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Off Leash

von Daniel Potter

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696381,277 (3.64)2
Thomas wanted a simple, stable existence, but saddled with unemployment, an absentee girlfriend, and the impending unpaid rent, change is hurtling down on him whether he likes it or not. Following the sudden murder of his strange elderly neighbor, He awakens on wrong side of the Veil transformed into a mountain lion and thrust into a dangerous world of magic. Thomas must team up with a disgraced Inquisitor and a pyromaniac squirrel to dodge the fate pushed upon him by haughty mages, manipulative union leaders, and violent werewolves. Does Thomas have the will to take control of his life through wit and claw to become the first Freelance Familiar? Off Leash is the first book in Daniel Potter's Freelance Familiars series, a humorous adventure story beset by immoral mages and fast-talking animals. If you enjoyed the Dresden Files and want an overtone of Discworld, you'll love this rollicking urban fantasy adventure. Dig in your claws, brace for impact and buy this story right now!… (mehr)
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3.5 stars Thomas's life, not the greatest, but his, is turned upside down when he wakes up one day and discovers himself metamorphed into a cougar and that he can see magic. What's worse, he finds his life is no longer his own as strangers try to take over his life, tell him he's a familiar to be exploited (at least that's the way he sees it, others do not), and his old life no longer matters. Thomas, however, is stubborn and not willing to put up with anyone telling him what to do - within reason. A gift left by the archmage who helped him cross the Veil into this new, unwanted, life, will give him a chance to make his own decisions.

I like Thomas and look forward to reading the next book in the series.

My only complaint is that Thomas's reaction seems to be a little too mild to having his life uprooted. ( )
  fuzzipueo | Apr 24, 2022 |
I like it, but

A little sloppy. Needs proofing. The world building is a little haphazard.

Some unique ideas about magic systems. I liked the Familiar design, but it wasn't really developed as well as it should have been. A few too many plot points were glossed over with 'magic'.

Entertaining, and Rudy is awesome. I don't feel I can recommend this to a casual reader. ( )
  wildwily | May 28, 2020 |
I like it, but

A little sloppy. Needs proofing. The world building is a little haphazard.

Some unique ideas about magic systems. I liked the Familiar design, but it wasn't really developed as well as it should have been. A few too many plot points were glossed over with 'magic'.

Entertaining, and Rudy is awesome. I don't feel I can recommend this to a casual reader. ( )
  wildwily | May 28, 2020 |
A good read. It's a neat angle on "normal human becomes aware of the magical world" - for some reason, certain (non-magical) people randomly become a) magical and b) animals, and are then greatly prized as familiars for mages. Thomas Khatt (and the one thing that was missed was that he should really have been exceedingly bored with cat jokes about his name...) becomes a puma and a prize - and despite his self-avowed laziness and accommodation to others' desires, he pushes back when people start pushing him. It's interesting that since Thomas doesn't know anything about anyone, he has to judge by words and actions - and some people start out looking pretty good and turn out to be rather nasty, and some vice versa. Thomas just does what seems right to him, and tries to avoid being controlled - and he ends up making some serious changes in his own destiny and a good many others. I found the book better than I expected - I expected good, light entertainment and I got that along with a solid dose of thought, some _excellent_ worldbuilding, and a self-contained story that still made me really want to read the next one. Oddly, the first 2/3rds of the story were very well edited - I didn't catch a single typo - but the last third had quite a few; words that weren't words, words that didn't fit the sentence, and at least one sentence that...I'm still not sure what the author intended to say, but that's not what it said. It didn't seriously detract from the story, but I did notice it. The copy editor got too caught up in the story to catch the errors? Good book, and I definitely want to read the next in the series. ( )
  jjmcgaffey | Oct 23, 2018 |
Originally posted on Tales to Tide You Over

I met Daniel Potter at BayCon 2018 and based on his pitch, gave Off Leash a try. The book took a bit to reach the top of my pile, but when I started reading, I expected to be entertained and wasn’t disappointed. This novel introduces a world in which magic and mundane exist on top of each other, the magic concealed with a veil created in early history by the Fey. The veil has the interesting property of extrapolating a mundane answer to display to those blind to magic based on cues from the magical people. This is not the only aspect of the world Potter builds I found intriguing either.

The writing has rough spots and the main character is everything I should find annoying, but between Thomas’ character growth once attaining his “true” self and the mix of a chirpy tone with heavy questions, it worked. I even enjoyed how Thomas (the first person main character) narrated events with a grumpy, often sarcastic, tone. Watching him come to terms with his new reality, and his reactions to the setup everyone magical accepted (no matter how reluctantly) as the way things should be were well worth the stumbles.

The description is creative and fun. For example, Thomas has to reinterpret everything about the town he lives in once he is transformed into a familiar. A puma might be coveted by the magi, but becoming one leaves much to be desired. He has to navigate a mundane world full of police officers and humans who find a large predatory cat disturbing all the while trying to figure out who is on his side, or at least not actively against him.

Despite my comment about rough writing, the plot seeding is well done. I could guess at some answers because of the clues left in the text and experienced Thomas’ confusion about who was trying to help or harm him as though I shared it. Without understanding the situation, he doesn’t know who to trust or whether the person “protecting” him from someone is working in his best interests. I’m avoiding names so you can have the same experience, but it was worth going through it to get a nuanced picture of the power struggles in the magic world.

Speaking of Thomas, he starts out as a whiny, sarcastic puma…who tries to eat other people when hungry (and the puma instincts overcome the person). He’s a self-proclaimed doormat, especially where his girlfriend is concerned. I could have stopped there, but at the same time, his base principles of loyalty and how to treat people are solid. From the first chapter, we see him holding a door for his elderly neighbor, for example, a simple act, but one not every person would bother with.

I think it’s obvious I enjoyed the book a lot, so I’ll leave with this: The resolution was better than I’d expected in some ways, on both the global and personal level, and yet it still worked within the book and the world nicely. The novel is both silly and campy. Thomas is really dumb at times, but his stubbornness, even when he doesn’t know what’s going on, makes things possible that weren’t before. I barely noticed the depth underlying the story because I was enjoying the world and fun tale, but it’s there when you want to see it. ( )
  MarFisk | Oct 4, 2018 |
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Thomas wanted a simple, stable existence, but saddled with unemployment, an absentee girlfriend, and the impending unpaid rent, change is hurtling down on him whether he likes it or not. Following the sudden murder of his strange elderly neighbor, He awakens on wrong side of the Veil transformed into a mountain lion and thrust into a dangerous world of magic. Thomas must team up with a disgraced Inquisitor and a pyromaniac squirrel to dodge the fate pushed upon him by haughty mages, manipulative union leaders, and violent werewolves. Does Thomas have the will to take control of his life through wit and claw to become the first Freelance Familiar? Off Leash is the first book in Daniel Potter's Freelance Familiars series, a humorous adventure story beset by immoral mages and fast-talking animals. If you enjoyed the Dresden Files and want an overtone of Discworld, you'll love this rollicking urban fantasy adventure. Dig in your claws, brace for impact and buy this story right now!

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