12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
even more riveting entertainment, September 22, 2006
This review is from: Bound In Flesh (Paperback)
This book, similar in ilk, surpasses its predecessor. To set first-comers expectations, please see the lot of Bound in Blood reviews.
There is an *unmistakeable* leap forward in quality of writing here -- I could have written the first book, but not this -- and an equally unmistakeable lapse in quality of editing. It's not grammar, as another review bemoans, but density of prose that makes for occasional discomfort.
Your life won't change, but enjoy. And enjoy the growth of true talent. Congratulations!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bound In Flesh, October 10, 2006
This review is from: Bound In Flesh (Paperback)
BOUND IN FLESH, the second installment in Lord's epic vampire saga (reportedly a five book series), raises him to the zenith of the modern vampire fiction mountain. This may be one of the most inventive takes on the classical vampire archetype I've read in many years. Not since Anne Rice's classic vampire fiction have I found myself so immersed in a fictional vampire world.
In the first novel, BOUND IN BLOOD, we met Jean-Luc Courbet (Jack to his friends and victims), a seductive predatory gay vampire living in New York City. On the international lame from his murderous mother, he played 'serial killer' across the Big Apple, dining on the hottest of NYC gay society. As the victims piled up, the story came to an end in true tragically operatic fashion, a literally fiery denouement.
BOUND IN FLESH flashes forward a month, and Jack's last victim, ex-cop Michael O' Donald, finds that his dead lover is only the beginning of his problems, as vampire slave Claude Halloran entraps him and plans to use him to finally destroy Jack's super powerful monster of a mom, Noel Courbet.
This tale alone would have made a decent enough story to captivate his fans, but, for Lord, that's just the tip of the fang. From France to New York, and then to The City of Sin, BOUND IN FLESH runs the gambit, from soulful introspection, as O' Donald must come to grips with his new undead powers and limitations, to the fantastical in the shape of Purity St. Martin, The Red Witch, and Baum and White, freakishly tall albino undead twin lovers who oversee all of Jack's legacy and estate, inhuman creatures with their agenda.
Jack and Claude form a union of sorts, and switch their old bodies for new (now Apollo and Loki) to become the toast of Las Vegas as a duo of impossible and mysterious show magicians. O' Donald and Purity form their own union to hunt down the vampires and destroy their evil plans to perform a Black Mass to gain ultimate undead power. We have blood, lust, magic and betrayals enough to keep any Greek tragedian racing through to the last page. The end will not disappoint even the most jaded of vampire fiction fans.
With BOUND IN FLESH, Lord changes the pace of the story, dropping most of the ponderous sex scenes from BOUND IN BLOOD, and using more dialogue to carry the exposition. Proving himself more than a 'vampire writer', or even an eroticist, with this newest installment, he impresses that even the stall tropes of the weary vampire sub-genre have yet to be completely sucked dry. Using a classical style- with just enough sexual edginess to titillate- he manages to break beyond the standard horror fare to create his own fiction- an admixture of horror and fantasy, and undeniably his forte. His characters are flawed beings, and can never know perfection, but move on instinct and emotion. His villains are more than simplistic bloodsuckers looking for a fresh meal; these creatures are Machiavellian masters infused with immense mental and physical powers. And it is during these moments, that we see what a true classical education can do for a serious examination of good and evil. There are many emotional levels to his villains, more so even than his undead hero, Michael. Acceptance leads to rage; rage leads to a cool clinical dissection of human life. To his lead villain, Apollo (once Jean-Luc), death is a means to an end- not an end in itself- and he undergoes several transformations to illustrate his newfound belief in something beyond even himself. Flesh and mind are paper barriers, to be ripped apart for discovery's sake.
Lord also takes time to examine the modern incarnation of Goth culture, a fetish-like underground movement that has embraced Rice's fiction with childlike acceptance. A once literate cult of dark music and bleakly existential literature, now sadly a pitiable reflection of its former self, Lord creates a sensual master and servant scenario to illustrate this modern disconnection with Old Goth vs. New Goth. His 'children of the night' posers become the ultimate, and willing, fodder for Apollo and Loki's dreams for world domination, as they trade in their self perpetuated shadows of the dance club world for the true blackness of death and eternal hunger.
If this second novel illustrates what's coming down the pike from this talented writer of dark semi-classical fiction, then one can only salivate for the third in the series. I have high hopes what may lie beyond in Lord's fantastically dark worldview.
--Nickolas Cook
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No