Book Review: Stake You by Claire Farrell (No Beautiful Brooding Vamps Here)

Gorgeous cover, don’t ya think?

??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????Stake You by Claire Farrell

I’ve read other books by this author and enjoyed them. Stake You grabbed my attention because of the cool cover and title.  The story didn’t grip me at first, but I kept reading and before the halfway mark, I was anxious to find out how it would all pan out for the heroine, Dev.

We guess that the creepy new boy at school is a vampire from the very start. Dev describes him as an Edward Cullen wannabe who wears sunglasses indoors, and pretty soon he has a vulnerable girl under his spell.

Dev (full name Devlin O’ Mara), our protagonist, is a tough girl. She’s had it hard looking after her alcoholic mother for the past number of years and spends most of her time outside of school working long hours at a pub to pay the bills and put food on the table. It’s clear something bad happened in her past with one of her mother’s loser exes, but Dev doesn’t talk about it, or let herself think back too much. She’s closed off, even from her boyfriend, Deco, and close friends.

Her other love interest is Base, a decent, attractive guy with family problems of his own. These two should be together. The reader knows it, Base knows it, and Dev pretends not to know it. Grr, if only I was at that school to sort those kids out. Dev resists her feelings for Base because of a lie her bitchy friend, Shauna, told her years ago. Now the thing I couldn’t understand was that Dev knows exactly what kind of trouble making cow her friend is. She must realise Shauna lied to her about Base… Anyway, I suppose I’m looking at all this high school drama through my grown-up eyes rather than a teenager’s.

Moving on to our villain. Sully is a creep. He scratches at windows, preying on vulnerable girls who’ve had trouble in their life. He seeks out who he calls “broken girls” feeding off their pain, adding a new dimension to vampires. Dev isn’t so easily entranced, however. Sully may be a vampire in this book, but he’s a metaphor for the type of abusive man who controls the woman in his life with fear. Sully is a slimy, repulsive being, the kind of guy who enjoys making his girlfriend feel weak and dependent on him, cutting her off from other people.

Stake You is quite a dark read for a Young Adult book with a vampire. Dev’s homelife is just awful, and Base doesn’t have it much better. They’re both far too responsible and burdened down for people their age. Dev and Base’s investigation of Sully is the most interesting aspect of the novel, for the simple reason that together, these two characters are compelling.  I wouldn’t mind spending more time with them. ****

There’s nothing beautiful or sexy about vampires in this book, and as such, it stands out from the crowd.

Check it out on Goodreads and Amazon. It’s FREE at the time of posting.

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Has anyone come across this book? What are you reading at the minute?

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Film Review: Byzantium (Think all Vampires lead glamorous lives? Think again)

A Vampire Movie that Slipped Through the Net

byzI remember hearing about an upcoming vampire movie starring Irish actor Saoirse Ronan (The Host, The Lovely Bones) maybe eighteen months to two years ago, but I don’t remember it ever coming to the cinema. I found it recently and thoroughly enjoyed this very different vampire tale. It’s directed by Neil Jordan, who also did Interview with the Vampire.

Byzantium is often bleak, but with the muted tone, vibrant cinematography and stunning performances by Ronan, Gemma Arterton and Caleb Landry Jones, I’d recommend it to any fans of the vampire genre who are interested in watching something different.

Clara and Eleanor have spent the last two hundred years moving from place to place, running. They could be sisters, and call themselves such, but Clara is actually Eleanor’s mother. They are vampires, but not the sort we’ve come to know in recent years. They aren’t superhero powerful, leading fabulous lives of wealth and frivolity, having great sex or enjoying all-consuming romances with eternal lovers. No, Clara ekes out a meagre living for them as a prostitute. She’s been selling her body for hundreds of years and doesn’t know anything else. Times may have changed since she was a young human, but one of the oldest professions in the world goes on. She’s sparky and straight-talking where Eleanor is quiet and reflective. Clara kills when necessity strikes. Eleanor takes only those who are willing and ready to die.

Their arrival in a rundown seaside resort in England brings about big change. Clara finds a home and new business enterprise in a nerdy guy suffering a recent bereavement. She turns his deceased mother’s closed down guesthouse into a brothel. Eleanor meanwhile wanders into a nursing home one night and starts playing the piano. A young employee  watches her play. She is polite but not eager to answer his questions. Frank is a pensive young man, quiet and older than his years. They attend the same school, both are outsiders and loners, and so it’s no surprise they are drawn to each  other.  Eleanor breaks her mother’s rule. She writes the story of their lives for Frank, and their private world is about to be torn apart.

I found myself moved watching this story. It doesn’t have the action or the beautiful brooding vampires we’ve come to see in recent years, a welcome change. These two women seem like ordinary, down-on-their-luck people, scrummaging through the garbage heap of life to maintain their existence. The dilapidated promenade running the length of the beach and the desolate, empty atmosphere of the town serves to underline the sombre and quiet tone of this film. The flashes of life, spirit and violence all come from Clara.

How they came to be vampires is another unusual twist on the typical blood exchange we’ve come to see in most books and films. The flashbacks that happen throughout the film give us just enough information to keep us waiting for the next piece of the puzzle.

For a rainy day, I’d recommend Byzantium. Even if you’re not a fan of the fang, but enjoy supernatural dramas, give this a try. ****

Here’s a clip of Eleanor talking with one of the teachers who read her essay.

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What do you think? One to add to your vampire movie list?

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Posted in Film Reviews | Tagged , , , | 28 Comments