I recently found out (partly via amazon) that there is a whole bunch of books similar to Dresden Files. I mean that particular style of series with PIs and supernatural critters and so on. Supposedly a lot of overlap with romance stories lately.
I have read some reviews, talked with some people about it, and have come to the conclusion that I might limit my reading of this particular kind of UF to Dresden Files after all.
So as I have never read those other books (I am thinking about Patricia Briggs, Laurell Hamilton, Kim Harrison, Tanya Huff, Carrie Vaughn etc. here)
- are they - writing style wise - in any way comparable to Jim Butcher?
- are the perspectives and the narrative styles similar?
The narration style (1st person, a bit detective novel-y) shows up in plenty of other series. Many of them, however, are also filed under "paranormal romance", which means that Bob would love them, but I usually don't.
LKH wrote 3-4 nice supernatural mystery novels before the series started changing. I eventually stopped reading it after the lame porn completely overwhelmed the early police cases. I see a very strong similarity between those very early books and the Dresden Files.
I read Tanya Huff's Blood Ties series years and years ago and liked it a lot, but it belongs to an older style of urban fantasy, as do the Diana Tregarde series by Mercedes Lackey (which I also recommend, unlike much of her recent work, and it's only three books long). I have a hard time articulating the difference clearly, but you could probably divide these works into pre- and post-Buffy periods.
I also recommend Charlaine Harris' Sookie Stackhouse (Southern Vampire) Series. I've only read a couple, and they were definitely more in the romance direction than the Dresden Files, but they have more mystery and less porn than a lot of the crap infesting the genre.
Personally, I've given up looking for other series of this type because I can't relate to the female characters in any of them. This should be totally ridiculous given what a
guy perspective we get in the Dresden Files, but I find that Jim's writing makes it sound like he actually likes and respects women, while Laurell K. Hamilton's writing, even in book 1 of her series, made it sound like she hated all other women and wanted all the boys to pay attention to her. (What is this,
junior high?) Other books that I've skimmed at the bookstore (mostly from romance imprints) have the unmistakable ring of chicklit--not a style I like at all--or have prose that I can't stomach. Rant, rant, rant. (Though, for what it's worth, I haven't read the other authors you mention, so this is not an anti-recommendation of any of them.)