Love Bites this question feed

asked by sandi on November 18, 2006 3:19 PM

Reviews

Thumb_up
Thumb_down

0%
0%
This book did have a very interesting premise, but it could have been written in a whole much better direction than just to have the two main characters repeatedly having sex throughout most of the book. I did like the fact that 'respectable' vampires drink from bags of donated blood instead of attack people on the street (could have made a good subplot dealing with the blood bags); and the straws getting stuck on the woman's fangs so that she didnt have to taste the blood was kind of inventive too (but then she could have moved on with her life and tried to eke out what she could of the life she had before becoming a vampire). Too bad the blood issues were the only interesting things in the book.
reviewed by artdealer on November 23, 2006 1:31 AM

Thumb_up
Thumb_down

0%
0%
OK, this is a book about a vampire, Etienne, whose only passion in life lately has been writing video games. He sits alone in his basement all night making the games & the crazy psycho killer of the novel is another game-writer who wanted a job with Etienne and didn't get one.

Then the heroine, Rachel, is a coroner with no social life. But seriously, no social life. She tells us over and over again - gee, I never go out, gee, what's there to do at night, gee, I caught my last lover having sex with my roommate and that was years ago in college. Her first major bonding experience with Etienne post-crossover is...spending a whole night with him playing video games. 10 hours straight. It made me feel sad.

Look, if you can get past this, maybe you will like the book. But I couldn't find Etienne sexy, no matter how silvery his eyes or impressive his physique. Not just because he spends all his time in a basement with his computers, or because - as he admits one morning to his mother - he hasn't had sex in two or three decades. No, it's because he's such a puppy dog. He's a kid. Bashful and a little dumb where women are concerned and eager to please. He acts a lot closer to twenty than three hundred.

Plus, and maybe I've just been reading too many of these vampire novels lately, but I am a little tired of the part of the novel when the heroine says something flip and a little rude and some older yet wiser vampire chuckles and observes, "Isn't she delightful?"

Also, this is a novel in which the vampires think that biting people is really taboo. They don't bite one another, they don't bite humans, they don't even appear to be very interested in biting. Where's the fun in that? They do, however, make all sorts of interesting blood cocktails. That's nice, but...eh.
reviewed by jbritt on November 23, 2006 3:35 PM

Thumb_up
Thumb_down

0%
0%
Rachael works at the morgue on the night shift. She sleeps through the day, albeit she loves the sunlight. She sometimes uses this as an excuse for her lack of a social life - being asleep during the day and at work all night.

Rachael is overcome with the flu, when she encounters what she assumed a corpse with a bullet wound straight to the heart. Instead, her body is really Etienne, a 6'4" blonde vampire, whose body is in stasis because of the heart wound delivered to him by his (rather dorky) villain, Pudge.

Technical Note: Sands' vampires are really ancient humans but with nano's (nanomachines) in their bloodstream. (She calls them "benign parasites," although, technically, this seems more mutualism than parasitism.) These nano's feed off blood to regenerate wounds, etc. Heart wounds can be fatal if a bullet is lodged in there for a while, as that would prevent the nano's from doing their job. No curse, eternal damnation, or any of that dark stuff involved.

Rachael does her job removing the bullet for forensics, whilst recording her progress (Scully-like from X-Files). Etienne's body is allowed to heal, and he escapes. Nothing happens for a while -- well, the vampires celebrate a birthday by going to the movies and Etienne's car gets blown up as he walks towards it; as a result, his body becomes utterly charred - and he's back to the morgue as a "crispy critter."

Rachael, whose memory has been altered by Etienne's last appearance, has been having dreams about Etienne. She encounters him in his blackened charred form. Definitely dead for sure, right? Instead, however, bits of Etienne's char flakes off and skin has regenerated beneath. Etienne's assassin, the villain of the story, Pudge comes and attempts to behead him, resorting to this since his first kill attempt (bullet through heart) failed. Instead, he accidentally slices through Rachael.

In the intermittent confusion, Pudge escapes and Rachael is "turned" into a vampire by Etienne, who feels responsible for her death wound. Later, we will find out that Etienne also liked her from the very beginning. A vampire can only "turn" one lifemate because of population limiting reasons. (Incidentally, only one baby is allowed per 100 years.)

More technical details: much of the blood in the transfusion comes from IV's hooked to bags of blood. Sands' vampires have fangs which "jump out" at the sight of blood. Apparently, these fangs work with straws, quite fortunate, for the vampires who don't like the taste of blood.

When Rachael is conscious again after her transformation, she goes through pages and pages and PAGES of denial. (Pain to read through since her excuses were a bit off-beat.) A good fifth of the book is spent on denial and disbelief of vampires.

Despite thinking Etienne is some crazed cult maniac, she finds him to possess sex-appeal. They share dreams that are almost steamy, but not quite sexy. (Unfortunately, the same description goes for Sands' other explicit scenes.) After a while, Rachael accepts her new existence as a vampire. She is determined to continue her life as is despite her change in mortality.

Etienne, however, wishes to keep her in his home as long as possible. He makes her drink bad blood to deliberately sicken her, so that she would be dependent on him for food. (A wee bit childish. We're talking an approx. 300 year old vampire trying to "trick" his lovemate, here...) On the other hand, "the Argeneau family," requires that Rachael be convinced to lie about Pudge kidnapping her in order to solve the problem of the assassin. Etienne postpones telling her this, and eventually, this leads to Rachael's distrust.

Apparently, Etienne is a solo game-programmer (which is rather unrealistic, nowadays). He created "Blood Lust," which just happens to be Rachael's favorite video game. This, along with other reasons, builds up Rachael's "liking" of Etienne. But, sad to say, there isn't really much love in this book, despite the title. There is, however, a whole lot of what seems like light infatuation and sex that's significant enough only for brief casual flings.

In Love Bites, Sands' romance abilities are really non-existent. There's a beach scene and underwater sex scene, but it's described bereft of the "umph" - for the lack of a better phrase - that a scene as emotional as that deserves. Although not as perverse as Bangs (Night Bites) to have shallow characters just lust after each other, yet act and think like children, Sands' characters tend to, also, think in crude ways.

I had to force myself to read through the bulk of the novel, telling myself that the sooner I'm done with this, the sooner I can focus fully on the next (and hopefully less horrid) book. Rachael's reasoning for a few chapters near the last part of the book deprecated to that of a 8 year old -- in language, as well as logic! I understand that writers have deadlines to meet, but having to distort what is supposed to be a college/med-school-educated character instead of a bit of revision just further destroys Rachael's character.

My rating for this book is primarily set by the lack of passionate-love-romance in the book. However, there are a few random perks that had me smiling.

The drinks offered by the Night Club were interesting, and if they were complemented with a bit more love in the resultant sex scenes, that might be worth an extra star. The vampire wedding was one of the better-written scenes, but the concept of such really detracts from the idea of a proper vampire... I guess the last bit would be my own personal requirement that vampires act a certain way -- I mean, the "creatures" in this book might as well be called nano-droids, rather than vampires.

The penis biting was a bit amusing, and perhaps one of the sexier, but still not really sexy scenes, as both characters end up sickened by the clash of nano's. Etienne's family discovering this first-hand, as they deliver the blood, is also worth a smile.

Note: Apparently, vampires cannot bite each other - as that would lead to a profusion of nano's in the biter's and ingestor's bloodstream. Nano's consume blood and if there are too many of them the vampire, who does not have enough blood to feed them, is weakened.

As for naming: a vampire named Lucern -- Lucerne? as in Safeway Select? Etienne already sounded too feminine to be a macho vamp name.

Anyway, if you're up for the steamy, brooding, intelligent/wise, *dark*, vampire of passion, love, and eternal nights - you won't find Him here; if you're not up for a light read with pathetic vampires, then skip this, rather than be wrongfully disappointed. (...)

reviewed by avi on November 25, 2006 6:54 AM

Thumb_up
Thumb_down

0%
0%
So the plot's a little predictable. That's not why you read romance in the first place, is it? It's the romp on the way through that draws you in! That being said, I can write this without any guilt. I personally prefer comedy to drama anyday, and Sands' delivers this quite well. While the editorial posted by Amazon scoffs at one vampire's surfer/hip lingo, I personally found it quite funny. Maybe it's because I grew up with 90210 and Saved by the Bell, but I love valley lingo because of its absurdity. Vampires who wallow in their own damnation are no fun at all. And that's what this novel is: FUN. Don't expect anything that will knock you to the floor laughing (Single White Vampire is better for that), but this is a cute bit of fluff that's great for rainy day reading.
reviewed by crafty1 on November 27, 2006 11:33 AM

Thumb_up
Thumb_down

0%
0%
If you're looking for a Para-romance/comedy with a great family then you'll enjoy this series: ("A Quick Bite" (read them in this order), "Love Bites", "Single White Vampire", & "Tall, Dark and Hungry"). I did have to remind myself to stop comparing these stories to the more maudlin Vamp books by authors like Christine Feehan or Sherrilyn Kenyon whom have both created such awesome worlds, and whose books are full of action and suspense. When I read a "Vampire" book I'm used to expecting magic and suspense, shape shifting, "Evil" bad guys, etc. But while these stories are just about relationship development, it's a refreshing change. I just love this family! Yes, there was a comical vampire hunter in Love Bites but as far as vampirism; she takes a more comical route, which is fun and different. They preferred bagged blood as opposed to biting (which they considered "out of fashion" unless it was an emergency), which for me did seem to take a bit of the intimacy out of it. But it works, because there's just enough "nibbling" between just the right people. These heroes's were also not very "Alpha" men, as some would expect from this type of book. Greg was a psychologist, Etienne was a video game inventor, Lucern was an author, and Bastien was a businessman. There were only three instances where Greg, Etienne and then Lucern were put in "dangerous" positions where they encountered a vampire hunter (which was more comical than anything else). In "Tall, Dark and Hungry" there was absolutely nothing. But, like I said, these stories are not to be missed, all of the characters were great, and I'm really looking forward to the upcoming secondary characters stories, hopefully Thomas will be next, he's such a "Charmer!"
reviewed by madfool on November 27, 2006 8:15 PM

search

 
 

browse

book tags