Nicole Reads A Lot

so many books, so little time

A Blood Seduction by Pamela Palmer

Title:A Blood Seduction
Author:Pamela Palmer
Publication Date:May 29, 2012
Publisher's DescriptionVampires live only for lust and pleasure in the eternal twilight of Vamp City. But the city’s magic is dying. The only person who can restore it? A beautiful woman from the mortal world...one who knows nothing of the power she wields.

Quinn Lennox is searching for a missing friend when she stumbles into a dark otherworld that only she can see—and finds herself at the mercy of Arturo Mazza, a dangerously handsome vampire whose wicked kiss will save her, enslave her, bewitch her, and betray her.

What Arturo can’t do is forget about her—any more than Quinn can control her own feelings for him. Neither one can let desire get in the way of their mission—his to save his people, hers to save herself.

But there is no escape from desire in a city built for seduction, where passion flows hot and blood-red. Welcome to Vamp City...
My rating:**

I chose to review this book because it seemed like something that I would really like. A lot of the action takes place in a world parallel to our own, and I’m always interested to see how authors handle a world that is at once familiar and new. In Ms. Palmer’s case, I would say, not well. I was horrified by so much that happened in this book. Vampires as a story element are certainly au courant, but the gender and power dynamics of this novel could easily have come from any less progressive bodice ripper of the 70s or 80s. “What the…” was a common refrain as I read this.

First of all, Quinn was ENSLAVED and end up feeling all gooey and warm toward her captor. Almost immediately! The phenomenon of Stockholm Syndrome was named after a course of events that unfolded over six days. Quinn was already making an ass of herself over Arturo on day one. Second, and maybe I’m just sensitive about this, I really hate how acts of mental and even physical cruelty toward women in this book are seen as negligible, because at least they’re not sexual violence (although there was plenty of that to go around, as well). Really???

I understand what an anti-hero is, but I think that Arturo’s really just a jerk. The source of his conflict was inane, and Kassius served as an embodiment of why Arturo’s supposed unshakeable loyalty was even dumber than it initially appeared to be. Then again, maybe Arturo is perfect for Quinn, because she’s an idiot. She’s supposed to be intelligent enough to be a scientist, but seems pretty slow on the uptake. She gives her trust too easily, to a person she should not, who (rather sportingly) warns her against doing so, then betrays her; to get an idea of the rest of the book, lather, rinse, and repeat. Even after he proves himself untrustworthy and admits to lying when it is expedient to do so, she still continues to take Arturo at his word! What does it take to get her to wake up and realize that the only person she can depend on is herself (answer: I don’t know, she does’t reach this conclusion by the somewhat hilarious end of this book). Furthermore, Quinn observes the speed and strength of vampires relative to that of humans, and still manages to completely underestimate them. What does it take to get through to this woman?

I didn’t feel at all invested in Quinn’s emotional connection to Arturo, which I was really glad for as I reached the end of this book. Maybe I’m just not in the target demographic for this book, because I didn’t get or enjoy it at all.

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Nightshade by Andrea Cremer

Title:Nightshade
Author:Andrea Cremer
Publication Date:June 2011
Publisher's DescriptionCalla Tor has always known her destiny: After graduating from the Mountain School, she’ll be the mate of sexy alpha wolf Ren Laroche and fight with him, side by side, ruling their pack and guarding sacred sites for the Keepers. But when she violates her masters’ laws by saving a beautiful human boy out for a hike, Calla begins to question her fate, her existence, and the very essence of the world she has known. By following her heart, she might lose everything - including her own life. Is forbidden love worth the ultimate sacrifice?
My rating:****

Warning, this review is mildly spoileriffic.

This book was certainly an interesting take on werewolves and witches. I wasn’t too sure about this world when I first started reading, but it quickly grew on me. My hesitation was due to the fact that I may have werewolf fatigue (I just finished a review copy of Raven Calls, that review will come out closer to the book’s publication date), and also because the publisher’s description sounds far more insipid than I found this book to be.

There were things about this book that didn’t thrill me. I thought that the Keepers’ rules regarding the purity of female alphas was just to the left of the Taliban’s, and this more than anything helped me get on Team Anybody Else. I’m already against any culture that slut-shames a girl for a kiss but feels that it’s perfectly okay for a boy to sleep his way around the high school. Hey, Keepers, the 50s called, and they want their gender roles back. I also didn’t get why the kids at the school were so afraid of the Guardians. I believe that the explanation provided about how this world works is that the humans did not know what was different about the Guardian kids. Why, then, were they afraid of them? Why were the teachers? What did everybody else think it was that set these people apart? I may reread the early pages of this book and see if I overlooked something.

On a more positive note, I felt that some of the choices the characters in this book made washed away some of the Twilight sludge that has stubbornly stuck to my brain jelly for the last several years. Things that in that series would have necessitated 1) an interspecies altercation or 2) a marriage licence happened here in a nicely understated way. I appreciated how Ms. Cremer gave her characters layers, and even the personalities of the less prominent pack members shone through. My only regret is that my public library’s ebook site is down right now, because I really need to check out the second book in this series!

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Shady Lady by Ann Aguire

Title:Shady Lady
Author:Ann Aguirre
Publication Date:February 2011
Publisher's Description"I’d spent my whole life settling, trying not to attract attention, and generally doing whatever it took to keep other people happy. I didn’t want to do that again. Not when I was finally comfortable in my own skin. Sure, there were certain challenges, like a drug lord who wanted me dead, and the fact that I owed a demon a debt that he could call due at any moment. But everybody’s got problems, right?"

Whenever Corine Solomon touches an object, she immediately knows its history. But her own future concerns her more and more. Now back in Mexico, she’s running her pawnshop and trying to get a handle on her strange new powers, for she might need them. And soon.

Then former ally Kel Ferguson walks through her door. Heavily muscled and tattooed, Kel looks like a convict but calls himself a holy warrior. This time, he carries a warning for Corine: the Montoya cartel is coming for her—but they don’t just pack automatic weapons. The Montoyas use warlocks, shamans, voodoo priests—anything to terminate trouble. And Corine has become enemy number one…
My rating:****.5

I went back and read Blue Diablo and Hell Fire before I read this book, and I’m glad I did. I hadn’t visited this world for over a year, and there were lots of little details that I had forgotten. Reading the books in a series back to back will either cause you to fall more in love with it, or expose flaws that followed from book to book and make you like the series a lot less (hello, Weather Warden books). Thankfully, this book falls into the former category.

Corine Solomon is a fascinating character…and so is Kel. Ms. Aguire did an excellent job of showing how Corine and Kel’s relationship changes over the course of their time together. Halfway through this book, I nearly forgot how creepy he must have seemed to every rational person in this universe (no offense to poor Shannon, but it’s not like teenagers are known for their rationality).

The number of powerful, complex men in Corine’s life just keeps increasing. The mutation of the Chance and Jesse situation has been fascinating to read, and then the ending of this book went and threw two new curveballs at us. I love it!

I am really looking forward to reading the next book in this series and the further adventures of Corine and co.

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Rebirth by Sophie Littlefield

Title:Rebirth
Author:Sophie Littlefield
Publication Date:July 2011
Publisher's DescriptionCivilization has fallen, leaving California an unforgiving, decimated place. But Cass Dollar beat terrible odds to get her missing daughter back—she and Ruthie will be happy.

Yet with the first winter, Cass is reminded that happiness is fleeting in Aftertime. Ruthie retreats into silence. Flesh-eating Beaters still dominate the landscape. And Smoke, Cass's lover and strength, departs on a quest for vengeance, one that may end him even if he returns.

The survivalist community Cass has planted roots in is breaking apart, too. Its leader, Dor, implores Cass to help him recover his own lost daughter, taken by the totalitarian Rebuilders. And soon Cass finds herself thrust into the dark heart of an organization promising humanity's rebirth—at all costs.

Bound to two men blazing divergent paths across a savage land, Cass must overcome the darkness in her wounded heart, or lose those she loves forever.
My rating:****

I liked this book, but it felt like

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Aftertime by Sophie Littlefield

Title:Aftertime
Author:Sophie Littlefield
Publication Date:February 2011
Publisher's DescriptionTHE WORLD'S GONE.
WORSE, SO IS HER DAUGHTER.

Awakening in a bleak landscape as scarred as her body, Cass Dollar vaguely recalls surviving something terrible. Wearing unfamiliar clothes and having no idea how many days—or weeks—have passed, she slowly realizes the horrifying truth: Ruthie has vanished.

And with her, nearly all of civilization. Where once-lush hills carried cars and commerce, the roads today see only cannibalistic Beaters—people turned hungry for human flesh by a government experiment gone wrong.

In a broken, barren California, Cass will undergo a harrowing quest to get her Ruthie back. Few people trust an outsider, let alone a woman who became a zombie and somehow turned back, but she finds help from an enigmatic outlaw, Smoke. Smoke is her savior, and her safety. For the Beaters are out there. And the humans grip at survival with their trigger fingers. Especially when they learn that she and Ruthie have become the most feared, and desired, of weapons in a brave new world....
My rating:****.5

Yet another zombie book, but not a typical one. This book, maybe more than the other zombie books I’ve read lately (Allison Hewitt is Trapped, and Mira Grant’s Deadline books), focused on what happened to/in the world after the zombies came (which is one of the rebirths to which the title refers). In this world, the zombification of people came as a direct result of biological warfare, waged against the United States by an unspecified enemy that lost a ground war to the US. Zombies are the the WHY of what took place this novel, not the what itself. This novel was about what happened when California begins to remake itself after a zombie outbreak.

The main character, Cass, was a recovering drug addict who was attacked by zombies, briefly became a zombie herself, and then spontaneously recovered. This made sense in the context of the novel, and also served to give us something that is missing from a lot of other zombie books: hope for those who remain. Even though the book made it clear that “outliers” were not even close to common (one figure offered was at 1 in 1,000, but there’s no way to know if this estimate was supposed to be correct), this glimmer of light in an otherwise dark world worked to give the characters in this story something to believe in. If some people were able to be cured, why not everybody?

Cass wasn’t interested in her outlier status, except for what it could bring her: hope of being reunited with Ruthie, her young daughter, who she lost when she was briefly a zombie (or beater, in the parlance of this world). Cass met up with Smoke, a man who, for his own reasons, was willing to assist her, and headed toward the religious colony where her daughter had been sent.

The Convent was full of some seriously mess-up people, but it’s tough to believe that our world wouldn’t split into similar or crazier factions in the face of such circumstances. The small world feeling of this novel made sense in the context of a society where large numbers of people had recently died, and the sense of urgency of the novel made it hard to put down.

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