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Review: Vampire Academy, Richelle Mead

Rose and Lissa are best friends.  Lissa is one of the Moroi vampires, while Rose is a dhampir, learning to become a guardian and protect Lissa from the Strigoi, the evil vampires.  Convinced that someone was out to get Lissa, the two fled St. Vladimir’s Academy, living on their own and evading capture.  That only lasted so long, however, and now the girls are back at school.  Sexy dhampir guardian Dimitri found the girls and while acting as guardian for Lissa, begins to train Rose to become a far better guardian than she was before.  In the face of a new danger, can Rose keep Lissa safe while denying her newfound attraction for the older Dimitri?

Vampire Academy is a fun start to what appears to be a promising YA series.  For once, it isn’t particularly Twilight-esque and I appreciated its originality with the two different kinds of vampires and the dhampirs as the guardians of the Moroi vampires.  It’s a well done world.  I always enjoy books set in boarding schools.  They provide such a terrific setting with all the characters in one place, with a reason for them to be parentless, and I find that I often wish I could go there myself (Hogwarts is the best example of this).  While I don’t think I want to attend St. Vladimir’s Academy, the setting worked perfectly and allowed all of the young drama to take a strong hold on the characters and their actions.

Rose is by far the strongest character in the book.  She is a vibrant teenager that visibly grows over the course of the book.  She is a bit promiscuous, but I like that she learned over the course of the novel how to be a better guardian and became much more of an adult.  Her priorities straightened out and her development was impressive and fluid.  I really liked her crush on Dimitri.  I think most teenage girls have an older man that they decide they love, so it humanizes her and gives the story an interesting direction to take for the next few books.  I’m really looking forward to seeing where it goes.  Lissa is a weaker heroine, in part because we see her only through Rose’s eyes.  She seems to be loyal and kind, but it’s harder to get a grasp on her personality, although I loved her scenes with Christian when Rose was spying on them.

Overall, I really enjoyed this book.  It’s great YA urban fantasy and I’m looking forward to continuing the series.

I purchased this book. I’m an Amazon Associate.

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Library Loot: Week of Nov 1st, 2009

library-lootI have been very lazy with my Library Loot (hosted by Eva and Marg) posts lately.  The reason is because I’ve been using my husband’s computer.  It’s more powerful than my laptop and our flat is so small that I don’t need the portability, plus typing at the desk is better for my wrists.  My camera, however, uses an SD card that I can just plug into my laptop and get the pictures from, so I’ve long lost my camera cord, and that means I can’t get pictures onto this computer directly from it.  This computer does not have the slot for the SD card.  I’m generally too lazy to wait the ten minutes it takes to start up my laptop, upload the pictures, and then turn the thing off again right away.  So, I’m just using some cover pictures from Amazon today.  I hope no one minds!  This post covers a couple of trips.  Links on the pictures go to LibraryThing, in text go to Amazon through my Amazon Associates account.

From the big library:

  • Nocturnes, Kazuo Ishiguro – I already finished all the stories in this and am in the process of writing my review.  Ishiguro is one of my favorite authors and now I’ve read all of his books but The Unconsoled, which I have on my TBR pile.  This collection was not as good as the novels, but I’ll leave the rest for my post.
  • My Invented Country, Isabel Allende – This is  for the Women Unbound challenge.  I loved one of Allende’s later memoirs, so I’m looking forward to this.
  • The Tale of Murasaki, Liza Dalby – Same as above!  This is historical fiction, which I’m a little tired of, but hopefully medieval Japan will be different enough to captivate me.
  • The Borgia Bride, Jeanne Kalogridis – I got this out a couple weeks ago, before I realized I was tired of historical fiction, and it’s pretty big.  I may need to renew it.

And the smaller library:

  • The Dark Rose, Cynthia Harrod-Eagles – I waited for this second volume in the Morland Dynasty series for months in York and never got it.  Just found it on the shelf here, and was thrilled!
  • Wild Swans, Jung Chang – Another for the Women Unbound Challenge.
  • Brave New World, Aldous Huxley – I’ve been wanting to read this for years.

Have you taken anything interesting out of the library lately?

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