|
|
|
|
|
|
After Twilight written by Amanda Ashley, Christine Feehan, Ronda Thompson Studio : Love Spell by Love Spell Publisher : Love Spell Released : 2001-09-10 Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days Number of Items : 1 EAN : 9780505524508 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 33 reviews)
List Price : $7.99 Our Price : $4.00
|
|
| |
|
Product Description |
|
Three of romance's hottest bestselling authors -- Amanda Ashley, Christine Feehan, and Ronda Thompson -- invite you to explore the dark side, to taste the forbidden, to dive into danger with heroes who fire the blood and lay claim to the soul in these striking tales of sensual passion. A man hunts for a woman. Yet what if he is no ordinary male, but a predator in search of prey? A dark soul looking for the light? A vampire, a werewolf, a mythic being who strikes fear into the hearts of mortals? When day fades into night, when fear becomes fascination, when the swirling seduction of everlasting love overcomes the senses, it must be after twilight. |
| |
|
| |
|
decent paranormal anthology |
***½ "Masquerade" by Amanda Ashley.
This is a pretty standard vampire romance, with the added theme of the Phantom of the Opera--the heroine's in the chorus of the play, and the vampire hero identifies with the phantom. I appreciated the believability of the romance: he asks for her autograph, then invites her for drinks, and they begin spending more and more time together. I'm not, however, a fan of vampires who hate their un-lives, and the method of cure in this one was just a wee bit cheesy.
___________
****½ "Dark Dream" by Christine Feehan.
This is one of Feehan's Carpathian stories. Falcon is one of the Ancients the old Prince sent out to fight vampires, and he's on his way back to the Carpathian mountains for one last look at his homeland before ending his life (he's close to turning), when he unexpectedly discovers his lifemate. Sara has been hunted by a powerful vampire for the past 15 years, and when she and Falcon first meet, she tries to protect him. I think this is one of my favorites of this series. The writing, at least for the first 2/3 of the story, is Feehan's best--even the dialogue, which normally bothers me. But mostly, I like these characters. Sara is strong without being stupid about it, and Falcon, amazingly, trusts and respects her and doesn't try to control her or be overprotective. (shocking behavior for a Carpathian)
_____________
**** "Midnight Serenade" by Ronda Thompson.
The hero's a werewolf/veterinarian, and the heroine's a wildlife advocate. This story was more emotional, with the hero hating that he becomes a monster during the full moon, and worrying that he's infected the heroine. Both characters' emotions and motivations were very clear, and I could really get into their heads. I loved this one... until the ending. |
| |
|
Christine Feehan Fan - Carpathian Series |
|
I love the Carpathian series from Christine Feehan. But I was a litlle dismayed when I bought the anthology "Dark Dreamers", then ordered the "After Twilight" anthology from Americancivilwar, and it turned out the CF short stories were the same. |
| |
|
Only one out of the three stories was worth reading |
In Masquerade, Jason Blackthorne has spent the last three hundred years filling his time with different hobbies in order to drive away the empty loneliness that haunts him. That is, until he met Leanne. She immediately knows in her heart that she was born to love him. Jason, however, is desperate to drive her away despite his love for her. Their struggles will climax in a decision that Jason must make: Make Leanne his own for all eternity or sacrifice his life for her.
Dark Dream is a sensuous love story between an ancient Carpathian warrior named Falcon, and a psychic named Sara. Sara has spent fifteen years on the run from a ruthless and powerful vampire who murdered her family. She runs into Falcon in a dark alleyway and her life is changed forever. Fifteen hundred years ago, Falcon wrote a diary and dedicated it to his lifemate, a woman he knew he would never know because of the mission on which he has dedicated his life. Sara found the diary in a dig in Egypt and has kept it by her side, knowing on some level of her consciousness that the diary was written specifically for her. The vampire who has stalked Sara is now very close and Falcon is Sara's only hope of escape.
Midnight Serenade begins with hunters stalking a wolf. The hunters are in the process of killing it when Stephanie Shane, a wildlife researcher, steps in and saves him. In the process of administering first aid, she is bitten and the wolf makes his escape. Stephanie, however, tracks the blood stains to the house of the local vet, named Rick Donavon. He's there of course but there's no sign of a wolf. Rick and Stephanie are drawn toward each other, despite their heated arguments. Like in Masquerade, the story climaxes in a life or death decision for Rick: Should he sacrifice his life to save Stephanie or make her his own?
Masquerade is pretty good. It's well written, plot is solid and even the prose is adequate. My only complaint is with character development, but the problem could also be with over-editing. Jason easily comes alive, his emotions jump out of the pages, but Leanne is quite the opposite. The focus is heavily on Jason, but since Leanne comes across as a two-dimensional, shallow character, the story isn't balanced very well.
Dark Dream, I think, is the best story in this book. Christine Feehan's prose is, as usual, exemplary. She develops her characters and her plot very well and you easily lose yourself in the story.
Midnight Serenade, in my opinion, is the weakest of the three. The prose is not very good at all. I found trouble relating to the characters. It was written with a heavy focus on showing what the characters were doing but not what they're feeling.
Overall I thought this was one of the better anthologies I've read in this genre. It seems writing short stories is not an easy task since you have to condense so much of the story into a small number of pages, which is why I don't really care to read short stories written by many of my favorite authors. I much prefer full-length novels. I think, however, you'll find this an entertaining and easy read if you can overlook some of the shortcomings mentioned above.
|
| |
|
Feehan does it again. |
|
This book is interesting in that it highlights the ancients that were sent out before the time period of the other books. |
| |
|
Could NOT Put this one Down! |
|
This is my first time reading Amanda Ashley & Rhonda Thomson, but definitely not my last! Both are now that greatest of all finds--new favorite authors! I can't remember the last time I read a collection of short stories, but I wanted to sample these authors in hopes of finding more paranormal romances to enjoy. I'm new to this genre, the closest I came was Rice's vampire series, now seen as incomparable in excitement, sensuality, and satisfaction. I've seen the future & it's not Rice or her Lestat. Thomson's Werewolf story is the most believable, moving and romantic of its type, unique as incredible as that seems, for this wolf-man is almost too human, & sexy is an understatement. I may never go back to mere human romances again. I hope this author keeps her unique edge and continues to breathe life into such marvelous character-driven stories. Amanda Ashley creates a female antagonist, Leanne, who is a bit too incredible & perfect to believe in fully, plus annoyingly reluctant one minute, accepting too much too soon the next. Jason, not an imaginative name for a vampire from Europe, & Leanne go back & forth constantly--vowing to never see each other again, only to fall back into each other's arms repeatedly--a tiring plot design of crisis & fulfillment that keeps irritatingly interrupting the reader's escape into the story. This seems a lazy, template-driven way to create tension to me. Still, this is a sensual fantasy fairy tale that will satisfy almost any appetite, though the climax may seem effortful once it's over. Ashley delivers on her promises predictably--I'm still hoping to find an author who will surprise me with an unpredictable ending in this genre. I will peek at Ashley's other paranormals to see if she's a worthy new favorite author to explore fully. Feehan satisfies completely with another fantastic book from her "Dark" series. Dark Dreams features a powerful ancient Carpathian guardian of his people, about to walk into the sun & end his existence. He has given up in his search of the Light lifemate who could save him from becoming the very evil he hunts & destroys. Same exact plot, just different names and details. We get exactly what we expect in Feehan's Dark series, and the climactic moment, while even thrilling at times & eventually satisfying, gets as stale as monogamy in a loveless marriage after awhile. What makes up for that predictability is Feehan's expert character development which makes us care about & love them like we would a chosen family. The humor is perfectly blended and laugh-out-loud hilarious. The romance & sensuality more fulfilling, detailed & REAL than any other in this genre. Still, the laziest phrase authors use in ALL of these novels, though gratefully Feehan uses it less than most, "he deepens the kiss", turns me off like a cold shower. Please authors & EDITORS, delete that phrase from your stories--it adds nothing to our knowledge of the characters or story, and is just unnecessary sloth. It is exciting to read each author's different idea of what would make mythic monsters romantic and acceptable to the human characters & readers alike. I'm addicted to this new-for-me genre because these authors DO make suspending reality fairly easy, an escape sorely needed in today's world of human monster's with no morals. Here instead, we are confronted with morally good creatures traditionally seen as monsters that are anything BUT. Thanks to these three authors for introducing me to a new source of pleasure--short novel length stories packed into a single-book bargain. I look forward to filling my selves with more books from all three! Like those potato chips we can't eat just one of, these stories are irresistable. |
| |
|
|
|