Book Review
Aug. 7th, 2007 08:31 pmSunshine
by Robin McKinley
This vampire novel was surprisingly fresh and fascinating. The setting is more or less the modern world, but as it might be if things like demons, peris, were-creatures, magic use, and vampires were all real and had always been. The heroine, Sunshine, is a punky, offbeat baker at her family's coffeehouse. Because of her unprecedented survival of an encounter with vampires, Sunshine is thrown headlong into both her own magic-handling abilities and the world of the Others (non and part human supernatural beings). One of the strengths of the book is that Sunshine is able to be powerful and heroic while still being disturbed by and scared shitless of everything she's gotten herself into. In fact, all the characters are very well-written, especially for this genre. The other strength is that McKinley does not fall prey to the last couple of decades' fascination with vampires as sexy, angsty, goth anti-heroes. McKinley's vampires are largely monstrous, predatory, and inhuman. They are horrors, yet without being simplistic bogeymen or simple villains. At times, I think McKinley is even offering some subtle commentary on the sexy vampire trend.
by Robin McKinley
This vampire novel was surprisingly fresh and fascinating. The setting is more or less the modern world, but as it might be if things like demons, peris, were-creatures, magic use, and vampires were all real and had always been. The heroine, Sunshine, is a punky, offbeat baker at her family's coffeehouse. Because of her unprecedented survival of an encounter with vampires, Sunshine is thrown headlong into both her own magic-handling abilities and the world of the Others (non and part human supernatural beings). One of the strengths of the book is that Sunshine is able to be powerful and heroic while still being disturbed by and scared shitless of everything she's gotten herself into. In fact, all the characters are very well-written, especially for this genre. The other strength is that McKinley does not fall prey to the last couple of decades' fascination with vampires as sexy, angsty, goth anti-heroes. McKinley's vampires are largely monstrous, predatory, and inhuman. They are horrors, yet without being simplistic bogeymen or simple villains. At times, I think McKinley is even offering some subtle commentary on the sexy vampire trend.