Review: An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe Handling (Subpar Heroes story) by Jenn Burke

Rating: 5🌈

As a fan of this author, I couldn’t wait for her contribution to the multi-author Subpar Heroes series. It’s excellent! One of my favorites so far.

An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe Handling includes the two ends of the super hero spectrum. One, Ward Sullivan aka Firefox, a man’s whose talent was so powerful that it’s got him damaged permanently. Now Ward’s bitter and angry about his past and the loss of what he once had.

The other? So little is thought of his talent that he hasn’t even been assigned a superhero code name. He’s just been shunted off to Thunder Bay for minor tasks , where he’s content to living his life in a small Canadian community he’s called home. That’s, cheery, bearded, outfitted in plaid, ax wielding Devlin Campbell.

A weird case of arson in the middle of a park campground in winter brings Devlin together with Ward who’s sent to investigate the case, in what’s probably his last venture with SPAM.

Burke takes interesting characters, a great location full of small town culture as well as the frigid winter conditions then just starts layering on all the necessary elements as well as adding the details that give the story the fantastic depth.

She brings to Ward, Dev and a certain young Hallie, as the story develops, all personality growth and needed revelations that make the reader feel like we have an immediate connection to them. And Dev’s oh so inconsequential talent soon is seen to be not so inconsiderable after all.

That’s one of the best qualities of Burke’s narrative. She slyly feeds us several truths about the characters. The way they are being treated or perceived as well as the way the character are truly defined. These are not portraits that form at once but ones that may take almost the entire plot to reveal, giving the reader plenty of time to form their own thoughts and become more fully involved in this journey to love and HEA.

A special note about how Burke treats Ward’s issues and injuries. This is a choice the author made to go realistic with the outcome and I absolutely agree and appreciate that she went with it. It’s in keeping with his hard won journey, with the theme of the series (these aren’t Superheros) , and it’s reflective of the trauma that he has been through.

I just loved these characters, their relationship and their journey. Hallie is fabulous too.

Top of this series! A must read. And that cover is everything.

Subpar Heroes series- 15 books:

šŸ”·The Accidental Necromancer by Liv Rancourt

šŸ”·Behind the 8-Ball by A. E. Wasp

šŸ”·Transparent Is a Color by Kaje Harper

šŸ”·Impossible Things by Alexa Land

šŸ”·My Not-So-Super Blind Date by Allison Temple

šŸ”·An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe Handling by Jenn Burke ā¤ļø

šŸ”·In The Nick of Time by Elle Keaton 7/25/2024

šŸ”·Static/Cling by Jaimie Samms 7/30/2024

šŸ”·Spiritual Guidance Not Required by Jacy Braegan 8/1/2024

šŸ”·What Could Go Wrong? By Toshi Drake 8/6/2024

šŸ”·License to Chill by Chantal Mer 8/8/2024

šŸ”·Code Name Dolittle by Lynn Michaels. 8/22/2024

šŸ”·Signed, I’m Yours! By Rhys Lawless 8/29/2024

šŸ”·A Taste of Danger by Morgan Brice. 9/5/2024

Buy links:

An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe Handling

Blurb

No more Mr. Nice Hero

Ex-hero Ward Sullivan used to be a household name before his career went up in smoke. Now he’s stuck hunting for the cause of mysterious fires in Northern Ontario. Worse still is his new partner, an overly cheery Canadian named Devlin Campbell.

Dev’s a lumberjack and he’s okay with that. It sure beats working in an office where his not-so-super power forced everyone to be nice to him. Partnering with the famous ex-hero Firefox is a dream come true. Not only is he one of Dev’s idols, he’s immune to his niceness.

Dev’s upbeat vibe soothes Ward’s grumpy soul, but he’d never admit it. Nor would he admit that he really likes the way Dev handles an axe. But when a threat from the past comes roaring into Ward’s present, it’s no more Mr. Nice Hero. Ward may have to give up a future with the nicest guy he knows to save the world one last time.

An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe-Handling is a part of the multi-author Subparheroes MM romance series.

• Publication date: June 13, 2024

• Language: English

• Print length: 192 pages

Review: Transparent Is a Color (A Subparheroes Novel) by Kaje Harper

Rating: 4🌈

ā€œPeregrine Crawford stared in horror at the box sitting on top of his delivery cart. That’s a bomb.ā€

I’m a fan of Kage Harper’s work. This author manages to take a ā€œordinaryā€ person’s, or someone who has been categorized as ā€œsub parā€, approach to an extraordinary set of circumstances and make it and him relatable.

That’s Perry whose super powers are anything but. Perry can make things change colors but not indefinitely. Yellow rug to blue. Until the color fades. He has one more talent but it doesn’t always work and takes a lot of power and practice. So Perry hasn’t told anyone about it. That makes him a disappointment to his mother, especially as his only job he can hold is in a mailroom.

Perry is that easy to connect with character. One whose life changes when he does the right thing and meets Sergeant Deckard of the Nova City Bomb Squad and his canine patrol partner, Nix.

Harper combines an investigation into a serial bomber with a sweet developing relationship between Perry and Deckard. The super hero organization, SPAM, isn’t much of a element here but does appear largely as a smaller thread.

This is a good take on the theme and a sweet couple.

Subpar Heroes series- 15 books:

šŸ”·The Accidental Necromancer by Liv Rancourt

šŸ”·Behind the 8-Ball by A. E. Wasp 5/30/2024

šŸ”·Transparent Is a Color by Kaje Harper

šŸ”·Impossible Things by Alexa Land

šŸ”·My Not-So-Super Blind Date by Allison Temple 6/6/2024

šŸ”·An Ex-Hero’s Guide to Axe Handling by Jenn Burke 6/13/2024

šŸ”·In The Nick of Time by Elle Keaton 7/25/2024

šŸ”·Static/Cling by Jaimie Samms 7/30/2024

šŸ”·Spiritual Guidance Not Required by Jacy Braegan 8/1/2024

šŸ”·What Could Go Wrong? By Toshi Drake 8/6/2024

šŸ”·License to Chill by Chantal Mer 8/8/2024

šŸ”·Code Name Dolittle by Lynn Michaels. 8/22/2024

šŸ”·Signed, I’m Yours! By Rhys Lawless 8/29/2024

šŸ”·A Taste of Danger by Morgan Brice. 9/5/2024

Buy link

Transparent Is a Color

Blurb

Perry’s mother told him he’d develop the superpower of flight, like his grandfather. She even named him Peregrine, so folks would call him “The Falcon.” Spoiler— they don’t. Because when he did come into his power, all he got was the ability to change colors. Not even himself, like some kind of Chameleon Man, but the color of objects. He can de-pukify the shade of his bedroom curtains, turn a bully’s sweatshirt pink, or even turn a red traffic light green. (Not a good idea.) He hasn’t told anyone except his disappointed mom about his power. What would they call him? The Interior Decorator?

Back in high school, under stress, he did convince his power that transparent was just another color. Now that ability’s sometimes fun in an illicit way. Then one morning, in the mailroom at work, he turns a cardboard box transparent and sees a bomb inside. And Perry’s ordinary life explodes.

Sergeant Deckard of the Nova City Bomb Squad never thought much about superheroes, or supervillains for that matter. He has plenty of work with ordinary humans and their explosives. Until he and his bomb-sniffing dog, Nix, get called to a possible-explosives situation in a highrise mailroom. The guy who reported the bomb is a nerdy twink in dark-framed glasses who pushes all of Deck’s buttons. When he finds out the young man has a weird superpower and may be the target of a villain, every protective instinct comes into play.

Deckard’s goal is to keep his job, his dog, Nova City, and Perry intact. His libido can just sit down, shut up, and take a number. But as their attraction gets hotter and the villain closes in, their future might be blown apart before it even has a chance to start.

Transparent Is a Color is a part of the multi-author Subpar Superheroes MM romance series.

(Content warning for abduction, parental emotional abuse)

• Publication date: May 23, 2024

• Language: English

• Print length: 271 pages

Buy link

Transparent Is a Color

Blurb

Perry’s mother told him he’d develop the superpower of flight, like his grandfather. She even named him Peregrine, so folks would call him “The Falcon.” Spoiler— they don’t. Because when he did come into his power, all he got was the ability to change colors. Not even himself, like some kind of Chameleon Man, but the color of objects. He can de-pukify the shade of his bedroom curtains, turn a bully’s sweatshirt pink, or even turn a red traffic light green. (Not a good idea.) He hasn’t told anyone except his disappointed mom about his power. What would they call him? The Interior Decorator?

Back in high school, under stress, he did convince his power that transparent was just another color. Now that ability’s sometimes fun in an illicit way. Then one morning, in the mailroom at work, he turns a cardboard box transparent and sees a bomb inside. And Perry’s ordinary life explodes.

Sergeant Deckard of the Nova City Bomb Squad never thought much about superheroes, or supervillains for that matter. He has plenty of work with ordinary humans and their explosives. Until he and his bomb-sniffing dog, Nix, get called to a possible-explosives situation in a highrise mailroom. The guy who reported the bomb is a nerdy twink in dark-framed glasses who pushes all of Deck’s buttons. When he finds out the young man has a weird superpower and may be the target of a villain, every protective instinct comes into play.

Deckard’s goal is to keep his job, his dog, Nova City, and Perry intact. His libido can just sit down, shut up, and take a number. But as their attraction gets hotter and the villain closes in, their future might be blown apart before it even has a chance to start.

Transparent Is a Color is a part of the multi-author Subpar Superheroes MM romance series.

(Content warning for abduction, parental emotional abuse)

• Publication date: May 23, 2024

• Language: English

• Print length: 271 pages