A great super human series takes a darker turn! -- 5 stars
     
     My next review is the third novel in the "Paranormals"
      series, by one of my favorite authors.  And yet again, it was well
      worth the wait!
     
     On the surface, "Paranormals" is a series about super humans
      (think the Avengers, but with more focus on character).  But this
      entry has a darker tone than its two predecessors, creepier
      overall.  Actually, each of the books has had their own flair: 
      The first book was a straight forward super hero "origin story,"
      showing how Vortex got his cybernetic eyes after the brutal
      slaughtering of his family, how Takayasu and Shockwave partnered
      up at the Paranormal Control Agency, and how Powerhouse went from
      a reluctant villain to an almost as reluctant hero.  The second
      book, "We Are Not Alone," (which I read during one of my reviewing
      "dry spells," but I enjoyed it very much!) brought in extra
      terrestrials, focusing upon the arrival of good ... and eventually
      BAD ... aliens, while introducing Shining Star to the super hero
      group.
    
    And now, "Darkness Reigns" introduces magic to the equation.
      Magic, and a disturbing new villain.
     
     "Darkness Reigns" opens by rolling the clock back to the
      beginning of the first book's main story.  We see the attack on
      Vortex's family from the point of view of his older brother John. 
      Author Christopher Andrews peppered the first two books with
      references to fact that John's body was never recovered, that they
      only PRESUMED he was dead, and we now find out what really
      happened to him that day.  And, more importantly, what happened to
      him after the attack.  I won't spoil the details, but John has
      been somewhere else, for a VERY long time.  And John is now a kind
      of super hero in his right, known as the Gladius (like the sword,
      literally).
     
     And the main thrust of this book's story launches when an
      enemy of John's, a monster called the Skygger, decides to exact
      revenge on Gladius by going after his brother, Vortex.
     
    At this point, all the familiar faces return -- Vortex and
      Shining Star, Takayasu and Shockwave, and Powerhouse -- and we
      learn that things HAD been going well recently, crime wise.  Until
      a few weeks ago, when they began seeing a spike in more macabre
      crimes.  They've been trying to continue on, business as usual,
      but they can all feel that something just isn't right.
    
    Soon enough, our heroes find themselves in over their heads. 
      And even with help from Gladius ... well, no spoilers here, but I
      will say that this book brings some serious consequences for our
      heroes.  And they may be permanent.
    
    As noted at the beginning, "Darkness Reigns" is the most
      unsettling of the series so far.  The Skygger is quite the sadist,
      and we witness its torturing, or the end results of its torture. 
      It felt like the kind of villain I would have expected to turn up
      in Andrews' "Triumvirate" series, which deals with the super
      natural.
      
      None of this is intended as a complaint, mind you.  And there is
      plenty of "super hero" action sprinkled through out, enough to
      keep the book true to its series' roots.
    
     While the book follows its predecessors' approach as an
      ensemble piece -- each chapter's title indicates whose point of
      view will be favored at that time -- "Darkness Reigns" feels like
      it is mainly
      Gladius/John's story.  We do still see the other, familiar
      characters' POVs.  Shockwave, in particular, is given more time to
      shine than before (though the REASON for it is all part of this
      book's ghoulish tone).  But I was surprised by how little time
      VORTEX spent in the spot light this time around, especially since,
      if this ensemble series DOES have an overall "main character" up
      to this point, it would have been him.
     
     That might be my only concrete complaint about this entry in
      the series:  While the REASON for his decreased attention is
      certainly legitimate, I still wish we had seen more of Vortex.  It
      would be exaggerating to say that he was "side lined," but he is
      definitely focused on less than I have come to expect.
     
     But overall, the book earned a well deserved 5 stars from
      this reader.  The characters are strong, and the dynamics between
      Vortex and Gladius are poignant and satisfying.  I am curious as
      to where else Andrews will take this series, and look forward to
      the next entry.
