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A Morbid Initiation (Vampire: Victorian Age, Book 1)

A Morbid Initiation (Vampire: Victorian Age, Book 1)

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

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Fairly good vamp novel
Review: i love vampires so i was drawn to this novel. i definitely got sucked in but it wasn't what i call an "easy read" because of the victorian age language in it. it's not something i'd sit and read for hours at a time but definitely enjoyable. i'm looking forward to the next 2 novels.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Delirium Tremere
Review: It's been quite a while since I've ventured back into White Wolf's Vampire: The Masquerade series. After completing the original clan series and the grail trilogy I was beginning to feel that the publisher had worked this vein (sorry about the pun) as much as it could be, and that the element of repetition was getting noticeable. At the result of several recommendations I decided to give this particular series a try. After all, vampires and Victorian is where is all started.

Phillippe Boulle is a surprisingly good author, which partially explains his position as managing editor at White Wolf Fiction. He manages to skirt the pitfalls of the Masquerade genre while presenting the story of Regina Blake, recently back from a long residence in Egypt with her father James, Lord Blake. In a hectic series of events, Regina's mother Emma dies under suspect circumstances and Regina discovers that a series of secrets that catapults her into the vampire society of Victorian London.

Fortunately, Victoria Ash, who at one time knew her mother, steps in to make Regina her prot?g? in a society that forgives nothing and is quick to punish mistakes. Now Regina sets out to discover what has happened to her mother, who has disappeared from her tomb. In the meantime, Lieutenant Malcolm Seward, her estranged lover, is becoming enmeshed in a secret military society that also seems to be entangled in the vampire's world.

So far, the story is focused on the machinations of the Tremere clan, which had fallen out of favor under the Prince of London, who had disappeared, leaving a regent in his place. His return offers a new opportunity for maneuvering and mayhem. At present the political element (which is the part I like least about Masquerade novels) is being kept at bay. Instead the primary focuses are Regina, Malcolm, and Victoria. For some reason the presence of a handful of humans (Victoria is a vampire) seems to enliven vampire stories, which otherwise tend to turn into caricatures of themselves. While not totally engaging, this turned out to be an interesting first volume, and I expect to complete the series.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Delirium Tremere
Review: It's been quite a while since I've ventured back into White Wolf's Vampire: The Masquerade series. After completing the original clan series and the grail trilogy I was beginning to feel that the publisher had worked this vein (sorry about the pun) as much as it could be, and that the element of repetition was getting noticeable. At the result of several recommendations I decided to give this particular series a try. After all, vampires and Victorian is where is all started.

Phillippe Boulle is a surprisingly good author, which partially explains his position as managing editor at White Wolf Fiction. He manages to skirt the pitfalls of the Masquerade genre while presenting the story of Regina Blake, recently back from a long residence in Egypt with her father James, Lord Blake. In a hectic series of events, Regina's mother Emma dies under suspect circumstances and Regina discovers that a series of secrets that catapults her into the vampire society of Victorian London.

Fortunately, Victoria Ash, who at one time knew her mother, steps in to make Regina her protégé in a society that forgives nothing and is quick to punish mistakes. Now Regina sets out to discover what has happened to her mother, who has disappeared from her tomb. In the meantime, Lieutenant Malcolm Seward, her estranged lover, is becoming enmeshed in a secret military society that also seems to be entangled in the vampire's world.

So far, the story is focused on the machinations of the Tremere clan, which had fallen out of favor under the Prince of London, who had disappeared, leaving a regent in his place. His return offers a new opportunity for maneuvering and mayhem. At present the political element (which is the part I like least about Masquerade novels) is being kept at bay. Instead the primary focuses are Regina, Malcolm, and Victoria. For some reason the presence of a handful of humans (Victoria is a vampire) seems to enliven vampire stories, which otherwise tend to turn into caricatures of themselves. While not totally engaging, this turned out to be an interesting first volume, and I expect to complete the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Life may only exist in the vampire world...
Review: Philippe Boulle has created a masterpiece of Victorian Vampirism. The book is filled with mystical mysteries, and has been thoroughly researched so that the anachronistic details take you to Victorian England. I could not put the book down, and could hardly wait for book two. Now I need book three, which has not yet been published.

Regina Blake is the beautiful daughter of the Viscount Lord James Blake, who has served in the military in Egypt for most of his career, and nearly all of her life. Lady Blake is ill, and must return to England to be cared for, yet when they leave Egypt, her brother refuses to join them, and father and son are estranged.

In their English manor, Lady Emma Blake dies -- was it murder, which it certainly appears to be, or something far darker. Her mother's family, the Ducheski clan, descends on the estate to bury Emma according to their traditions. In Regina's search for the burial place of her mother, she finds far more than any girl should see.

Regina believes she is in control of her nightly wanderings in London. She can no longer talk with her father, who has turned his anger at his wife's death to the liquor bottle.

Systematically Regina is seduced into a complex relationship with Victoria Ash, who becomes her sponsor and introduces her to the true nightlife in London. Victoria is also the only one who can save Regina's life during the Morbid Initiation.

I cannot begin to reveal the story in a short review -- it is fascinating, dark, delicious, frightening, enlightening, and horrific. It is one of the best books, not just one of the best horror novels, that I have read. The characters are complex, linked through so many levels of society and blood lines, filled with emotions and danger they each are real, not just words on a piece of paper.

This is book deserves five stars.

Victoria Tarrani

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Life may only exist in the vampire world...
Review: Philippe Boulle has created a masterpiece of Victorian Vampirism. The book is filled with mystical mysteries, and has been thoroughly researched so that the anachronistic details take you to Victorian England. I could not put the book down, and could hardly wait for book two. Now I need book three, which has not yet been published.

Regina Blake is the beautiful daughter of the Viscount Lord James Blake, who has served in the military in Egypt for most of his career, and nearly all of her life. Lady Blake is ill, and must return to England to be cared for, yet when they leave Egypt, her brother refuses to join them, and father and son are estranged.

In their English manor, Lady Emma Blake dies -- was it murder, which it certainly appears to be, or something far darker. Her mother's family, the Ducheski clan, descends on the estate to bury Emma according to their traditions. In Regina's search for the burial place of her mother, she finds far more than any girl should see.

Regina believes she is in control of her nightly wanderings in London. She can no longer talk with her father, who has turned his anger at his wife's death to the liquor bottle.

Systematically Regina is seduced into a complex relationship with Victoria Ash, who becomes her sponsor and introduces her to the true nightlife in London. Victoria is also the only one who can save Regina's life during the Morbid Initiation.

I cannot begin to reveal the story in a short review -- it is fascinating, dark, delicious, frightening, enlightening, and horrific. It is one of the best books, not just one of the best horror novels, that I have read. The characters are complex, linked through so many levels of society and blood lines, filled with emotions and danger they each are real, not just words on a piece of paper.

This is book deserves five stars.

Victoria Tarrani

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WHITE WOLF SCORES WITH GASLIGHT GHOULS!
Review: The first volume in the VICTORIAN AGE VAMPIRE trilogy is a knock-
out! It invokes images of old Hammer Dracula films and brings
back old friends we've met before in more modern chronicles--
Victoria Ash, Hesha Ruhadze, Beckett. Written in the manner of
a Victorian Gothic, the novel is a must-read not only for
VAMPIRE roleplayers, but for anyone who loves Gothic novels, the
fog-shrouded streets of Whitechapel and a look at the Kindred
during the height of the Victorian era. DON'T MISS THIS ONE!!!


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