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Foxglove Summer (Rivers of London Book 5) Kindle Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 15,713 ratings

Ben Aaronovitch's bestselling Rivers of London urban fantasy series • “The perfect blend of CSI and Harry Potter.” —io9 • 2015 Locus Recommended Reading for Fantasy

When two young girls go missing in rural Herefordshire, police constable and wizard-in-training Peter Grant is sent out of London to check that nothing supernatural is involved.

It’s purely routine—Nightingale, Peter’s superior, thinks he’ll be done in less than a day. But Peter’s never been one to walk away from someone in trouble, so when nothing overtly magical turns up he volunteers his services to the local police, who need all the help they can get. 

But because the universe likes a joke as much as the next sadistic megalomaniac, Peter soon comes to realize that dark secrets underlie the picturesque fields and villages of the countryside and there might just be work for Britain’s most junior wizard after all.

Soon Peter’s in a vicious race against time, in a world where the boundaries between reality and fairy have never been less clear....
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for the Rivers of London series:

"A low-income housing tower gone awry, an old enemy with a bone to pick...and a shocker of an ending—
Broken Homes is a delight." —Charlaine Harris, #1 New York Times-bestselling author

"The 
prose is witty, the plot clever, and the characters incredibly likeable." —Time Out

"This series is 
a constant joy to read....I’ve been looking forward all year to find out what happened next, and the book did not disappoint.” —Genevieve Cogman, author of acclaimed The Invisible Library

"It's 
witty, fun, and full of vivid characters, and the plot twists will keep even seasoned mystery fans guessing." —Publishers Weekly

“The perfect blend of 
CSI and Harry Potter.” —io9

"This book is, at its heart, a police procedural with an overlay of urban fantasy elements. The voice is persuasive and funny as all get-out, and the reader is engaged with the narrative from the very first page. Aaronovitch has written a diverse cast of characters who all feel like real people with their own specific motivations.
 This book is simply wonderful." —RT Reviews (top pick)

"The 
most satisfying fantasy thriller to hit bookshelves in quite some time." —SFX Magazine

"The most entertaining book that I have read in such a long time.... 
It's very funny, it's very clever, it's very nicely written.... It's such a treat." —Nancy Pearl

"Aaronovitch makes the story sing, building momentum until
 the ending is literally breathless.” —SF Revu

"Aaronovitch has a very witty, casual voice, with a tendency toward sarcasm and humor, which is threaded throughout 
Broken Homes. And a few crazy plot twists will devastate and delight fans in equal measure." —RT Reviews

About the Author

Ben Aaronovitch was born in London in 1964 and had the kind of dull routine childhood that drives a man either to drink or to science fiction. He is a screenwriter, with early notable success on BBC's leg3endary Doctor Who, for which he wrote some episodes now widely regarded as classics, and which even he is quite fond of. After a decade of such work, he decided it was time to show the world what he could really do, and embarked on his first serious original novel. The result is Midnight Riot, the debut adventure of Peter Grant, followed by Moon Over Soho. He can be contacted vis his website, http://www.the-folly.com/.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00INIYHQ4
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ DAW; Reprint edition (January 6, 2015)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 6, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1975 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 333 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 15,713 ratings

About the author

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Ben Aaronovitch
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Ben Aaronovitch was born in 1964. Discovering in his early twenties that he had precisely one talent, he took up screenwriting at which he was an overnight success. He wrote for Doctor Who, Casualty and the world’s cheapest ever SF soap opera Jupiter Moon. He then wrote for Virgin’s New Adventures until they pulped all his books.

Then Ben entered a dark time illuminated only by an episode of Dark Knight, a book for Big Finish and the highly acclaimed but not-very-well-paying Blake’s 7 Audio dramas.

Trapped in a cycle of disappointment and despair Ben was eventually forced to support his expensive book habit by working for Waterstones as a bookseller. Ironically it was while shelving the works of others that Ben finally saw the light. He would write his own books, he would let prose into his heart and rejoice in the word. Henceforth, subsisting on nothing more than instant coffee and Japanese takeaway, Ben embarked on the epic personal journey that was to lead to Rivers of London (or Midnight Riot as it is known in the Americas).

Ben Aaronovitch currently resides in London and says that he will leave when they pry his city from his cold dead fingers.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
15,713 global ratings
Check you have all the pages in your copy!
3 Stars
Check you have all the pages in your copy!
I was reading and the story made a giant plot jump - I went back and reread multiple times and couldn’t figure out how I could have missed such an integral story line resolving. I realized the book was missing pages 171-202. It looks completely undamaged from the outside and there’s no ripped pages. It appears that it was some sort of error that occurred during printing and binding. I didn’t realize until past my return window and want to make sure no one makes the same mistake! Check your pages and make sure you’ve got them all!In terms of story, I assume you’re reading reviews for book 5 because you’ve already read earlier ones in the story. It’s a fun read like the others. I haven’t finished it yet because I’m waiting til I have those missing pages but would recommend it so far. I docked stars from my review due to the missing pages, not as a critique to the content of the book.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2015
I love this series. I bought the first as an Amazon Recommendation tied to the Felix Castor series by Mike Carr and was enthralled, buying and reading the rest immediately. The writing is excellent, the plots are engaging, the characters interesting, and the world-building solid.

But I'm afraid...very afraid. Not of ghosts and ghoulies and things that go bump in the night, but that the author might make what I would consider to be a *serious* mis-step in the overarching plot of our PC Grant. Spoilers ahead. Seriously, stop reading if you don't want the defining twist of the series (thus far) spoiled.

Still here? Okay...I swear by any deity interested in books that I will not only stop reading this series but actively campaign against any friend, family, acquaintance, or browsing stranger buying it if the author wimps out and `redeems' Lesley.

End of Book Four catapulted this to the top of my Awesome List. It was so unexpected, so profound, a WTF Moment of the most excellent variety. Serious, spoilers, stop reading or it's on your head...

He *had* him! Grant *had* The Faceless Man! After four books, it was about time (although to be honest, TFM wasn't the `known' villain for all four books); not too soon, not too late...completely satisfied that Grant got him at that place, at that time, in that manner. It completely worked.

And Lesley, his best friend, partner, mostly unrequited love interest...the one person Grant has depended on without reservation...betrays him. Shoots him in the back and helps TFM escape. Tell me that's not awesome! And when the Stunned Bunny Moment was over, I flipped back through the book and checked a few things and...it made sense. You won't know until you look for the clues, and maybe even some of them are wishful thinking on my part, but...yeah, I could see it.

Now Mr Aaronovitch better have the guts to follow through. I want Lesley in jail, with her messed up face, realizing she betrayed her best friend and lost everything for *nothing*. None of this wimpy, "You could have told me, that was mean, I forgive you" lame crap. No "Lesley is a double agent" weaseling.

TFM is a murderer, and Lesley helped him go free...at the physical expense of her supposed best friend. There isn't...or should not be...any going back from that simple fact. Not for Peter. TFM almost killed him...and was more than willing to do so...not just once. TFM is directly responsible for Sky's death, and quite a few others. I can't see Peter forgiving and forgetting that. Even *if* Lesley turns out to be a double-agent plant by Nightingale to get info on all the other plans TFM has, this event will have completely ruined the trust he shared with Lesley. She was his partner and now every time she's involved (assuming she's somehow redeemed), a portion of his mind will always wonder if she's *really* got his back or if she's going to put her Taser in it. And if Nightingale planted her with TFM, there goes the trust Peter had in him, as well...because now Peter is just cannon fodder, a bright moving target for the bad guys to focus on. Completely expendable.

And don't think I hate Lesley. I've been quietly cheering them on as a couple since the first few pages. She is an awesome character (I like her better than Beverly, always have) who balances Peter out nicely; together they were a hell of a team. I can understand *why* she did it, and also have no qualms saying it was a stupid, unforgivable choice.

This is seriously good stuff. It remains to be seen if it gets better, or Mr Aaronovitch bails out to play it safe and clichéd. I'm hoping he follows through. I see no way Peter could ever trust her the way he would need to. Even if she's a double-agent...maybe even especially. He's always going wonder if she *really* has his back...or if he's being set up for a fall again.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2016
Utterly unique, even within the increasingly crowed genre of Urban Fantasy. The only viable "competitor" to The Laundry Books of Charles Stross, but delightfully seeming in no way to be competition. The narrative voice of Peter Grant is charming and seductive and utterly genuine. I find myself endlessly wondering how the author has come by his seemingly complete understanding of the details of his protagonist's mundane life as well as his wider world view. It is truly impressive, all the more so for its fluidity and utter plausibility. The "magical scheme," such as it is, is easy-flowing and beautiful and seductive and blends magnificently with the day-in, day-out life and perspective of young Constable Grant.

There is an impressive economy with which Aaronovitch allows new characters to join the story. Just frequently enough to give our Young Man protagonist a plausibly evolving world and social life, but at a rate that allows the reader to both want and be able to allow the new characters into what feels like our very privileged access to Peter Grant's private world.

Five books in, the narrative remains simultaneously unhurried and yet bounding with energy, with no end in sight to the mysteries and questions and life decisions and evolutions that lie ahead. Each book resolves its sorry satisfyingly and with a paradoxical gentleness and almost explosive energy, and yet, in "finishing", seems little more than (for the reader) a reluctantly conceded, well-earned pause before the next case (so long as it doesn't last too long...), the next stage in Peter's evolving life.

A note about "4 Stars" from me. 5 Stars is reserved for books that have fundamentally changed the way I see the Universe, think about Life and has, or will have, a lasting impact on how I will be living my life forevermore. 3 Stars is a "really good read".

This is a perfect example of a "4 Star" book or series for me: a treasured experience, deeply respected, loved, and recommended with an almost desperate need for the experience to be shared with anyone who can be enticed to share it with me.

Such fun. So original.So fresh. So much more to come!
Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2015
I love this series, and this is one of the best therein. While the action is not as overwhelming as it is in the others, that's for the good; it allows Peter the opportunity to gather his thoughts and talents- not to mention have some romantic interludes with a certain River goddess!

If there had been a bit of backstory, this would be a fine novel to start with in the series. It probably is anyway, though it does lack the frenetic tone of the others. However, some of the characters from the other novels make appearances here- though briefly- and these would be puzzling without any context. In all, though I think it was a good call; it's easy for a series to get too caught up in backstory to progress. Maybe just a cast of character list would serve.

I love that Peter is not at all omniscient in these books, giving us readers time to pick up on stuff before he does sometimes! I love the dialog. The plotting is great, too, and with less overwhelming action in this one, one can appreciate the nicely convoluted plot(s) more.

All in all, a wonderful addition to a great series!
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2023
Not so much an adventure as a statistical variation in the amount of excitement in my day-to-day existence (with apologies for borrowing from Aaronovitch’s fabulous prose). Thus far this series has provided me with more fun per hour invested than anything else I’ve read in decades.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Swanster
5.0 out of 5 stars Great series
Reviewed in Germany on October 18, 2023
Another solid addition to the series.
Breezy
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Reviewed in Canada on February 12, 2021
Just keeps getting better, and better. Seamless to the very end. I don’t want to say anything about the story, and that was fourteen more words.
Ivan T.
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this author
Reviewed in Italy on February 12, 2018
Contemporary and yet full of vintage references. Ideal for non-native speakers like me who struggle keeping in line with spoken English, without neglecting good literary one. And the claim on the front page (prose is witty, plot is clever, characters are likable) is so true. One warning: if you dislike sci-fi and/or magic (or if you think the one as opposed to the other) look for something different.
Helene
5.0 out of 5 stars De mieux en mieux
Reviewed in France on March 15, 2018
Loin de Londres, hors de son élément, Peter Grant se retrouve en plus sans aide habituelle : Nightingale est retenu à Londres et Lesley...
Bref, la campagne, l'enlèvement de deux fillettes, des extraterrestres supposés, des licornes... Tout un nouveau monde s' offre à notre héros. L'histoire est maîtrisée de bout en bout. Le suspens grandit. Je me suis retrouvée à bout de souffle à la fin de ce roman. Un réel plaisir. Voire même une addiction dans mon cas.
Kinky Kid
5.0 out of 5 stars Siempre divertido
Reviewed in Mexico on February 18, 2016
La serie Rivers of London es ,uy buena y nunca descepciona, su mezcla de hard bioled con fantasia la hace unica e interesante, pero lo mas interesante de este libro son de cosas, saber que paso con Lesley y las consecuencias de los que hizo Faceless Man. Tambien interesante leer a Peter fuera de sus zona de confort, en el campo. Muy bueno
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