Hubbry Logo
Turn CoatTurn CoatMain
Open search
Turn Coat
Community hub
Turn Coat
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Turn Coat
Turn Coat
from Wikipedia

Turn Coat is the 11th book in The Dresden Files, Jim Butcher's continuing series about wizard detective Harry Dresden. It debuted at number one on the New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover fiction.[1]

Key Information

Plot summary

[edit]

Nearly a year and a half after the events in Small Favor, a wounded Warden Morgan shows up at Dresden's apartment, asking for protection from the other Wardens. Morgan claims that he was drugged and framed for the murder of Senior Council member LaFortier. While obtaining medical supplies, Dresden spots a naagloshii, a shape-shifting creature from Native American lore. Over the course of investigating Morgan's apparent crime, he legally entangles his apprentice Molly, as well as Anastasia Luccio, after they stumble over Morgan in Dresden's home. Dresden also confronts Madeline Raith of the White Court, whom Dresden comes to suspect is behind framing Morgan, and Binder, a practitioner who works as a mercenary by summoning beings from the Nevernever to serve him.

Dresden invites Luccio to accompany him on a visit to Lara Raith and accuses her of complicity, but is interrupted by the naagloshii who ransoms Thomas Raith for Morgan. Realizing he needs far more strength to combat the naagloshii, Dresden performs a Sanctum Invocation and bonds with the spirit of Demonreach, the island in the finale of Small Favor. Aware that he cannot fight both the naagloshii and Morgan's betrayer alone, Dresden calls the Council, House Raith, and the naagloshii, convincing each that Morgan is on the island or that the island is where they will meet to discuss further strategy. Dresden persuades Binder to quit the fight and is saved from the naagloshii by Listens-to-Wind, while Lara kills and devours Madeline in order to recover from injuries sustained in a grenade explosion. Thomas is rescued but is insane with hunger, and is collected by Lara. Morgan surrenders after the true murderer manages to slip away.

During Morgan's trial in Edinburgh, Dresden produces incontrovertible evidence that Samuel Peabody, a high-ranking clerk within the White Council, has orchestrated LaFortier's murder and has been psychically influencing the Council members through the use of magically adulterated ink. Peabody escapes, slaughtering a large portion of the Council, and opens a Way into the Nevernever. Dresden chases Peabody down, but is overpowered. Morgan kills Peabody and admits to Dresden that it was Luccio who actually killed LaFortier, under the influence of Peabody, and Morgan acted to protect her. He dies of blood loss from the wound he sustained in fleeing from the Wardens, hinting with his last words that he was wrong about Dresden's character.

In the aftermath, Gregori Cristos, suspected by Dresden of being on the Black Council, fills LaFortier's Senior Council seat. During a respite, Luccio approaches Dresden and confirms that her romantic feelings for him were most likely manufactured by Peabody's subtle influences (as Rashid the Gatekeeper had suggested to Dresden while he was recovering in the Council Infirmary), and formally ends the relationship. Dresden learns that Ebenezar is slowly and quietly gathering support from those who secretly believe that a Black Council exists, and that it must be opposed. Dresden labels the new group Ebenezar is forming as the "Grey Council." He stops in to join Will Borden and his friends in one of their role-playing game sessions, introducing Waldo Butters to bring the group back up to full size following the death of one member in the naagloshii attack.

Introduced characters

[edit]
  • Skinwalker: a Naagloshii, a Native American spirit of immense power and ability to change form. This creature has survived a millennium and is semi-divine in nature. It eats magical creatures, including wizards, to increase its own power.
  • Vincent Graver: a private detective and former vice officer from Joliet, who resigned after being assigned to the SIU as punishment for trying to prosecute a Chicago city council member. Dresden is impressed with his integrity, and subcontracts detective work to him. By the end of the book, Graver and Molly have a date, and Graver and Mouse together bring in conclusive evidence implicating Samuel Peabody as the traitor within the White Council.
  • Binder: Ernest Armand Tinwhistle, a Cockney mercenary who specializes in summoning a large number of creatures from the Nevernever.
  • Demonreach: the ancient spirit, genius loci, of the uncharted island in Lake Michigan. Dresden bonded with the spirit during the Sanctum Invocation. Whenever Dresden is physically present on the island, he shares the Demonreach's supernatural knowledge of the island. Demonreach appears as a 12-foot-tall (3.7 m) cloaked and robed figure with no visible features but glowing green eyes. It has a limp from "the glacier that carved out Lake Michigan"[2] The island holds an unknown grudge against the Gatekeeper resulting in the Gatekeeper's unwillingness to step onto the island.
  • Madeline Raith: a White Court vampire and cousin of Thomas and Lara. She betrayed the White Court to the Black Council in much the same way as Vitto Malvora did in White Night. Working with Lara's business manager, she creates a money trail from Morgan to one of Lara's holding companies, in order to implicate the White Court in LaFortier's death. She hires Binder to find Morgan before anyone else does, so that Morgan can be blamed for her future activities. Lara ultimately kills both Madeline and the business manager and sends their heads to the White Council.

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Turn Coat is the eleventh novel in the series by American author , first published in hardcover by Roc Books on April 7, 2009. The story centers on Harry Dresden, Chicago's only professional wizard, who becomes entangled in a high-stakes conspiracy when his longtime adversary, Warden Donald Morgan of the White Council of Wizards, arrives wounded and accused of treason—a punishable by execution. Dresden reluctantly agrees to shelter Morgan and investigate the charges, uncovering deeper threats to the wizarding community amid tensions with supernatural factions like the vampires of the Red Court. Set nearly a year and a half after the events of the previous novel, , Turn Coat explores themes of betrayal, loyalty, and the internal politics of the , while advancing Dresden's personal arcs, including his relationships with allies like Lieutenant John Stallings of the and the spirit Lasciel. The narrative blends hard-boiled detective elements with fast-paced action, magic, and humor, characteristic of the series, as Dresden navigates a manhunt and races to expose a traitor before the Council's judgment falls. Upon release, Turn Coat debuted at number one on The New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover fiction, marking another commercial success for the series. Critics praised its energetic action sequences and character development, with Publishers Weekly noting the "top-notch" writing and added depth to Dresden's personal life, though some observed the plot's reliance on familiar tropes. The novel has been lauded for escalating the series' stakes while maintaining its blend of mystery and fantasy, solidifying Butcher's reputation in urban fantasy.

Background

Development and writing

Jim Butcher's writing process for The Dresden Files series begins with formulating a core story question to anchor the narrative, such as identifying the central conflict or traitor in the case of Turn Coat. He defines key elements including the protagonist's defining tags and traits, the antagonist's motivations and goals, and then outlines scenes on index cards, arranging them into a visual to map the plot's progression and ensure escalating tension. This method allows Butcher to balance action, character development, and elements while maintaining the series' overarching 20-book arc. For Turn Coat specifically, Butcher emphasized escalating political intrigue within the White Council following the events of Small Favor, positioning it as a pivotal expansion of the series' institutional conflicts. This storyline, including the introduction of the naagloshii—a skinwalker rooted in Navajo mythology—as a formidable new supernatural adversary, was broadly planned in advance to advance Harry's evolving role, though finer details like character actions and resolutions were improvised during drafting. The naagloshii draws directly from traditional Navajo lore depicting shape-shifting witches empowered by fear and taboo-breaking rituals. Butcher completed the Turn Coat manuscript ahead of its April 2009 publication, incorporating feedback from beta readers to sharpen action sequences and plot twists. He calibrated revisions based on their reactions, aiming to evoke excitement—"nudging it up over the 'Ooooooo!' threshold"—without causing frustration from excessive complexity or unresolved threads. The novel's framing narrative channels classic detective noir influences, blending hard-boiled mystery tropes with —a foundational approach Butcher credits to combining wizard archetypes like with private investigators such as .

Context within the series

Turn Coat serves as the eleventh installment in Jim Butcher's urban fantasy series, following (2008) and preceding Changes (2010). As the series progresses beyond its initial case-file structure, this novel marks a notable shift by delving deeper into the internal politics and power struggles of the White Council of Wizards, heightening the personal stakes for protagonist Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden while maintaining the blend of mystery, action, and supernatural lore established in prior volumes. Readers benefit from familiarity with key prerequisite events from earlier books, such as the necromantic confrontation involving a dinosaur in Dead Beat (2005), which underscored Harry's contentious history with the White Council, and the events of Proven Guilty (2006), where assumes the apprenticeship of Molly Carpenter, complicating his standing within wizarding hierarchies and emphasizing his evolving role as a mentor. Additionally, the "," published in the anthology Side Jobs (2011) but set chronologically between and Turn Coat, offers bridging insights into related character developments from an alternate perspective. The narrative advances the series' broader evolution by incorporating and expanding upon mythological elements introduced in previous entries, such as the intricate faerie politics originating in (2002), thereby integrating them into the escalating conflicts among supernatural factions. By the time of Turn Coat, the series encompasses ten prior novels alongside supplementary short fiction, positioning this book as a critical escalation in tension that foreshadows Butcher's outlined "big apocalyptic trilogy" commencing with Changes.

Publication history

Initial release

Turn Coat was first published in hardcover on April 7, 2009, by Roc Books, an imprint of the (USA). The edition spans 432 pages and is identified by 978-0-451-46256-4. Its cover art, illustrated by Chris McGrath, portrays protagonist Harry Dresden amid a snowy, mystical . As the eleventh novel in Jim Butcher's ongoing Dresden Files series, the release followed the momentum of the prior entry, , and was promoted through author appearances including a midnight launch event and signings in on April 6, 2009, along with a broader tour.

Formats and editions

The edition of Turn Coat was released simultaneously with the hardcover on April 7, 2009, narrated by and running 14 hours and 36 minutes. The compact disc version carries ISBN 978-0-14-314472-3. A mass market paperback edition followed in 2010, published by Roc with 978-0-451-46281-7 and 576 pages. The UK edition appeared in 2009 through , with 978-1-84149-697-9 for the . Translations include the German edition titled Verrat, published in 2012, and the Spanish edition titled Renegado, released in 2017 by Nosolorol with 978-84-16780-53-2. Digital formats became available as an eBook in 2009 via Penguin Random House, and later through platforms including Amazon Kindle. As of 2025, no graphic novel or film adaptation of Turn Coat has been produced. Special editions include signed copies available at author conventions and a limited collector's hardcover from Subterranean Press in 2018, comprising 500 numbered and signed copies along with 26 lettered and signed copies illustrated by Vincent Chong.

Narrative elements

Plot summary

Turn Coat follows Harry Dresden, Chicago's only professional wizard, as he becomes embroiled in a crisis within the White Council of Wizards when the Warden Donald Morgan arrives at his home, gravely wounded and accused of and . Morgan, a longtime adversary of Dresden, seeks his aid to prove his innocence, forcing Dresden to shelter him while investigating a conspiracy that hints at a traitor among the Council's senior members and involves supernatural espionage led by a . The investigation propels Dresden across multiple locations, including the streets of , the headquarters of the White Council in , , and a remote, mysterious island in , where he navigates dangerous encounters and forms uneasy alliances with vampires from the White Court, faerie representatives, and a team of supernatural mercenaries to evade pursuers and uncover evidence. These plot beats unfold through a series of escalating conflicts that test Dresden's resourcefulness and force him to confront threats from both familiar foes and unexpected betrayals within the magical community. Narrated in the first-person perspective from 's viewpoint, the novel blends procedural mystery elements with high-stakes action, structured across 49 chapters that divide into implicit acts building suspense around questions of trust and loyalty. The story resolves the central conspiracy through a high-tension trial before the White Council, eliminating immediate dangers to Morgan and while deepening the ongoing series arcs, particularly Harry's expanding responsibilities and influence within the wizarding hierarchy.

Characters

Harry Dresden, the series' protagonist and a wizard working as a in , sees his mentorship of his apprentice Molly Carpenter deepen in this installment, as he guides her through increasingly complex magical challenges while balancing his duties to the White Council. Dresden often acts as a reluctant mediator amid escalating tensions between the White Court vampires and the White Council wizards, navigating alliances fraught with suspicion and betrayal. Warden Donald Morgan, previously a stern antagonist to Dresden due to past conflicts, undergoes a significant redemption arc, transitioning from foe to uneasy ally as circumstances force collaboration against greater threats. Anastasia Luccio, as the commander of the Wardens, asserts her leadership role within the White Council, directing investigations and enforcement with a focus on maintaining order amid internal divisions. Among characters introduced in the novel, the Naagloshii, also known as a , emerges as a formidable —a vengeful spirit rooted in Native American lore, possessing potent shape-shifting abilities and mastery of illusions to manipulate perceptions and sow chaos. Vincent Graver appears as a gritty with a background in , providing practical support to through and fieldwork despite his non-magical perspective. Binder, a seasoned wizard, employs unique summoning to call forth gray-suited imps as disposable combatants, highlighting his pragmatic and ruthless approach to contracts. Demonreach is revealed as the sentient spirit embodying Demonreach Island, a mystical nexus of ley lines that serves as both guardian and potential prison for otherworldly entities, interacting with Dresden in a cryptic, symbiotic manner. Madeline Raith, a member of the White Court vampires, operates with cunning subtlety, pursuing hidden agendas that intertwine personal ambition with broader politics. Returning supporting characters include Karrin Murphy, Dresden's ally in the , whose brief appearance underscores the strains in their professional and personal relationship amid ongoing supernatural intrusions. Similarly, Thomas Raith, Dresden's half-brother and a White Court , makes a short cameo that highlights familial tensions and his own precarious position within vampire hierarchies.

Themes

Betrayal and loyalty

In Turn Coat, the theme of institutional manifests through the White Council's internal conspiracy, where a high-ranking traitor frames Morgan for the murder of a senior council member, aiming to destabilize the organization from within. This underscores the fragility of trust in hierarchical magical authorities, as the Council's rigid enforcement of nearly leads to Morgan's immediate execution based on . The narrative draws parallels to thrillers by emphasizing how internal threats erode institutional integrity more insidiously than external enemies. On a personal level, loyalty is explored through Harry Dresden's reluctant alliance with Morgan, his longtime antagonist and former parole officer, whom he chooses to shelter and defend despite the personal risks of charges. Dresden's actions highlight the redemptive potential of trust in a world rife with politics, where aiding a perceived enemy could result in his own death or exile from the Council. This decision forces Dresden to navigate divided allegiances, balancing his obligations to the White Council against his moral imperative to uncover the truth. The novel further illustrates betrayal and loyalty through broader intrigues, such as manipulations within the vampire courts and fragile alliances with faerie entities, where characters face dire consequences like execution or banishment for perceived disloyalty. These elements amplify the costs of trust violations, showing how personal bonds can fracture under institutional pressure and political maneuvering in the universe. By centering these themes, Turn Coat escalates the series' exploration of internal conflicts, contrasting with prior volumes focused on external threats.

Identity and family

In Turn Coat, the theme of identity is prominently explored through the characters' internal conflicts with their dual natures, particularly evident in White Court vampires who balance human empathy against their predatory instincts. Thomas Raith, Harry's half-brother and a White Court vampire of House Raith, exemplifies this struggle as he faces starvation and torture by the skinwalker Shagnasty, forcing him to revert to his base, monstrous tendencies to survive. This ordeal underscores the tension between inherited heritage and personal agency, as Thomas nearly succumbs to his hunger by targeting Harry's apprentice Molly during a rescue attempt. Harry Dresden's own wizard heritage, stemming from his mother LeFay's lineage as established in earlier series entries, profoundly influences his choices, reinforcing his role as a protector despite the isolation it brings. This supernatural background amplifies his sense of otherness within both human and magical societies, shaping his identity as a reluctant guardian of the vulnerable. Meanwhile, the novel contrasts biological familial ties in politics—such as the power dynamics within House Raith—with Harry's evolving understanding of kinship beyond blood. Central to the exploration of is the concept of "found family," illustrated by Harry's surrogate bonds with Molly Carpenter, his young apprentice, and , his intelligent temple dog companion, who provide emotional anchors amid the White Council's betrayals and external threats. These relationships highlight themes of chosen loyalty and mutual support, offering Harry stability in contrast to the cutthroat alliances of supernatural politics. The narrative portrays pain and hardship—such as Thomas's physical torment and Harry's moral dilemmas—as pivotal in forging identity, enabling characters to move forward from past traumas through resilience and interpersonal connections.

Reception

Critical response

Turn Coat received widespread acclaim from professional reviewers for its intricate conspiracy plot and the distinctive voice of protagonist Harry Dresden. highlighted the novel's fast-paced action in sustaining taut suspense throughout the search for a traitor within the White Council. The review praised Butcher's ability to balance high-stakes intrigue with Dresden's sardonic noir narration, making it accessible to both longtime fans and newcomers. Critics also commended the deeper exploration of the series' supernatural world-building, particularly the introduction of ancient entities like the , which added layers to the magical hierarchy and setting. The SF Site described the narrative as delivering "non-stop action from the opening sentence to the end," emphasizing the compelling investigative arc and integration of allies such as werewolves and vampires. However, some reviews noted a relatively slower pace compared to the more action-heavy predecessors, attributing it to the focus on political conspiracy over constant battles, though this shift was often seen as strengthening the character dynamics. The audiobook edition, narrated by James Marsters, was particularly lauded for enhancing the humor and tension through his expressive portrayal of Dresden's voice and the ensemble cast. The SF Site review of the audio version underscored Marsters' skill in capturing the wit and emotional depth, making the 15-hour production a standout format. On Goodreads, Turn Coat holds an average rating of 4.44 out of 5 from over 111,000 user reviews as of 2025, reflecting strong reader appreciation for its blend of mystery and fantasy elements. The novel earned a spot on the 2010 RUSA Reading List for Fantasy, recognizing its appeal in the genre.

Commercial performance

Turn Coat achieved significant commercial success upon its release, debuting at number one on the New York Times Best Seller list for on April 26, 2009. The novel maintained a strong presence on the list for three consecutive weeks, reaching number two the following week and number ten on May 10, 2009. This performance underscored its immediate appeal within the genre during a period of heightened popularity for the category in the late 2000s. Fan reception has been overwhelmingly positive, with the book earning an average rating of 4.44 out of 5 on from over 111,000 ratings as of 2025. Readers frequently highlight the development of key characters and the series' engaging blend of mystery and elements as standout features. The book's success contributed to the broader trajectory of series, which has sold 14 million copies in the United States over 25 years as of 2025. Additionally, the edition, narrated by , has bolstered the series' enduring popularity through his dynamic and immersive performance, which many listeners credit with enhancing the narrative's accessibility and appeal. Released amid the boom, Turn Coat capitalized on market momentum similar to that of Charlaine Harris's series, achieving comparable bestseller rankings during its launch window.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.