A charming urban fantasy about the unusual practice of London doctor Greta Helsing, who secretly treats the ills of the undead. This is the old-school type of urban fantasy (our world but with supernatural beings), not the later one (supernatural love triangles). There is a romance, but it's extremely understated, the consummation occurs off-page if it occurs at all, and is not what the story is about. The medical details, as far as I could tell, were accurate.
Like many urban fantasies, Strange Practice has a thriller plot--there's some glowy-eyed monks who are murdering the undead--but what makes it notable are the assortment of quirky characters, both human and not, the unusual premise, the generally light tone, and, despite some gory bits, the complete lack of grimdark. Greta is dedicated to her profession and her patients, and is surrounded by people who care very much about her and mean well in general.
A lot of the book consists of her found family and patients--vampires of various species, ghouls and an adorable ghoullet, and my favorite character, a telepath of unknown origin whom she essentially inherited from her doctor father and who has been a reassuring presence in the back of her mind ever since--hanging out together and making each other mugs of tea or blood (virgin's, for vampyres.) It's really sweet.
If you liked Nick O'Donohoe's Crossroads books about a veterinarian in fantasyland but could have done without the genocide and animal harm, this book's for you.
Strange Practice (A Dr. Greta Helsing Novel)


Like many urban fantasies, Strange Practice has a thriller plot--there's some glowy-eyed monks who are murdering the undead--but what makes it notable are the assortment of quirky characters, both human and not, the unusual premise, the generally light tone, and, despite some gory bits, the complete lack of grimdark. Greta is dedicated to her profession and her patients, and is surrounded by people who care very much about her and mean well in general.
A lot of the book consists of her found family and patients--vampires of various species, ghouls and an adorable ghoullet, and my favorite character, a telepath of unknown origin whom she essentially inherited from her doctor father and who has been a reassuring presence in the back of her mind ever since--hanging out together and making each other mugs of tea or blood (virgin's, for vampyres.) It's really sweet.
If you liked Nick O'Donohoe's Crossroads books about a veterinarian in fantasyland but could have done without the genocide and animal harm, this book's for you.
Strange Practice (A Dr. Greta Helsing Novel)
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You're so right about the storyline with the monk. I also really liked what happened with the issue of absolution. For a book with lines like, "Greta was always fascinated by her mummy cases," it was surprisingly moving.
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your eyes of polished tinand you miss it.From:
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Though I was a little irritated by the afterlife treatment and that took away a little bit from the philosophical points.