
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
A Vampire a Day: Blood Thirst by Richard Matheson

A Vampire a Day: Vampire's Mail Order Bride by Kristen Painter

This book caught my eye because of the title. I am not a fan of the cartoony illustration style of chicklit/PNR covers, but I was intrigued enough by this one to read the product description. (I haven't read the book yet.)
The author has a series called NOCTURNE FALLS and the series seems to be very popular. This book has almost 400 reviews and a 4.6 rating. It is also currently #3 in the free kindle store. That's number three out of millions of books. (To give you an idea, Bride of the Midnight King is currently free and I'm THRILLED to have it ranking 974 in the free kindle store. Number three is amazing. Mad props to Kristen!) I look forward to reading this because it looks like a good time. I'll let you know...
Monday, January 18, 2016
A Vampire a Day: L.A. Banks' Vampire Huntress Legend series

You can find some African-American vampires on screen. (Essence Magazine put together a gallery of their favorites from Vonetta McGee to Eddie Murphy to Grace Jones.) But there are still not that many black blood-suckers stalking the pages of paranormal romance novels.
A handful of authors have multi-racial casts, but as often as not, they get tagged "urban," as if vampires, like actors who play James Bond, have to be white. (Seriously, for a while there the rumor was that Idris Elba was in the running to be the next James Bond and that would have brought a LOT of people back to the franchise, including me. Although I'd also like to bring Judi Dench back. Maybe as a vampire.)
Sunday, January 17, 2016
A Vampire a Day: Anno Dracula by Kim Newman

Newman’s novel is very ambitious. In addition to giving the Jack the Ripper
tale a new spin—and who doesn’t like Jack the Ripper stories?—the book turns
history on its ear, adding a potent element by adding a vampire police state storyline that results in anti-vampire riots and other
conflicts and clashes. Readers may be
reminded of the graphic novels of Alan Moore, which include both V FOR VENDETTA
and FROM HELL, also a Jack the Ripper tale.
There is also the relationship between Charles and Genevieve,
which has more nuance than the usual human/vampire interaction and is a lot
more grown-up. The characters here—and
there are a LOT of them—vary in stages of development but a lot of them are
really fine. It’s not necessary to know
that one character is real and another fictional in order to enjoy the
story. What we get is a feel for the
inhabited world, a Dickensian abundance of people (and vampires) who overflow
the pages and seem real.
Labels:
Anno Dracula,
Jack the Ripper,
Kim Newman,
Mina Harker,
Oscar Wilde,
Vampire novel
French words--Free
I'm always looking to improve my French vocabularly and was delighted to see that 1000 French Words in Context is FREE today on Amazon. Go snag it!
QA Vampire a Day: Christmas with the Vampire by Shay Roberts. FREE!!

Labels:
Christmas,
novelette,
Santa Claus,
Shay Roberts,
vampire
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