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Lädt ... Falling Colours: The Misadventures of a Vision Painter (The Vision Painter, #1) (2012)von R J Samuel
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BOOK ONE in the series THE VISION PAINTER FALLING COLOURS - The Misadventures of a Vision Painter KIRAN is the only vision painter working in Ireland, the only female in the ancient Indian profession. As a vision painter, she paints the hopes and dreams of her clients into existence. Her practice is not doing well and she works as a waitress in a struggling restaurant in Connemara. When Kiran is asked to paint the forbidden, forces are unleashed that she cannot contain, including two infuriating women with whom she must work in a race to restore order and save her gift. FALLING COLOURS is the first book in The Vision Painter series and introduces the unique concept of vision painting and Kiran, a woman who struggles with a fascinating gift. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Falling Colours is a paranormal mystery with a lesbian romance. The premise sounds like something straight out of Twilight Zone. Kiran is a half-Irish, half-Indian woman who quit her budding engineering career in Galway to follow what she feels is her true calling--vision painting. This particular talent is a little more involved than fortune telling though. The vision painter supposedly has the power to realize the clients’ visions or dreams. That is a truly scary power to have. So the rules and regulations that govern vision painting are very stringent.
Kiran has another problem however. Vision painting is as Indian as curry. But she is what the Asians call a banana (yellow outside/white inside--she may look exotic but she’s Irish through and through). Her cursory knowledge of India and its customs means she isn’t very good in marketing herself as such (e.g., dressing up or talking like a guru or swami, lol). She can't even fake an Indian accent. Her very Irish clients don’t really know what to make of her talent or how to pay her back (material compensation is not allowed). So she languishes in her waitressing job and worries about being able to afford winter heating. Neither can she expect much help from home. Women vision painters aren’t allowed in her tradition-bound ‘profession’ back in India, not to mention a lesbian one. So she’s also the family’s dirty little secret.
The author’s prose is a bit different if you’re not used to her style, but it is a good different--very descriptive and emotional. The first few chapters establishing Kiran’s cred are rather confusing. I didn’t really understand how vision painting works until we actually see her in action. And then it hits you in the face. What a whammy! Things start to pick up from there. There is danger, cheating, betrayals, a possible murder or two, kidnapping and other shenanigans.
Out of the blue, the author chose a certain POV that really surprised me. Some people don’t like it, but for me, it’s what elevated the book from another run-of-the-mill paranormal whodunit and earns from me the extra star. I love Marge’s POV. Rich housewife, meddling mother, a one-time unfaithful wife--her actions are horrid. But she’s so human and typical mother-knows-best--well-meaning but totally clueless and off the mark. Her POV is revealing, poignant, ironic and often funny as hell in a black comedy kind of way (well mainly because she’s also
A caveat for romance lovers. This isn’t equal parts mystery and romance. The subtitle is after all, Misadventures of a Vision Painter. There is a beautiful romance but it is rather understated although the chemistry is there. There is a lot of intrigue and angsty human drama to take up the slack though. If you’re looking for something a little different than the usual lesfic and paranormal tropes, this is a good combo and won’t disappoint.
5 stars
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