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Buffy the Vampire Slayer (which I haven't yet watched but the title feels perfectly appropriate for this book) meets Dark Lover. Fast-paced, lacks in plot complexity and spectacularity.
A bit of Anita Blake and a lot of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The romance was a bit too insta-love, but the action and lore decent enough.
Can’t stand Bones’ way of talking though. Way over the top British. Also, he couldn’t have been more of a Spike from Buffy, but fair enough, I loved Spike too.
Can’t stand Bones’ way of talking though. Way over the top British. Also, he couldn’t have been more of a Spike from Buffy, but fair enough, I loved Spike too.
When I was told this book was reminiscent of Buffy, I was all in. The book itself is not terrible, however - I was not in the mood to read about rape and sexual assault and did not realize that it seems to be such a large theme in the book. I’m not sure if I would pick this back up again due to my reading preferences.
adventurous
dark
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
A little slow at first but it speeds up. I like the character building for Cat and of course I'm a sucker for a paranormal romance
If I could give it 10 stars I would!
This book (dramatized adaptation) is 100% up my alley!
So sassy, witty banter and lots of action. And great side
characters.
This book (dramatized adaptation) is 100% up my alley!
So sassy, witty banter and lots of action. And great side
characters.
funny
mysterious
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Complicated
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
Saying I'm disappointed in this book would be an understatement. I have close to two thousand books on my Kindle, many of them free, but I shelled money out for this one because so many people rave about it. I'm totally boggled. Why?
I love vampire based PNR, but this book had so many of the genre's tropes that I hate all in one place. The emotionally unstable, angry heroine who is also painfully virginal and unaware of her own sexuality. "I didn't like it before. I think something is wrong with me." Really? Despite how the whole thing worked out it never occurred to you that is was just bad sex? Her insistence on holding onto old slights so long that they become character traits. The way she went all embarrassingly cave-man possessive whenever a attractive female came around. Pet names, god the patronising pet names! The way Bones knew more about her abilities than she did. 22 years and she never noticed that she could see ghosts, for example, but he knew somehow. The constant reminders of female victimhood. (I'll be coming back to that one.) The characters complete unwillingness to communicate in any sort of civil manner, etc. (OK, some of those aren't necessarily tropes, just frequent occurrences to the genre.)
If I had to name the theme of this story it wouldn't be romance, erotica or even vampires. It would be women as sexual victims and the use of sex as a form of control and degradation. There are so many references to prostitution in this book I lost count. Cat's mother is considered a whore because she had a child out of wedlock. Cat is seen similarly by extension and even called one by her mother at one point. Sergio calls Cat one before their final encounter. Bones admits to having been a gigolo when he was alive. The whole plot hinges on hunting down the head of a human trafficking prostitution ring. Though admittedly with a vampire & ghoul twist. Cat has to dress like a slut so that she can attract her marks, often posing as a working girl in the process. This despite the fact that she ostensibly has to sit through hours of dirty talk before hunting a man who has a penchant for underage girls. Really, what exactly does he appreciate about their underage status if not their innocence? Seems to me that's the wrong front to be presenting.
And that's just prostitution references. I could go on another whole rant about the rape victims and/or suggested victims. This book should make women fear being alone with ANY MAN. They all seem to be predators of some sort. It sapped the enjoyment right out of the book for me. There are so many sexual victims it blots out the story. I appreciate a little sexual tension here and there, but that isn't what was sprinkled throughout this book. I felt male privilege leering at each and every female character in this book. It was disquieting. [Of course I realise the author is a woman, but that doesn't mean she can't write acts of MP into her characters.]
Then there were all of the subtle (and occasionally not so subtle) indictments of modern human behaviour that was often painfully oversimplified and arrogant almost beyond palatability. Sorry, having some slutty vampire bitch preach at me about the failure of the government to stamp out the modern slave trade in Brazil (or where ever) or 'honour rapes' in Pakistan didn't fly too well with me. It certainly didn't excuse her vampire boss.
I've seen a number of previous reviewers compare Bones and Cat to Buffy and Spike. I can COMPLETELY see that. It's there, not doubt about it (intentional or not). On a related side note, Bones' English is rubbish. I lived in Northern England for a number of years and let me tell you it isn't convincing.
Possibly most annoying of all, however, is that after spending 95% of the book wishing it would just end already Bradley Tate (and maybe Timmie) made me curious what what might happen next. I do not want to be tempted into any more of this drivel in the hopes that book two is better than this first one. When my two favourite people in the book are both MINOR side characters there is a problem.
I love vampire based PNR, but this book had so many of the genre's tropes that I hate all in one place. The emotionally unstable, angry heroine who is also painfully virginal and unaware of her own sexuality. "I didn't like it before. I think something is wrong with me." Really? Despite how the whole thing worked out it never occurred to you that is was just bad sex? Her insistence on holding onto old slights so long that they become character traits. The way she went all embarrassingly cave-man possessive whenever a attractive female came around. Pet names, god the patronising pet names! The way Bones knew more about her abilities than she did. 22 years and she never noticed that she could see ghosts, for example, but he knew somehow. The constant reminders of female victimhood. (I'll be coming back to that one.) The characters complete unwillingness to communicate in any sort of civil manner, etc. (OK, some of those aren't necessarily tropes, just frequent occurrences to the genre.)
If I had to name the theme of this story it wouldn't be romance, erotica or even vampires. It would be women as sexual victims and the use of sex as a form of control and degradation. There are so many references to prostitution in this book I lost count. Cat's mother is considered a whore because she had a child out of wedlock. Cat is seen similarly by extension and even called one by her mother at one point. Sergio calls Cat one before their final encounter. Bones admits to having been a gigolo when he was alive. The whole plot hinges on hunting down the head of a human trafficking prostitution ring. Though admittedly with a vampire & ghoul twist. Cat has to dress like a slut so that she can attract her marks, often posing as a working girl in the process. This despite the fact that she ostensibly has to sit through hours of dirty talk before hunting a man who has a penchant for underage girls. Really, what exactly does he appreciate about their underage status if not their innocence? Seems to me that's the wrong front to be presenting.
And that's just prostitution references. I could go on another whole rant about the rape victims and/or suggested victims. This book should make women fear being alone with ANY MAN. They all seem to be predators of some sort. It sapped the enjoyment right out of the book for me. There are so many sexual victims it blots out the story. I appreciate a little sexual tension here and there, but that isn't what was sprinkled throughout this book. I felt male privilege leering at each and every female character in this book. It was disquieting. [Of course I realise the author is a woman, but that doesn't mean she can't write acts of MP into her characters.]
Then there were all of the subtle (and occasionally not so subtle) indictments of modern human behaviour that was often painfully oversimplified and arrogant almost beyond palatability. Sorry, having some slutty vampire bitch preach at me about the failure of the government to stamp out the modern slave trade in Brazil (or where ever) or 'honour rapes' in Pakistan didn't fly too well with me. It certainly didn't excuse her vampire boss.
I've seen a number of previous reviewers compare Bones and Cat to Buffy and Spike. I can COMPLETELY see that. It's there, not doubt about it (intentional or not). On a related side note, Bones' English is rubbish. I lived in Northern England for a number of years and let me tell you it isn't convincing.
Possibly most annoying of all, however, is that after spending 95% of the book wishing it would just end already Bradley Tate (and maybe Timmie) made me curious what what might happen next. I do not want to be tempted into any more of this drivel in the hopes that book two is better than this first one. When my two favourite people in the book are both MINOR side characters there is a problem.