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Midnight Embrace [Mass Market Paperback]

Amanda Ashley (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 2002
ANALISA...He whispers her name, and it echoes back to him on the wings of the night. She is so young, so alive. She radiates warmth and goodness, chasing the coldness from his being, banishing the loneliness from his soul. In four centuries of prowling, the shadows have brought him few pleasures, but the nearness of her soft lips, her warm throat, promise sweetness beyond imagining. She has wandered unchaperoned to the moonlit tomb where he takes refuge by day, little suspecting that with his eyes alone he can mesmerize her, compel her to do his bidding. Yet he will not take her life's blood by force or trickery. He will have it as a gift, freely given, and in exchange, he will make her wildest dreams come true.
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 378 pages
  • Publisher: Love Spell (February 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0505524686
  • ISBN-13: 978-0505524683
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #545,811 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable, but pretty forgettable, July 8, 2002
This review is from: Midnight Embrace (Mass Market Paperback)
Analisa, close to death from an epidemic, is saved by some means she doesn't understand. Swept from her hospital bed to a grand gentleman's house and given every luxury she could want, she wonders why the house's owner, Lord Allesandro de Avallone (Lord Allesandro or Lord Avallone? Ashley seems to think that these titles are the same, though they are not) has given her all this. And why Allesandro avoids her, seeing her only for a few minutes at night and is never around during the day.

And then one night when she's caught in the forest in a rainstorm, she stumbles on his secret lair, finding him close to death after an attack from another vampire. Without giving her any indication of what's going on, he feeds from her in order to live. And from then on, she knows that he is a vampire.

And from then on, this book is pretty much like A Darker Dream, though with the addition of an evil vampire villain and a housekeeper instead of a butler who knows Allesandro's secret. The housekeeper is in love with him - a rival for Analisa? Well, not really, though Ashley tries to make it appear so at one point. But other elements are indeed the same: the vast luxuries, Allesandro's frequent attempts to send Analisa away or to abandon her himself, his frequent attacks of conscience when he is driven by the need to feed on her, his demand that she at least once stay by his side when he sleeps during the day, and so on.

Well, Ashley writes Gothic vampire novels, so it shouldn't really be surprising that there are similarities - though even still, neither this nor A Darker Dream match up to Embrace The Night. I would like to see a novel from Ashley in which the heroine is *not* a naive, innocent and poverty-stricken seventeen-year-old, and in which the gulf between hero and heroine is not exacerbated by his wealth, his intelligence and education and familiarity with the ways of high society. Her heroes do begin to run the risk of appearing like paedophiles.

Finally, this book, we are told, is set in late Victorian times - probably around the 1880s, though this isn't specified. And yet the 'feel' is very much of the Regency period: around the 1800s. The balls, masquerades and Society rules are very much of the Regency (though, Ashley, it was no more than two dances, not three). The period in which this book is set was of the Industrial Revolution: where is the sense that this is a time of new, life-changing inventions? Where are the gas lights that all wealthy people had in their homes by this time, and which were installed in the streets in the posh parts of London? Rail travel was also in its heyday, and the rich rarely travelled by horse-drawn carriage any more. Ashley needs to do a little more research on her period, instead of assuming that 'one size fits all' when it comes to historical England.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A Review of A Darker Dream-er... Midnight Embrace, February 24, 2002
By 
L. J Lewis "Miss Amii" (Collierville, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Midnight Embrace (Mass Market Paperback)
Deja Vu! When I finished Midnight Embrace I felt as if I had been in a time warp because this book is basically a rewrite of A Darker Dream with elements from some of Ashley's other vampire novels.
The novel starts with orphan Analisa Matthews dying of plague. On a whim, a mysterious stranger gives her a strange elixer that saves her life. The elixer is vampire blood. (Deeper than the night) Vampire Alesandro de Avallone, charmed by her innocence, becomes her mysterious and indulgent benefactor. (A Darker Dream) Analisa quickly discovers his secret when she stumbles upon his lair. Still, she can't help but love Alesandro and he can't stop himself from loving her. Then they start going to the opera and parties together and things get pretty inane while Alesandro atempts to drive Analisa away from him.
This book is only a slightly better rewrite of A Darker Dream with one exception, the villainous vampire Rodrigo who is basically the Italian version of Alexi from Shades of Grey. Instead of adding suspence to the story, he made it drag out longer and some of the stuff he did didn't pan out, like his aprentice vampire. He gets a whole short chapter were he makes one but then we never hear about it again.
The first hundred pages and the last fifty are pretty interesting, but the majority of the middle was a complete bore. Basically scenes in Ashley's previous books are rewritten to fit into this one. (Scene were heroine spends time in vampire lair during day sleep. The ill fated suitor meant to make vampire hero jealous.)It became a game to pick out the similarities.
I can't really recommend this book because of it's startling lack of originality. If you've never read an Ashley book.. Give it a try! But if you have read A Darker Dream...
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Okay, but not okay, September 5, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Midnight Embrace (Mass Market Paperback)
It's nice that some romance novels have a different plot than just a hot and heavy romance. Midnight Embrace has a hero (Alesandro, a vampire), a heroine (Analisa, a mortal), and a villain (Rodrigo, a rival vampire). But these characters and the plot don't seem to be as strong as it could be.

Rodrigo has been hunting Alesandro for four hundred years (and you can never forget the four hundred years; Ashley says it too often, as well as other things). He's angry at Alesandro because he drove his own sister (whom Rodrigo was in love with) to insanity, then death. This is a little bit difficult to swallow. Four hundred years?! You'd think Alesandro would be dead.

I'm not quite sure how Analisa loves Alesandro. Just because he took her in, is my guess. Now she loves his body and feels unsafe without him. I really don't understand where her love comes from. Alesandro's love for her is a bit far-fetched, too. Her blood is the sweetest he's ever tasted to date, and it calls to him. He finds himself falling in love with her. But Ashley never goes into it any deeper than that. WHY does he love her and vice versa? We never know.

The one thing I have to fault Amanda Ashley for is her repeatitive useage of words. Example: "Tall, broad-shouldered, and dark", the description of Alesandro is overused WAY too much, even tot the end. "Four hundred years" and "four centuries" is used WAY too much, again, to the end. The servants ask too many of the same questions that you may have read three or so pages earlier. Other pages will go by and you'll read the same phrase again and again and again. It's not a very successful interest-keeper to the reader; rather, it comes on as deathly annoying. It certainly didn't float my boat smoothly.

Overall, the story is doable, though it could be stronger than what it is. It's just a bit too long. We know by the middle of the book that Alesandro doesn't want to have to compromise or destroy Analisa mentally or physically. We know that she doesn't want to leave him. Yet Ashley insists on turning to that same channel throughout the book, which makes you feel as though you're running in a circle. When's it gonna end?!

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