Kitty's House of Horrors (Kitty Norville)

In this fast-paced monster mash-up, creatures of the night face the fight of their lives when they square off against one another on TV's first all-supernatural reality show.
Talk radio host and werewolf Kitty Norville is expecting cheesy competitions and manufactured drama starring shapeshifters, vampires, and psychics when she signs on for TV's first all-supernatural reality show. But as soon as filming starts, violence erupts, and Kitty suspects that the show is a cover for a far more nefarious plot.
When the cameras stop rolling, cast members start dying, and Kitty realizes that she and her monster housemates are -- ironically -- the ultimate prize in a very different game. Stranded with no power, no phones, and no way to know who can be trusted, she must find a way to defeat the evil closing in . . . before it kills them all.
Talk radio host and werewolf Kitty Norville is expecting cheesy competitions and manufactured drama starring shapeshifters, vampires, and psychics when she signs on for TV's first all-supernatural reality show. But as soon as filming starts, violence erupts, and Kitty suspects that the show is a cover for a far more nefarious plot.
When the cameras stop rolling, cast members start dying, and Kitty realizes that she and her monster housemates are -- ironically -- the ultimate prize in a very different game. Stranded with no power, no phones, and no way to know who can be trusted, she must find a way to defeat the evil closing in . . . before it kills them all.
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Community Reviews
Kitty's House of Horrors (Kitty Norville #7)
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
Kitty's House of Horrors (Kitty Norville #7)
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
Kitty's House of Horrors (Kitty Norville #7)
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
by Carrie Vaughn
Ranking so far:
Of the first seven books, Iâd rank them 3 (5 stars), 1 ( 5 stars), 6 (4 stars), 5 (4 stars), 7 (3 stars), 2 (4 stars), 4 (3 stars).
Kittyâs House of Horrors, can be read out of order without really noticing (I did in fact) and is pretty much a stand alone piece. A solid Kitty story, but not really very memorable. Sometimes reading Kitty Norville is like eating cotton candy for me, I enjoy it but there isnât much substance.
Kitty agrees to do a cheesy reality show even after finding out that her friends had signed up only after being told she had already agreed. She knows it is a bad idea, she really does, but how bad doesnât occur to her. With a bunch of psychics, lycanthropes, and vampires and living in a crowded remote cabin, throw in a professional skeptic and an unscrupulous producer and what could go wrong?
It all starts out cozy enough and Kitty of course finds a way to ask questions by making it a game. Things are pretty light until during a seance Tina see something dark and hateful but she canât really explain what. Then the television crew disappears along with all the phones at the same time the first body turns up. The paranoia from that point is amped up as they all try to figure out how to get out of the remote trap they find themselves in. The reality turns out to be even worse when they discover they have been set up for someone to pick them off as they try to escape.
Deaths mount up until they catch one of the humans shooting at them. The group of âmonstersâ band together for an assault on the humans who dare to hunt them and their only chance to escape and survive is to work together and not panic. They take down all the humans but not everyone survives. If this were a television show, Iâd call it a monster of the week episode with the human playing the part of monsters this time..
The only good news for Kitty in this story is finding out that Cormac has been paroled when she finally makes it home.
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