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Narcissus
In Chains by Laurel K. Hamilton Pub: Orbit/Time
Warner. 533 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99(UK). ISBN: 1-84149-134-9.
Check out website: www.orbitbooks.co.uk
This
is book 10 in the 'Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter' series. Yes, book
10! Long series and this is the first one that I've read but not
the first time for reading this author.
Last year I reviewed a compilation of short vampire stories written
by women and Hamilton was one of the authors in the book, if memory
serves me right then I chose her story as one of the good stories
(actually Geoff had to remind me of this!), so the question arose,
'would I be able to jump in and understand what was happening with
the heroine, Anita Blake?' The answer: sort of.
From
the front cover I thought this would be about someone going around
and killing vampires (a'la Buffy). Well it isn't and it is definitely
not like Buffy (well there are similarities).
Anita Blake is a registered vampire hunter/executioner of
all the various 'monsters' in her world and works as a consultant to the police
who have a 'Spook Squad'. However, the vampires have rights under US Laws and
Were-creatures (-wolves, leopards, snakes, bears, swans and so on) also live along
side the human population. Hope you're following this! From
the first couple of pages of 'Narcissus in Chains', I gathered that Anita had
a personal dilemma - which boyfriend should she dump. The choice was between Jean-Claude-
vampire and Master of the City of St Louis or Richard - science teacher and Alpha
male werewolf and Ulfric of the City of St Louis.
No ordinary boy-next-door types for Anita. Her best friend Ronnie
(a Private Investigator) wants her to dump Jean-Claude because she
doesn't like dead people and that's what a vampire is!
Thing is Anita is in lust/love with them both. From this genteel
beginning the reader is plunged into another world (and some of
you might not want to go there). It is the world of Submission and
Domination and the story moves to the club in the title of the book.
She goes there to rescue two of the
were-leopards because she is their protector, having killed their leader (in a
previous book, I think). Well, she has to dress up in clothes suitable for this
type of club (use your imagination or read the book, the author is quite descriptive).
While at the club with Jean-Claude, her other boyfriend Richard (turns up at Jean-Claude's
invitation). The three of them become the main floor show for the night,
something to do with 'mark of the vampire and were-wolf' and psychic connections.
Anyway she rescues her were-leopards and the 'baddies' are introduced. The
storyline from here on is one of rescue, kidnapping of the were-creature leaders
and sex. To be honest, the sex part seems to take-over the story. Does she kill
any vampires? No, she doesn't but she does resurrect one that has been in a coffin
chained with a cross on it (some sort of punishment Jean-Claude dished out). She
tries to help Richard whose pack has been infiltrated by the bad guys and she
falls in love. And all the time she is fighting her own personal battle (with
more than a little help from Jean-Claude) with the 'ardour', if I tell you what
it is it might spoil the story, but here's a hint: sex. So, to my opinion
of this book, not any of the other previous nine just this one. If I walked into
a bookshop and picked up this book, read the front and back cover, I would believe
I was buying a book about a vampire hunter. But what I have bought would be adult
literature in the guise of a vampire book. Sex in a story has its place. I have
no objection to that, however here the story seems to take second place to the
sex. What worries me is that a 13 or 14-year-old could pick this off
the shelf see the words 'vampire hunter' on the front cover and think 'this is
like Buffy' and their parents would be none the wiser. It is a book that should
have a warning about its adult content. Some reading this may think that
I am a 'prude', I am not. I work in a bookshop with a large adult section of books,
magazines and videos. I have read Black Lace adult fiction that is tamer than
this book! Just to make sure it wasn't me making more out of this than necessary,I
lent the book to a regular customer who reads vampire stories. He was taken
back by the content (I can't quote him as it is not printable!). So Ms Hamilton
and Orbit, in my opinion, put a warning of some kind on the cover about the sexual
content of the book. I wouldn't want any children buying it. Would
I buy another in this series? Not after reading this one, when I buy a book about
vampires etc. I expect to read about vampires and not sex. If the content had
been 75% vampire story and 25% sex, then it would have been a good read but the
percentages were reversed and I only finished reading it for this review.
Stella Pang
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