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9 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
BLOOD SPORT,
By
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
Amanda Peck has decided to leave her deadend job and abusive boyfriend. She packs a few belongings and heads out on the interstate to hitchhike. Her third ride turns out to be a killer with a literal taste for blood. Author VanBelkom has written a page turning vampire novel for those who like their vamps mean and scary instead of romantic. I would recommend this novel to fans of Richard Laymon and Simon Clark.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting and Horror,
By Natalie Reiss "Natalie" (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
I like this book it's great it has a lot of action and I was always anxious to see what happens next because it shows not to run away from your problems. It shows not to hitchhike & take rides from strangers. This is a horror book. The main character Amanda Peck is stupid of taking rides from strangers, what was she thinking. Did she even ask herself if she should take this ride, you never know if someone is crazy or not, she didn't even know him. I hate the way that Amanda had stayed with her boyfriend when meanwhile she was getting beating up with bruises. I also hat that her boyfriend gambles all the money away.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Down And Dirty Vampire,
By
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
Amanda is a Toronto waitress who has just been pushed a little too far. Without thinking things through, she leaves her mobile home and boyfriend and takes to hitchhiking. She soon realizes that she has no idea what she is doing and starts to hitch back. That is when she gets picked up by the wrong driver.Sharpe is a policeman who is looking for a serial killer. This killer drains his victims of their blood and dumps them by the highway. For some reason the bodies seem to get savaged by wolves. Now Amanda finds herself captive of a short, fat, balding truck driver who claims to be a vampire. He uses medical equipment to drink blood from her arm. Amanda must think quickly to try and outwit the vampire. Sharpe must get lucky to stop the body count from going up. This is a wonderful story that starts fast and keeps going. You find yourself rooting for Amanda and Sharpe and even for Amanda's downbeat boyfriend who was slapped by reality when Amanda disappeared. I will not give away the ending but it did follow the ideas in the book and was quite satisfying. If you like horror and/or vampires that don't fit previous stereotypes, this is one for you.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Bloodless Road is more like it,
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
While this book was actually entertaining I cant seem to be a little put off with a few details.(Im sure Im not the only one) Not one to be too picky however, this book is entertaining and keeps you reading. Not your average vampire book. A refreshing new twist on the undead. Recomended for light, superfast reading!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fast-paced, vivid, compelling,
By Robert J. Sawyer "Science Fiction writer" (Mississauga, ON, Canada) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
Edo van Belkom turns in another of his signature fast-paced, vivid, and compelling modern horror novels. He's a past Bram Stoker Award winner and Aurora Award winner, and you can see why in this taut tale. The pages just fly by in this loving homage to all the vampire stories van Belkom clearly grew up enjoying. Sink your teeth into this one -- you won't be sorry!
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Intriguing idea, but not executed well,
By
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
I usually avoid books and movies about vampires. I plan on reading Bram Stoker's "Dracula" some day, and I might peruse a few other notable titles in this huge genre at some point, but I am not particularly a fan of the vampires. I blame writers and filmmakers for my lethargy about this topic. Far too often, unoriginality rules the roost when it comes to vampires. I am weary of hearing about or seeing yet another dapper duffer lounging around a castle luring in the virginal girls from the village for another night of seductive bloodletting. I recently saw a couple of good movies about vampires, Jean Rollin's "Fascination" and Mark Pirro's "A Polish Vampire in Burbank," but those two films took a different approach to the topic. So did Edo Van Belkom's "Blood Road," a mass-market paperback about a Dracula type roaming the highways in a sixteen wheeler. Still, I ended up reading the book more due to its setting (Canada) and the idea of trucking serving as a central plot point. I like reading anything about our neighbor to the north, and I always thought a horror story set in a trucking environment would make a good story, so off I went for a few hours with Van Belkom's book tucked securely under my arm. I also gave the author a chance since I enjoyed a short story of his included in a horror anthology called "The Darker Side."Amanda Peck dreams of one day leaving her pedestrian existence in Parry Sound, Ontario for life in the big city. Her wearisome job as a waitress at a truck stop, slinging hash while chatting with guys named Cookie, just isn't doing it for her anymore. Too, her live in boyfriend Ron Stinson, a one time up and coming hockey star who has since fallen into a pit of alcoholism and gambling, is wearing a little thin. When Amanda returns from work one day to find Ron again gambling away all of their money, she decides to strike out on her own. Leaving her trailer far behind, Peck hitchhikes out to the highway with only the haziest idea of where she is going. After accepting rides from a couple of truckers, Amanda decides that what she is doing is downright ridiculous and starts the trek back to the trailer. Big mistake. On the way home, Peck accepts a ride from Konrad Valeska, a repulsive yet somehow magnetic figure who drives a fancy black truck for a company called Tucana Northern. Amanda isn't in the truck for long at all before she realizes the folly of her situation. Valeska is a vampire who cruises the highways of Canada picking up hitchhikers so he can feed. He straps his latest recruit to a special table kept in his cab, feeding on her blood at his leisure through a needle and tube device. Valeska foregoes the usual bite method because he is old and his fangs are rotting (!). Vampire Valeska possesses a few of the traits we usually associate with Dracula. He can hypnotize his victims, responds negatively to holy water and crosses, avoids the sunlight, and must feed on human blood to survive. That last item is where the whole trucking scheme fits into the picture. By constantly staying on the move, Valeska can abduct and dispose of bodies over a wide area, thus eluding the authorities in an age of instantaneous computer communications and wanted posters. The police are on to the vampire, though, as five bodies found on the side of the road bring in the local cops. The corpses, mysteriously drained of their life giving fluids and ravaged by wolves, present an ongoing threat. Constable Sharpe, the cop on the case who loves his coffee as much as he thrives on bringing in the bad guys, knows Canada has a serial killer on its hands. At least he thinks it's a serial killer until Amanda Peck escapes from her captor and tells her weird story to the disbelieving police and her doubtful boyfriend Ron. What follows could well give the young lady the title "Amanda Peck, Vampire Killer." The best element of "Blood Road" is the whipsaw fast pacing. This book movies so fast for its 300+ pages that I felt like I read it in a couple of hours. You won't wait around for anything important to happen with this story. I liked the Canadian environment too although the tale could have just as easily unfolded in the United States. Regrettably, the good is too often marred by the bad. Plot holes so huge you could drive a truck through them (no pun intended) spring up throughout the book like noxious weeds. Perhaps the most noticeable moment when I went "huh?" occurred when Sharpe investigates the trucking company where Valeska works. The cop goes there, asks a bunch of questions, and learns Valeska will probably show up to load his truck at some point in the near future. Away goes Sharp, off to investigate another angle of the case, AND HE DOESN'T ASSIGN ANY POLICE OFFICERS TO WATCH THE TRUCKING COMPANY! And this is after he suspects Konrad's involvement in the unsolved murders. Sure enough, Valeska stops by the yard, commits a crime, and continues cruising on down the highway without a care in the world. Still, I couldn't help but like the book despite this problem and a few others-like inadequate character development, the obsession with coffee, and the rather tame conclusion. I wouldn't pass up the opportunity to read another one of Edo Van Belkom's books in the future, but I fervently hope his other works avoid the problems found in this one.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
van Belkom is improving... slowly.,
By
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
Edo van Belkom, Blood Road (Pinnacle, 2004)
Edo van Belkom's Scream Queen is the epitome of the empty calorie novel; you can read it in one gulp, it's momentarily satisfying, and an hour later, you've forgotten it existed and are hungry for something else. His newest offering, Blood Road, is a bit more nutritious, but still qualifies as beachwear. There's a serial killer preying on the highways of Canada. He just dumped his fifth body in a farmyard outside Parry Sound, a small village in Toronto. Coincidentally, a waitress in Parry Sound has had it with her alcoholic, abusive boyfriend (because, after all, all abusers are alcoholics-- cf. The Butterfly Effect) and wants to get out of town. So despite the murders, she heads for the highway and sticks out her thumb. You can see the collision course a mile away. That's the problem with emotional-shortcut writing (e.g., "all abusers are alcoholics, and all alcoholics are abusers"); it tends to lead to predictability. When you're used to using emotional shortcuts to get your point across, when you have to actually work with foreshadowing, it comes off as clumsy and amateur. That Amanda and the serial killer are going to meet is one example (the nature of the serial killer, which is obvious from reading the back jacket, but not revealed until about a hundred pages into the book, is another-- but there is an amusing twist to it); the book abounds with others. In other words, van Belkom still has some (okay, a whole lot of) cliché and predictability problems. But one major improvement over Scream Queen is that his characters are less two-dimensional. The minor players are paper-thin, but the majors have gone from cardboard to masonite. It's simple, it's readable, it's relatively silly. It'll take more than an afternoon to get through this one, but you'll still be left with a sweet aftertaste and a rumble in the belly. It'll take about two hours this time. But it's getting better. ***
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Non-romantic vampire,
By
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
I loved this book - no Lestat here, just brutal bloodletting. The vamp in question is fat, balding, mean, stinky...and lethal. Think Max Schreck meets the Fat White Vampire. Not for the faint of heart, but for fans of nosferatu-type vamps, a must!
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
lifeless vampire story,
By David Group (Buffalo, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Road (Paperback)
Hitchhiking waitress meets vampire trucker, reader meets Sandman.And that about sums it up. This novel is too generic. This novel has about zero originality, from the stereotyped characters to the paint-by-numbers plot. If this were a movie, it would be one of those low-budget, late-night time-fillers that air in the wee hours hours on USA or SCI-FI. |
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Blood Road by Edo van Belkom (Paperback - March 1, 2004)
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