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Candle Bay

Candle Bay

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: interesting, if nothing else
Review: This book provides a new view on vampires. In this book there is not only one type of vampire, but two; trueborns, and human vampires. Trueborns are the original vampires, born being a vampire. Human vampires are what we normally think of vampires being, born through an exchange of blood from a vampire to a human.

In the little town of Candle Bay, the Candle Bay resort is owned by a family of human vampires called the Darlings. When the new assistant concierge, Amanda Pearce, arrives at the hotel she feels as if she was drawn there, and maybe she was, but more importantly she was drawn into the middle of a blood war between the Darlings and there nemesises the Dantes. Other than the fact that the Darlings nearly destroyed the Dantes years ago, the Dantes also want a powerful and useful potion possessed by the Darling. A war begins, and Amanda is in the middle of it. Before she knows it she finds herself playing an important role in an age old trueblood story that, if it comes to be true, will kill her and all she loves.

Despite this interesting story plot I feel that the book was not very well written(much like my review!:)), it also tends to be a little dry at times, so while I would suggest reading this I would also say that it will not win any awards.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Candle Bay
Review: This is the first book by Ms. Thorne that I have read. It was absolutely spectacular. The book had my full attention until I was finished. Her story is captivating and so real.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The culmination of Thorne's career
Review: This is the pinnacle of Tamara Thorne's brilliant writing career. And that says a mouthful; because this dame can write a yarn. She writes a great vampire novel here and does so much better than Ms.Rice.

This book has it all; sex, violence, gore, romance. What else can a horror fan ask for? Plot synopsis? You got it!!

Amanda, an innocent little thing, goes to work at Candle Bay resort, owned by the Darlings, a vampire clan. Candle Bay is an exclusive resort outside of San Francisco. The Darlings have an on-going feud with The Dante's. And the fun begins.

Thorne outdoes herself with each effort and is quickly becoming one of the best female horror writers published today. Her pacing of a novel is smooth and effortless, her characters are fleshed out, the violence quick and painful to the jugular, and the sex...Well you need to read this novel.

I have yet to read Eternity but it looks fantastic. Her new novel, The Forgotten, to be released in November 2002, also looks awesome.

Tamara, please, please, keep 'em coming!!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not Your Average Vampires
Review: This novel succeeds on may levels. At heart it is a gothic romance for the twenty-first century. Candle Bay, having said that is also oh so much more. The plot and pacing are quick. The characters colourful, lively and intriquing.
It tells the story of an assisant coiincierge just beginning work at a beautifully restored resort/hotel and spa. Unbeknownst to her the proprietors are a family of vampires.
The suspense is well maintained throughout the story, and it is definitely a novel with positive possibilities of sequels. I also am impressed that Tamara Thorne makes obvious refernce to the vampiric works of Chelsea Quinn Yorbra(sp) even so far as making her trueblood impersonate Chelsea's vampire.
Overall a great read for those fans of Vampire stories or those just looking to read something a little different.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Don Vampire di Corleone
Review: This story draws on so many disparate elements that it shouldn't work at all, but it does, and quite well.

Fresh-faced Amanda goes to work as San Francisco's Candle Bay hotel concierge, straight out of college. She's a lover of horror stories, but is completely oblivious to the fact that her employers, the Darling family, are an old vampire clan, and the Darlings do everything in their hypnotic power to keep her unaware. The Darlings have an ongoing gang-war with another vampire family, the Dantes, and are presently hosting one of the original trueborn vampire race - an extreme rarity, in the world - Julian Valentyne.

Julian comes bearing a gift: a precious, hitherto believed to be mythical elixir, that prolongs even vampire longevity and heals humans more quickly than usual, which is a valuable commodity to vampires whose hotel business is a front for a revolving food supply - the Darlings feed (lightly) on their sleeping guests, hypnotically erasing their memories of the nocturnal encounter, and being able to eliminate the wounds on their meals' throats before morning helps.

Julian is hardly an altruist, however. He has ulterior motives. He seeks a fabled treasure beneath the Darlings' hotel. Toward keeping his benefactor host family confused as to his true intentions, he turns them into drug addicts, exacerbates tensions between them and the Dantes, and works his charms on Amanda - who is the reincarnation of his sole human love, from Atlantis - to win her away from the attentions of Stephen Darling.

It may even be of importance for Julian to succeed in finding the treasure, despite his horrendous tactics - if he doesn't, both the human and vampire races may soon find themselves extinct.

This book succeeds on pure style and panache. It reads not like a horror novel, but like an epic black comedy - a good portion of the early part of the story is spent chasing the body of a murdered guest in a laundry cart, in true 1930s Hollywood comedy form. The dialogue is snappy, the characters credibly handled. Stephen and Amanda are the straightforward star-crossed lovers; sexy Barbara Steele-ish vamp Natasha is the hotel's CEO; Uncle Ori is obsessed with The Godfather, playing the soundtrack at family meetings; brother Ivor is a strong, silent brooder and thinker; and the psychopathic (but oddly charming) pre-teenage twins, Ivy and Lucy, are Wednesday and Pugsley Addams as serial killers.

This book is a lot of fun. It reads like a better-plotted Queen of the Damned, with more humorously likeable characters. Its only real flaws are a too-abrupt ending and a curious lack of developmental attention to human heroine Amanda. But the Darling family are delightfully demented and well-drawn, and the lengthy story moves at a pretty good clip.

Pass the AB-negative. Cheers!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hotel California Indeed!
Review: What a great read. The vivid pictures of the hotel, the foggy coast, the mobster Uncle, the vampire family and love in bloom. This is just a hint of what's inside this book. This is an excellent story, written well, fast-paced and leaves you hanging, just a bit, in the end. I'm hoping...sequel???...but no matter. I enjoyed the charm of Stephen and Amanda, the cast of crazy vampires and the setting for this haunt. Run out and pick this up, easily one of her best!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hotel California Indeed!
Review: What a great read. The vivid pictures of the hotel, the foggy coast, the mobster Uncle, the vampire family and love in bloom. This is just a hint of what's inside this book. This is an excellent story, written well, fast-paced and leaves you hanging, just a bit, in the end. I'm hoping...sequel???...but no matter. I enjoyed the charm of Stephen and Amanda, the cast of crazy vampires and the setting for this haunt. Run out and pick this up, easily one of her best!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Very disappointing
Review: Wow ... was an incredible disappointment. After reading the other reviewers' glowing comments I was excited to begin this 'riveting' novel. Too much dialogue, barely fleshed-out characters (especially Stephen) and not much personal investment in the heroine. There are SO many other vampire-based novels I found more entertaining (Laurell K. Hamilton series, Katie Macalester, and more). This definitely won't hit my "keeper" shelf.


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