Grilled Cheese and Goblins: Adventures of a Supernatural Food Inspector
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- € 6,49
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- € 6,49
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Vampire Hunter. Leprechaun Fighter. Food Inspector.
Keith Curry has his work cut out for him.
NATO’s Irregulars Affairs Division is a secret organization operating in thousands of cities around the globe. Its agents police relations between the earthly realm and those beyond this world, protecting citizens from both mundane and otherworldly dangers.
Former chef turned NIAD food inspector, Special Agent Keith Curry found out about magic the hard way and is now determined to keep dinner safe for everybody. Includes the novellas “Cherries Worth Getting,” “Magically Delicious,” and the never-before-published “Bring Out Your Best,” plus bonus shorts and more!
“In “Cherries Worth Getting,” Kimberling adeptly and humorously melds Portland, Ore.’s pretentiously earnest art and food cultures with a search for human traffickers.” –Publishers Weekly
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
NATO Irregular Affairs Division agents Keith Curry and Gunther Heartman, the protagonists of this haphazard collection of six linked stories in the shared Irregulars universe, are responsible for preventing Americans from discovering that paranormal creatures live among them. Keith's specialty as a former chef is food safety specifically, making sure that no humans are turned into food and that all of the creatures' food is safe for them to eat. He's racist against goblins such as field agent Gunther, but he also has to admit that Gunther who has been transmogrified to look human is deeply attractive. When they're required to work together, they gradually fall in love. Each of the three longer pieces has an intriguing mystery at its heart who's killing and butchering humans? why are NIAD agents being driven berserk by pixie dust? that intertwines with the romance between Gunther and Keith, but Kimberling fails to build suspense in each story. There's never any doubt that the partners will solve the mysteries at hand and make it home in time for dinner. The domestic aspects of the romance are lovely but similarly fall short. Kimberling builds a fascinating world for the characters to live in, but never manages to fully envelop the reader in it.