Showing posts with label vampire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vampire. Show all posts

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Dead Reckoning, by Charlaine Harris

Dead Reckoning, by Charlaine Harris.  Ace Books, 2011.  325 pp.  978-0-441-02031-7.

...in which Sookie witnesses a bombing, gets pulled into vampire politics, and acquires an interesting fairy artifact.



Dead Reckoning, the most recent installment in Charlaine Harris' enormously popular Sookie Stackhouse series, is an improvement on the last few books in the series, but doesn't quite measure up to the earlier books.  The book opens with Sookie working her shift at Merlotte's bar, which is firebombed by a mysterious individual.  Sookie suspects that someone supernatural is behind the attack.  Meanwhile, at home, Sookie is working on cleaning out the attic of her 150 year old house, with the help of her two fairy cousins/roommates.  While cleaning out an old desk, Sookie finds a mysterious object that was given to her grandmother by her grandfather.  As Sookie digs deeper into the mysteries surrounding her fairy ancestry, she also has to fend off attacks on her life and cope with her secretive, distracted boyfriend, Eric, who's being pulled into a nasty political affair amongst the vampires.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

A Discovery of Witches, by Deborah Harkness

A Discovery of Witches, by Deborah Harkness.  Viking Books, 2011.  579 pp.  978-0-670-02241-0.


... in which a witch and a vampire get caught up with an ancient magical manuscript and trigger a war.

A Discovery of Witches reads like a cross between Twilight, Neal Stephenson, and a history book.  The world is populated by humans, in addition to magical creatures, who comprise ~10% of the world's population.  These magical creatures are the vampires, ancient blood-drinkers with enhanced senses and physical abilities but no magic of their own; the daemons, born to humans but endowed with special intelligence, creativity and foresight; and finally, the witches, men and women with the power to use magic within themselves or to use witchcraft, in the form of spells and potions.  The main character, Diana Bishop, is descended from a long line of powerful witches; her oldest known ancestor was executed in Salem for witchcraft.  When she was seven years old, Diana's parents were murdered in Africa because of their magic.  Diana spends the next few decades swearing to never use her magic.  Now in her 30s, Diana is posing as a human and is at the peak of her highly successful career as a historian focusing on the history of science, particularly alchemy.  One day she is researching in Oxford's library, and she calls up an ancient alchemy manuscript from the stacks.  The text, labeled Ashmole 782, is under a powerful enchantment, and Diana can barely see the words hidden behind layers of enchantment.  Refusing to use her latent magic to unlock the secrets of the books, Diana sends the book back to the stacks.  What Diana doesn't know is that this particular manuscript has been under a powerful enchantment for centuries, and powerfully magical creatures have spent many years searching for it.  When it becomes known to the community of magical creatures that Diana had successfully called Ashmole 782 from the stacks, droves of witches, vampires and daemons descend upon Oxford.

Enter Matthew Clairmont, vampire.  Had Edward Cullen from Twilight been in his 30s when he was turned, rather than in his teens, he could very well have been Matthew.  Matthew also wants the manuscript, but as he gets to know Diana, he also begins to take an interest in her welfare, protecting her from the other magical creatures who would gleefully torture Diana for her scant knowledge of the manuscript.  Events begin to spin out of control, with Matthew eventually forced to take Diana to France when a fellow witch threatens Diana's life.  Intertwined in all of this is, of course, a love story.

I have a hard time forming a concrete opinion of this book.  On the one hand, Deborah Harkness, herself a Ph.D.-holding historian, is a skilled writer.  The prose is highly engaging and all of the conversations and backstory are easy to read.  Despite its length, I read about 3/4 of this book in a single sitting (one of those situations where you intend to read 20 pages and then go to sleep at a reasonable hour, and then you look up and it's 5 AM and you're over 400 pages in).  On the other hand, the book is a little irregular in its pacing and its characters.

The book can be divided into three distinct sections: Oxford, England; somewhere near Lyon, France; and Madison, New York.  In the first part, I enjoyed the discussion of Diana's work, and I liked the descriptions of the Oxford setting.  For the first part of the book, Diana herself is a strong, though sometimes naive, heroine with ambition, smarts and independence.  Perhaps it's just because he's a vampire, but Matthew is, of course, stunningly handsome, dazzlingly intelligent, stupidly rich, etc etc etc.  In terms of vampire fiction, the only thing I can say about Matthew is: I've already read this character in multiple other stories.  The most interesting thing about Matthew is his long history, and as a vampire, he's been around for a very long time and has seen some interesting events and has met some historically interesting people.  The first part of the book, set in Oxford, is pretty light on actual events and dense with conversations, detail and setup.  I enjoyed it a great deal.

When the book's setting shifts to France, we meet more of Matthew's family.  This is where the romance part of the story really starts to take prominence.  Most of the part in France bored me, because frankly there's nothing special about Diana and Matthew's romance, apart from the fact that it's forbidden for a witch and a vampire to be together.  Despite the fact that Matthew brought Diana to France to protect her from people who want to kill her, their time in France seems to be pretty jolly, full of horse rides and other silly things.  This is also the part of the book where the story turns into Twilight, where Matthew is most like Edward, and Diana is most like Bella.  It's a lot of Matthew being stupidly protective and a lot of Diana just going along with what he says and mooning over him.  In Matthew's defense, he was born in an era where knights went to war to protect their womenfolk, and when knights belonged to secret orders and brotherhoods devoted to protecting the weak.  Edward, having been born in the early 1900s, did not have this excuse.  Probably the most interesting part of the French section of the book is Matthew's vampire mother.  Incredibly ancient and incredibly French, Ysabeau is a very nuanced, conflicted character with a lot of events in her past making her the person she is today.  The evolution of her relationship with Diana and her relationship with her son are well done. 

The final part of the book takes place in Diana's home town of Madison, New York, where she was raised by her aunt Sarah and Sarah's partner Emily.  This is probably the most eventful section of the book.  Diana and Matthew are forced to leave France and go to New York to seek the protection of Diana's aunts, who can protect them from their fellow witches better than the vampires could.  This is also the part of the book where events and clues from earlier in the story begin to come together, and we begin to see that the developing conflict is about more than an old manuscript and a forbidden love.  Diana learns some secrets from her past, and also begins to come into her own, by developing her long-dormant powers and asserting herself as an equal to Matthew.  Diana's aunts are well-developed characters, each with her own dynamic and their own place in Diana's life.  Probably the most entertaining character in this part of the book is the house itself, which is sentient and willful and enjoys pushing its residents around to suit its own purposes.

The book ends on a cliffhanger, which is to be expected, as it's the first in a trilogy.  Despite its weak middle section and its hugely boring vampire, it's an engaging read.  It's probably not for people who need a ton of action and battles and such, but its rich details make up for the lack of action.  The witches of the book are a nice departure from Harry Potter, where the magical folk need only to wave a wand and say the right words for results.  The witches in this book use a much more individualized, organic approach, definitely a throwback to the pagan and Wiccan traditions of long ago.  I waver between a 3 star rating (I really did not care for Matthew and the romantic element of the story), and a 4 star rating.  I fell down on the 4 star side because I did enjoy reading it, and I intend to read its sequels.

4/5 stars

4/11/11: Note: rating changed to 3 stars.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Vampire Empire Book One: The Greyfriar by CLay Griffith and Susan Griffith

The Gryefriar is set in steampunk, vampire ridden earth. The planet previously had a vampire uprising, and vampires inhabited the colder regions of the world with human civilization clustered around the equator. The princess of a major human empire is taken by a vampire clan, and all kinds of factions are determined to get her and use for their own purposes.


The Greyfriar is marketed as a steampunk book. It's sort of hard to see why that's the case, as steampunk is a fairly minor element in the setting that has little impact on the plot or characters. There are things and people with old-timey sciency names, and characters wear goggles and travel by blimp. That's about the extent of the steampunk in it.



I feel fairly ambivalent about this book. It is pretty generic and nothing struck me as overly original. The little surprise that wasn't quite a twist was immediately predictable to me. But I really enjoyed reading it. Somehow, despite the vanilla plot and questionable writing, it drew me in and kept me very engaged. But I think what makes me like it most is that it surprised me at the end with a really touching event that made me cry my brains out after I finished the book.

I find the third person, universally omniscient perspective really distracting. I am used to books where the perspective changes from chapter to chapter (probably my preferred narrative style), but not sentence to sentence. I find it incredibly confusing and distracting when the author is describing multiple characters' thoughts and perceptions all mixed in together. It seems clumsy or somehow unrealistic. It just doesn't make sense to me and literally trips me up every time I encounter it. I realize it's a style choice, arguably as valid as any other perspective, but it really diminishes my enjoyment of books. Even first person or second person (it exists, it's weird) is less 'unnatural' to me!

I sort of hate to say this, but The Greyfriar would probably appeal to the twilight crowd. Spunky princess. Mysterious vampires in cool outfits. Unlikely love. Drama at a very teenage level... It definitely appealed to the lovelorn 13 year old in me, more than the cynical 25 year old!

Despite the horrible things I am saying, I really inexplicably enjoyed this book and would recommend it to fans of light fantasy who don't mind plots centering around spunky princesses and love stories. I definitely am not going to be recommending it the the steampunk enthusiasts I know, because that is a marketing gimmick for the series more than a legitimate plot element in my opinion! The second book in the series isn't out yet, but I will probably be reading it when it arrives.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Tempest Rising, by Nicole Peeler

Tempest Rising, by Nicole Peeler. Orbit, 2009. 368 pp. 978-0316056588.

... in which a half-human, half-selkie woman helps a vampire solve some grisly murders.

The plot of this book revolves around a young woman named Jane True. Jane lives in a tiny tourist town in coastal Maine, and because she is different than the other townspeople and has a troubled past, she is something of a social pariah. Her secret joy in life is to go swimming in the dead of night in the very turbulent, very cold ocean waters near her house. Over the course of the book, she discovers that her oddities are due to her mother actually being a selkie. If you've ever seen the movie The Secret of Roan Inish (a favorite of mine from childhood!), you'll recognize a little of the mythology here. She eventually discovers that there is an entire community of magical folk (vampires, gnomes, shape-shifters, etc) living side-by-side with humans. Eventually Jane gets caught up in an investigation into a series of murders, and teams up with a vampire to help him solve the crimes.

As far as urban fantasies go, this one is not especially unique (socially ostracized girl with mysterious past, handsome vampire, etc), but it's a fun (and fast!) read nonetheless. As far as vampire-craze books go, this one is more on the Sookie Stackhouse side, instead of the Twilight side. The characters aren't quite as clean as the characters in Twilight are, and the various mythological creatures have the potential to have more complicated histories than the creatures in Twilight.

The author is a professor of English and has an interest in ancient mythology, and that certainly comes through in the book. I enjoyed how the author made an effort to tie her characters in with ancient mythology, but to also add her own creative spin. I also liked that vampires didn't dominate the storyline, as I have long since grown tired of the Edward/Robert Pattinson craze sweeping the nation. Yes, the second most important character in the book is a vampire, but the main character is half-selkie, a somewhat lesser-known creature.

The plot of this book moved along fairly quickly, and it was very straightforward. It was an extremely predictable novel, but that is a common failing for the majority of books in this genre. The predictability of the book didn't interfere with my enjoyment of it, though, because the prose was well-written.

My major complaint with the book would be the characterization of some of the key players in the story. The main character, Jane, spends a little too much time agonizing over a traumatic event in her past (an event that is not fully explained until about 2/3 of the way through the book). The author beats us over the head with the fact that Jane is hated in town, but it seems like she has at least four or five allies in the town's tiny population. The vampire Ryu is a pretty thin character, so in the future I hope that Peeler plans on expanding on him a little bit more. The character that I found the most compelling was also one who remained in the background for the majority of the novel. The character, a talking dog who occasionally turns into a human, seems to have known Jane longer than the others, and he has been with her through her darkest moments, yet he gets little-to-no development in the characterization department. Again, I hope that this is because the author intends for him to be a major player in the future, and perhaps she is keeping his backstory in reserve.

In the end, I would recommend this book as a beach read, if you're looking for something that can be read on vacation or in a single sitting (it took me only a few hours to read). If you're looking for something long, intricate, or with a good twist, you might look elsewhere.
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