved adopted-sister after accidentally touching her she had never truly been alone. No ready to deal with a teen with Kira's 'problems' her foster-parents left under under the care of the mysterious Gilead commission who later taught Kira to not only control her 'gift' but to fight in the long-standing battle between Light and Shadow. Years later, Kira has become one of the few deadly ShadowChasers, men and women who are specifically trained to take out the biggest and baddest of the Shadows. Exceptionally brave men and women who don't tend to make it past age 40. Or 30 even.

Dangerous as her job may be, Kira happens to be quite good at what she does and has carved out a small, happy existence in Atlanta with a few trusted friends to rely on. That is until Kira's world is turned upside-down after learning that her much admired handler and mentor was killed by a vicious Seeker Demon searching for a centuries old blood thirsty knife that her handler had previously passed onto Kira for authentication. Hurting and not sure of whom to trust, Kira is forced to join forces with the dagger's previous owner Khefar - a Nubian warrior almost as old as the dagger itself - who has his own agenda where the knife is concerned. Though the pair constantly but heads, they agree that the demon and its guide must be stopped before it can loose more destruction on the unsuspecting city. And if Kira happens to take a little vengeance in the course of things, so much the better.

Although Shadow Blade started out fairly slow, I quickly fell into the rhythm of Kira's intense narrative. I usually really enjoy it when an author plops me firmly into their story, forcing me to find my way around, but I sort of floundered around until I felt I had a good grasp on Kira's background. Once I began to understand her motives, her history - her thoughts and feelings became much more relate-able and quite believable. Kira and Khefar also had some nice moments together. I've said it before, but I really appreciate an author who knows how to take their time developing relationships. Seressia Glass does an admirable job of slowly building tension between Kira and Khefar without neglecting the story itself. Always a good thing in my book. Additionally, the layered mythology and Kira's fascination for antiquities laid a very solid foundation for Ms. Glass' tough leading lady. Not all of Kira's many secrets were revealed and her relationship with Khefar was far from resolved, leaving Ms. Glass plenty of room for her likable characters to maneuver around in the next ShadowChasers novel, Shadow Chase.
Profile Image for Kelly.
616 reviews159 followers
July 3, 2010
(3.5 stars) In Shadow Blade, Seressia Glass creates a compelling urban-fantasy heroine, Kira Solomon, and kicks off what promises to be a distinctive kick-butt series.

For me, Shadow Blade got off to a bumpy start. There’s a lot of “telling” and exposition as Glass familiarizes the reader with her world and with Kira’s backstory. We learn that Kira can drain an ordinary human of vitality by touching them, which means she has to keep people at literal arm’s length. It’s a heartbreaking “gift” to have, but it’s mentioned more times than it needs to be. We learn that Kira’s mentor, Bernie Comstock, is like a father to her — and this, too, is repeated several times. Then there are a few random non sequiturs, like a description of the hero’s “honed runner’s build” smack dab in the middle of a sentence and paragraph that otherwise have nothing to do with his physique.

It gets smoother from there, though. Glass immerses the reader in two intertwined plotlines: one externally driven, and one that takes place within Kira’s psyche. The “outer” plot is exciting adventure-story stuff. Comstock gives Kira an ancient Egyptian dagger rumored to possess tremendous occult power. Soon, Kira finds that the dagger is an artifact people would literally kill for. She is pursued by a demonic entity who lusts for the blade’s power, and by Khefar, a millennia-old Nubian warrior, who is the original owner of the dagger and wants it back.

The “inner” story, to me, is even more interesting. Kira has spent most of her life keeping people at a distance, both physically and emotionally. As Shadow Blade progresses, she becomes more trusting and more willing to accept help from her friends and allies. Meanwhile, she is struggling to maintain the balance of Light and Shadow in her soul and stay in the good graces of her patron goddess, Ma’at. Kira’s emotional and spiritual journey takes place alongside her physical battles, and raises the stakes in those battles tremendously.

I also have to commend Seressia Glass for the uniqueness of her mythology. How often do you get to read an urban fantasy based on the Egyptian pantheon, or have breakfast with Anansi the spider-god?

Shadow Blade comes to a satisfying close — no cliffhangers here — but also serves largely to introduce the cast and set the stage for further installments. There are plenty of plot hooks left to explore as the Shadowchasers series continues.
Profile Image for Jess.
2,241 reviews71 followers
October 31, 2011
You know what's awesome about this book? Kira, the heroine, seems smart enough and knowledgeable enough that I can totally buy into the idea that she's an archaeologist. (That's sadly rare for me in PNR/UF.) Ms. Glass not only presents elements of Kira's expertise in a way that demonstrates that she knows what things mean, not just details in isolation, but she also puts it together in a way that shows how those elements are important within the overall story.

That eye for detail is evident in pretty much every aspect of this book, from Kira's childhood experiences as a psychometrist in a Normal world to Khefar's interactions with his trickster companion, who added a lovely splash of humor to the story.

I also likes how Kira and Khefar's relationship develops -- there's an attraction and a growing sense of affection and trust and loyalty, but no insta-love, no love triangles, no immediate jumping into bed, no 3-day HEA. It's so refreshing to have romantic leads who 1) focus on the mission and 2) actually take the time to get to know each other.

I enjoyed reading this and look forward to more by this author.

Favorite quote, a conversation between Kira and Anansi.

"Fighting a seeker demon doesn't freak me out. Having an ancient warrior rise from the dead in my bed doesn't freak me out. But having a demigod in my kitchen making breakfast... and that apron? Yeah, that strains my brain a bit."
"Why?"
"Why?" She blinked at him as he brought the plates over to the table. "You're a god."
"You've met them before. You talk to Ma'at quite often."
How does he know that? "Yeah, but she doesn't come to breakfast."
"Have you invited her?"
Profile Image for Amber Todd.
589 reviews5 followers
October 31, 2021
I loved that Kira not only had a super cool magical ability, but that she was capable of kicking butt without it. I thought all the Egyptian mythology and history was new and different from the Greek and Roman mythology books I've been reading. As someone who loves the romance, I was instantly intrigued by Kira and Khefars spark and look forward to more of them in future books!
Profile Image for All Things Urban Fantasy.
1,921 reviews618 followers
February 26, 2010
Review courtesy of AllThingsUrbanFantasy.blogspot.com

When I was little I wanted to be Indiana Jones (not his girlfriend, him) and I dabbled a bit with Lara Croft envy in my teens (the video game version more than the movie version) because I was obsessed archaeology, Egyptology in particular. When I heard about a new urban fantasy series featuring an antiquities expert, I got a little giddy. When I saw the cover featuring an Egyptian pyramid in the background I was downright euphoric.

"The dagger reeked of ancient magic. Kira Solomon stared down at it, trying not to salivate with longing." -Shadow Blade

Kira Solomon is an antiquities expert who moonlights as a Shadowchaser, a member of the Gilead Commission who hunts down the Fallen from Light (aka Demons). Kira has a unique ability that sets her apart from other Shadowchasers, she can sense the magic and history of an object just by touching it. But that ability that is so invaluable professionally, is deadly personally. Touching people can force them into a coma or even take their life.

One such object that Kira touches is a 4,000 year old Egyptian dagger with a magical bloodlust that has the ability to destroy the soul of whoever is strong enough to wield it. When the equally ancient (though not in terms of appearance) owner of the dagger comes calling, and a formidable Fallen power starts attacking, Kira may have to reach out and touch someone for the first time to save a life rather than take it.

Kira’s personal history and the burdening effects of her gift were fascinating. Everything she touches effects her. Even food that she doesn’t harvest herself can make her physically ill because of all the people who have touched it. Also the inclusion of the Egyptian pantheon of gods was a fresh and unique source of magic in the urban fantasy genre. The concept of Light and Chaos, and the Universe’s need for balance made for an interesting world to play in.

"Guardians are the higher beings of Light: angels, gods, goddesses and spirits who embody good. Shadow beings are the Fallen: spawns of Chaos who fought in the First Battle– the upper echelon demons, gods and goddess who sow discord and chaos. Both use Avatars in this dimension." -Shadowchasers website

I have to say I was a little disappointed by the lack of Indiana Jones/Lara Croft style adventure in this book. Kira didn’t get to raid a single pyramid. I know that antiquities expert doesn’t automatically mean Indiana Jones, but I was hoping.

Overall, the concept and unique world building are the clear strengths of this novel. Kira’s gift/curse was a little to easily overcome in terms of the romantic subplot, and while to the story never dragged, the excitement level never really took off in the way it could have. Shadow Chase (Shadowchasers, book 2) is due out July 27, 2010 and there is enough promise here that I’ll be watching out for it.

Sexual Content: References to sex.

My Rating: 3 out of 5
Profile Image for Vickie.
2,217 reviews6 followers
July 24, 2023
Below is my review from 2010. It still holds true. I don't often re-read books but this one has stuck with me for the longest time. I was glad to re-read as an audiobook.
I can still definitely recommend this book, series and author.
*********
I found this book thanks to Dark Faerie Tales and the Debut Urban Fantasy Author Challenge that's going on. So very glad I found the challenge and this book. The challenge has led me to some fab UF and this books is definitely in that group.
The premise of SHADOW BLADE was a new one to me, Kira has abilities to read items by placing her bare skin on the object. Sadly, this also means no close contact with people unless she wants them in a coma or dead. She's kept people at a distance all of her life, except for a trusted few and even they are kept sheltered from her touch and some emotional attachment. Kira has trained herself to be this way, for their sake and hers, but finds herself wanting to see what it would be like to touch one person...the Nubian, Khefar, owner of the ancient dagger she is protecting.
Khefar is tasked with a mission of protecting lives after an early lifetime of being a killing machine. The dagger was given to him by the Pharaoh and it's never been out of his sight until now and he will do what it takes to get it back.
Khefar has a 'sidekick', though Nansee would be appalled to find himself called such. I think he was my favorite character in the book. He appeared as needed or as he felt compelled to appear in the guise of an old man, albeit an old man who could kick ass in the kitchen and in the fight.
I enjoyed the parts of the book where Kira has to deal with all of the paperwork after a Shadow attack. Bureaucracy is bureaucracy no matter if it's in the 'real' world or in the UF world and the author does a good job of showing Kira's disgust with that fact.
I am very pleased that this blend of ancient Egyptian mysticism and urban fantasy is the beginning of a series. There is definitely a story that needs telling and finishing. A story of good (Light) versus evil (Shadow). Shadow is definitely truly horrendous and Kira needs her wits and her allies around her to fight the darker side. This dark side also wants Kira to work for them and are doing all they can to make that so. And she is doing all she can to keep on the right side of Light.
Five sparkly Light diamonds.....
Profile Image for Imogene.
854 reviews26 followers
July 13, 2018
It took me about three chapters to immediately order the entire series. YES PLEASE!
I love a tough bad-ass woman, I love her as a woc with a mysterious past and a curse that leaves her unable to touch anyone without harming them.
Not only is the protagonist a woc, but the majority of the main characters are also poc. All of the yes please.
Plus the Bechdel test? Oh, just two women sitting around talking about ancient weapons and stuff!
The research and world building are spot on. The teasers are the perfect amount of tease. Anything with a trickster god automatically gets my vote. And Khefar? I totally ship it!

4.5 Ancient semi-sentient blood-thirsty daggers out of 5.

Now I will be out haunting the mailbox if you need me
Profile Image for Lynn Calvin.
1,734 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2010
I wanted to have this work - heroine of color, antiquities.

Struggled through about chapter seven, and ended up not liking the heroine and finding the incredible mishmash of weird secret organizations and powers thrown together and infodumped at me in a way that left me going "who cares."

I had more sympathy for the supervisor she mouthed off to and it went downhill from there.

And you can only get away with leader/teacher called "Balm" of an organization called Gilead, if you have exactly the right touch. There were a lot of bits that were neat, or almost neat, but it didn't get pulled off.

Just didn't work for me.
Profile Image for Rachel-RN.
2,345 reviews28 followers
January 7, 2016
This stood out because this was built on the Egyptian pantheon. Good world building and world was interesting. Kira was a good heroine, maybe a little too perfect (in terms of her abilities - she's the strongest ever!). Because of all she could do, I think she could have been a little older (she's 25 if I remember currently in the book).
Overall, this was a good entertaining read. It just lacked that certain something for me.
Profile Image for Jilrene.
930 reviews80 followers
May 19, 2023
4+ stars I've already opened book two!

I enjoyed reading this. My favorite part is the world building. How light and shadow fight for control or balance. The shadow chaser magic. Egyptian gods and lore are the core, and I am so here for that!

I love Kira. This series is in first person POV, so Kira is the only character we can know. The others are seen through Kira's biases, which really says so much about Kira.
Profile Image for ☀Rachael☀.
991 reviews1 follower
November 10, 2015
I really liked Kira she was snarky and kickass my fave type of heroine!!
Profile Image for Harmony Williams.
Author 25 books156 followers
June 25, 2020
From the very beginning, this is a book that really punches home the importance of found family. Kira, unable to touch anyone due to the dangerous nature of her powers, is a character I found myself rooting for from the moment she found the body of her father figure. When the Nubian came into play, the one person she can touch without consequence, I couldn't put the book down. The light vs. chaos/shadow magic makes for such intriguing world building. I can't wait to pick up book 2!
Profile Image for Nicole Luiken.
Author 20 books169 followers
May 5, 2019
Good world-building: ancient daggers, immortals, Egyptian mythology, Fallen, Avatars, Shadowchasers and the Balm of Gilead. A strong heroine with cool powers who grabbed my sympathy in the prologue and an interesting supporting cast (fave Nansee).

Quibble: I'd really like to know WHY one thing is exempt from Kira's powers. Hoping this is covered in later books.
Profile Image for Heather.
386 reviews1 follower
February 12, 2022
It was so refreshing to find an exciting story with Ancient Egyptian gods and artifacts in it, rather than Greek and Roman. I loved every page, and I'm hooked for the series. I definitely want to know what happens next and see how some of the mysteries and secrets shake out. Kira is fierce and protective, with some interesting abilities. It was nice to see her rely on others in this book. She has spent so much time trying to protect others and building up walls to do so. I liked seeing those protective walls come down a bit, especially around Khefar.
Profile Image for J.S. Hawley.
Author 2 books10 followers
July 25, 2020
Easy read, New Fantastic World

The premise is classic boy meets girl and they save the world from dark magic. The author uses Egyptian mythology for the backdrop and her characters are African American. It was refreshing to say the least. The writing is smooth and concise. The first twist hits early in the book. So I was expecting none stop action but I felt lulls when there wasn’t. Right before the final action scene there’s a lull that made me want to fast forward. The fight is well written and followed by a lull so the reader feels the same contentment as the characters. Good reading overall.
437 reviews5 followers
Read
July 5, 2021
If i had read this before the pandemic, i would have really enjoyed this book but on a surface level. After having no human touch for a year, I was able to truly appreciate what Kira's life was like. She is a much stronger person than i would have realized before. I also like the Egyptian angle. That pantheon and magic don't get a lost of page time and having everything sorta be based off that was refreshing. I look forward to reading more, and seeing where Kira's story goes.
Profile Image for Jen (That's What I'm Talking About).
1,655 reviews306 followers
March 16, 2022
Kira is a Shadowchaser, a human with extrasensory powers and paramilitary training. She is part of an organization of Light that helps maintain balance with Shadow. As a side job, she is an antiquities expert who works with her mentor by using her gifts to determine if an object is a fake or possesses magic. When Bernie’s latest acquisition draws the attention of an immortal warrior and an Avatar of a Fallen, Kira finds herself in a deadly battle and unsure who to trust.

Shadow Blade is the first book in the urban fantasy Shadowchasers series. The author does a good job of introducing readers to this unique world that is loosely based on Egyptian mythology. I like that the author tosses the reader into the mix, introducing important aspects and characters over time; showing rather than telling.

Unlike most UF I’ve read, Shadow Blade is shared via alternating third person POVs. While it is primarily Kira’s tale, we also are privy to Khefar’s POV; he is the 4,000-year-old warrior and owner of the mysterious blade. I liked knowing right from the start his true intentions and his drive to protect Kira, while also experiencing Kira’s uncertainty to trust Khefar.

Shadow Blade is a great start to this Egyptian-mythology based UF. The author does a wonderful job introducing the components and main characters. I really love supporting character, Nansee. The main characters are strong but flawed, just as all great UF characters should be. The story moves quickly, and at a good pace. Overall, the story is interesting. The climatic battle is pretty good; I could have used a little more, but it was exciting and dangerous. The book definitely hooked me, and I want to read the next one.

My Rating: B
Profile Image for Layeshia.
375 reviews
December 9, 2017
To mystic blades combine to save the world!

This is my first reading of a book by this author usually I’m not a sci-fi type of reader this wasn’t bad I would’ve liked more romance perhaps in later part of the stor this is my first reading a book by this author usually I’m not a sci-fi type of reader this wasn’t bad I would’ve liked more romance perhaps in the next book that’s part of this story I’ll see more romance between the two primary figures. If you like adventure definitely there’s that and be back round stories of both were sufficient for now I’m sure we will learn more later.
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