Showing posts with label carmen adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carmen adams. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Song of the Vampire by Carmen Adams

First published in 1996.

BEWARE OF TALL HANDSOME STRANGERS-- Who sleep by day . . . and play at night.

DON'T BE TAKEN IN BY COOL VIOLET EYES--
Even if they're wild and exciting . . . and speak of romance in the moonlight.

LISTEN TO THE WARNING OF THE FORTUNE TELLER--
Who foretells a terrible danger . . . that lurks in the shadows of darkness.

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE--
Unless you're ready to face the evil . . . and destroy it - or die.

Didn't I say I'd have a review for this book in early April? I stick to my word, man. And this is my first "real" review for Bites, as in I'm not copying and pasting from my writing blog. It's fresh!

This is one of those blink-and-you-miss-it books. If I could sit still for more than a nanosecond and just read this book through, it'd take me about an hour, maybe an hour and a half. It's a no bullshit, right to the point vampire story that begins and ends so fast it'll have you twitching for more.

Now, I'm really biased. I love this story because it reminded me of my uber-obsession, The Lost Boys. It's set in a California beach town with a boardwalk, a thrumming night life, runaways, sexy punk-looking guys. Not a whole lot is different but the similarities are strong enough that when I first read it (many moons ago), I squeed before squee was even a word. But, if you're not psychotic about The Lost Boys like I am, you'll still enjoy it, and you don't need to read it's predecessor, The Band, to know what's going on. I haven't.

What you need to like and appreciate is the non-romantic aspect of vampires. Yeah, they're sexy and charismatic and captivating but, at the end of the day, you're food. And this is how this book treats them. Iris and Megan are vampire hunters pretty much by force and when they're sent to a beach town with a dwindling runaway population to hunt out the problem, they get in a little over their heads. Or at least Megan does.

The writing isn't superfantabulous but it's good. It's nice and fat free, gets to the point and gets the story told. You understand these girls, where they come from and what's going on around them without the pomp and circumstance of inner monologues or long, rambling descriptions. It's a light read that'll leave you and your vampire craving satisfied but, like Chinese food, you'll be hungry for more not too long afterwards.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Freaky Friday :|: 3

Next up on Horror Whores . . .


Title: Song of the Vampire (sequel to The Band)
Author: Carmen Adams
Published: March 1996
Pages: 153
Publisher: Avon Flare, a division of HarperCollins
Summary:
BEWARE OF TALL HANDSOME STRANGERS--
Who sleep by day . . .
and play at night.

DON'T BE TAKEN IN BY COOL VIOLET EYES--
Even if they're wild and exciting . . .
and speak of romance in the moonlight.

LISTEN TO THE WARNING OF THE FORTUNE TELLER--
Who foretells a terrible danger . . .
that lurks in the shadows of darkness.

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE--
Unless you're ready to face the evil . . .
and destroy it - or die.
I'm short on more editorial reviews for this one and I really wanted to reread it this week for Freaky Friday but seeing as how insurance has been sucking away my soul for the past month, I just couldn't get it in. But I did read a random chapter and I still loved every second of it. And you're going to laugh at me when I tell you why. Because it reminds me so much of The Lost Boys. I'm convinced that's why I've hung on to it for so long. I just can't part with it.

Thankfully, even though this is a sequel, you don't need to read The Band first to get what's going on. I'm proof of that. For all the cheese (and there are some pretty big blocks), this is probably one of my favorite vampire books ever. Look for a review for it early next month (as I'll be done with the insurance stuff and have my free time back). I really want to reread it now.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Freaky Friday :|: 2

Horror Whores marches on . . .


Title: The Claw
Author: Carmen Adams
Published: November 1995
Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
Summary:
Ecstatic about her new job at the local zoo, Kelly ignores the disturbing phone calls that threaten her to stay away, until a panther is let out of its cage, and the entire town is terrified by bloody claw marks that appear everywhere. - from amazon.com
Annotation:
Under the Adams pseudonym, here's Scholastic's first thriller from successful teen writer Carol Anshaw. In Claw, Anshaw fashions a shivery tale of teens terrorized by a leopard that has escaped from the zoo--or is it something else? Original. - from bn.com/Fantastic Fiction
This one's pretty scant on information. The same information is repeated across a few websites, where I can actually find something. Creepy nonetheless!

Friday, March 6, 2009

Freaky Friday :|: 1

It's the inaugural post of Freaky Friday, otherwise known as Horror Whores! To start the weekly shindig we have--

Title: The Band
Author:
Carmen Adams
Published:
May 1994
Pages:
144
Publisher:
Avon Flare, a division of HarperCollins
Summary
:
In an electrifying tale of supernatural suspense for today's hot young adult market, Karen, a new girl in school, is overjoyed to be accepted by The Band--until she discovers that her newly found friends are, in fact, members of a high school band killed 20 years ago. - from bn.com
Editorial Review:
Gr 8 Up-This horror tale perks along with a sparkling style and a plucky, determined heroine. It's formulaic, but entertaining and well characterized. Megan, the proverbial new girl at Mojave High, restores an ancient school bus; re-creates a tragic accident; and researches in the library and a bookstore in order to rid the town of revenants and release The Band of Undead into mortality. Despite some potholes in the plot, the writing is a cut above the usual slasher sleaze associated with the genre. Megan is resourceful and an adversary worthy of her creepy, occult opponents. A romping read that will provide YAs with the funhouse thrills they currently crave. - from School Library Journal, bn.com
I'm starting with Carmen Adams because, aside from the Goosebumps series, the only flashback book I own is from Adams. No, it's not this one. I'll get to it.

I've never read The Band but if it's anything like the book I do have, I must buy and horde my copy into the grave. Or ungrave, as it were.
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