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Thursday, August 13, 2009

The Reformed Vampire Support Group - by Catherine Jinks

This vampire book was different than any other vampire tale I'd read before. Instead of vampires being strong, powerful and menacing, vampirism is considered an infection that makes you sickly. Too much bright light makes you bleed from the eyes, you are often nauseous and throwing up blood, etc. Instead of becoming the strong version of whatever age you are, you stay in the exact same state. So if you are a 70 year old with a hunched back and feet problems, that's how you stay. The only time you might be stronger and menacing is if you drink human blood.

But that is where the Reformed Vampire Support Group comes in. Nina is a 15 year old (30-something vampire age) who weekly attends group therapy with a bunch of other vampires. The group is led by Father Ramon, and they focus on not succumbing to the desire to drink human blood, and on trying to be normal citizens without getting noticed. Despite that they are not really a threat to anyone, society still sees them as one, which probably isn't helped by the fictional vampire hero that Nina creates for the books she writes.

As they trudge through their weekly lives, Nina gets more and more annoyed with herself and the others and the state of their lives. But then someone in their group winds up staked, and everyone is immediately frightened that they might be next. Nina, Dave, Sanford and Father Ramon set off on a series of misadventures to try and figure out who the killer might be, and to prevent him from killing again.

They come across Nefly, an inept, super geeky vampire hunter, as well as the McKinnons, who are a father and son duo who exploit werewolves in fighting rings. They end up saving Reuben, the McKinnons' prize werewolf, as they try and stop Nefly, adding the McKinnons to their list of problems. Nina and a couple of the others find some strength in themselves they didn't know they had, and after a string of exciting turns, things things work out in the end.

This was a good read. It started a little slow, but once it got going was really very interesting and fun. I recommend it to anyone who is looking for a vampire book that's a little different than all the rest.