Home :: Books :: Horror  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror

Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Craven Moon

Craven Moon

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Shift of focus mid-way goes too far too fast
Review: Craven Moon advances the storyline begun in Billie Sue Mosiman's previous vampire novels, Red Moon Rising and Malachi's Moon, each of which stands as a fascinating - albeit sometimes illogical - new interpretation of vampirism. In the future world of Mosiman's creation, vampirism is caused by a mutated form of the blood disease porphyria; one becomes vampire as a natural result of heredity rather some supernatural cause (with exceptions, of course). When the change comes over the afflicted individual, that person literally dies while his/her soul travels to a mysterious realm lighted by a huge red moon; here, the soul must choose the type of vampire it will become: Predator, Natural, or Craven. Predators resemble stereotypical vampires; they feed on the living and are generally quite aggressive. Naturals choose to live as humans, hiding their affliction from the outside world and feeding only on bags of blood supplied by a Predator network. Cravens are doomed to a life of sickness and weakness; still bearing outward evidence of the porphyria that afflicts them, they depend wholly on the support of other vampires and spend their years in solitude and depression. Mosiman's vampires can fall in love, and on rare occasions one chooses to marry and mate with a human; such unions give rise to the rarest creatures of all - dhampirs. A dhampir has the super-human strength and many of the abilities of a vampire but will age and die the same as any mortal.

Malachi, the protagonist of the novel, is an unusually powerful dhampir, and many vampires fear that he is the dhampir referred to in ancient prophecy as a slayer of Predators. Malachi has faced and overcome some incredible tragedies in his past, but as Craven Moon opens he has put the past behind him and found happiness in the arms of his wife Danielle and his young son Eli. Unfortunately, his longtime vampire antagonist Charles Upton still lives and begins forming a new army of Predators with which to wage war against Malachi, the Cravens, and the Naturals. Upton finds himself a most unusual human assistant named Jacques, a man whose empty soul knows no fear. As the novel progresses, the focus moves away from Upton and directly to Jacques as the true antagonist. A shift in focus from the same old Upton storyline of the first two novels was needed at this point, but I'm not sure Mosiman truly succeeds in her transformation of the story from one of personal vendetta to potentially religious warfare. It turns out that Jacques might just be the Antichrist. Whatever he is, Malachi swears vengeance when this new enemy destroys his family; he is so intent on finding and killing Jacques that he chooses to become a full-blooded, Predator vampire. The ultimate conclusion is a bit anti-climactic, as the predicted open warfare among vampirekind never really comes to fruition.

I think Craven Moon is a much weaker novel than its predecessors Red Moon Rising and Malachi's Moon. The Armageddon plot element really pushes the story farther than it is equipped to travel, as Mosiman doesn't really frame the story in a proper context for such a radical shift. Mosiman also damages the integrity of the story by taking what I consider a radical shortcut near the end, basically denying this reader the very thing he was anticipating. I understand the author's desire to move beyond the same old storyline explored in the two previous novels, but I think Mosiman just tried to go too far too fast with this novel. Still, Craven Moon is a very enjoyable read offering a few fresh twists to the traditional vampire myth, and I should note that readers need not have read Red Moon Rising or Malachi's Moon in order to understand and follow the storyline in this particular novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A vampire/human war which could destroy all
Review: Craven Moon by Billie Sue Mosiman is the story of a vampire's child raised on an isolated Texas farm to avoid a prophecy only to find himself the target of those who want to overthrow vampires in the world. Malachi lives a mortal's life with his wife and child and tries to avoid his vampire heritage; but the ruin of his family involves him in the vampire/human war which could destroy all.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Horror the way that it was meant to be written.
Review: There is three different kind of vampires. The Predators believe they are superior to man and other vampires. They force vampires to buy blood from them so they can pass as Naturals. The Craven are timid creatures who hide in the shadows while depending on the pity and the mercy of the Naturals to stay alive. Malachi is none of the above because he is the son of a mortal man and a vampire mother. Many of the Predators believe he is the prophesied one, the being that would lead a war against them.

As a dhampire, Malachi is a mortal with extraordinary strength and psychic powers but he doesn't drink blood. He marries Danielle and they have a son Eli. His beloved family is the center of Malachi's world. When his enemy's minion kills his wife, Malachi decides to become a full fledge Predator to hunt down the vampire and the mortal who destroyed his world. He just never imagined he would become involved in the vampiric version of Armageddon.

Billie Sue Mosiman's vampire world has it's own set of rules and customs that must be adhered to if vampires are to coexist with their human counterparts. Hearts will go out to the hero who lost the love of his life and readers will understand the choices he makes. It is Malachi's own humanity that makes him a very good vampire. There are some secondary characters deserving of having their stories told and their are enough of them to fill up the author's entire writing career. CRAVEN MOON is horror the way that it was meant to be written.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Horror the way that it was meant to be written.
Review: There is three different kind of vampires. The Predators believe they are superior to man and other vampires. They force vampires to buy blood from them so they can pass as Naturals. The Craven are timid creatures who hide in the shadows while depending on the pity and the mercy of the Naturals to stay alive. Malachi is none of the above because he is the son of a mortal man and a vampire mother. Many of the Predators believe he is the prophesied one, the being that would lead a war against them.

As a dhampire, Malachi is a mortal with extraordinary strength and psychic powers but he doesn't drink blood. He marries Danielle and they have a son Eli. His beloved family is the center of Malachi's world. When his enemy's minion kills his wife, Malachi decides to become a full fledge Predator to hunt down the vampire and the mortal who destroyed his world. He just never imagined he would become involved in the vampiric version of Armageddon.

Billie Sue Mosiman's vampire world has it's own set of rules and customs that must be adhered to if vampires are to coexist with their human counterparts. Hearts will go out to the hero who lost the love of his life and readers will understand the choices he makes. It is Malachi's own humanity that makes him a very good vampire. There are some secondary characters deserving of having their stories told and their are enough of them to fill up the author's entire writing career. CRAVEN MOON is horror the way that it was meant to be written.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates