Returning to America from his college in London in order to fight in the American Revolution, Jonathan Barrett leaves behind his unearthly girlfriend Nora, a vampire, and takes with him an insatiable thirst for blood.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Well written, sexy...a good vampire fantasy.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Red Death (Vampire Files) (Paperback)
This book kept me guled until I was done. Jonathan Barrett, the unsung "hero" experiences first hand the lure and lust of the vampire world. Reading through the pages it was if I were there on the hot summer days, and erie nights. I will say I found the ending a little weak, but it sure left things open for P.N. Elrods next book. Worth the time!
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
one of my all-time favorite books,
By Melissa (nanaimo, canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Death: Being the First Book in the Adventures of Jonathan Barrett, Gentleman Vampire (Paperback)
This book introduces Jonathan Barrett, who we meet briefly in Bloodcircle (Elrod's 3rd Vampire Files novel). Jonathan is much less cynical and polished than Jack, and also quite a bit younger (only seventeen as the story opens). We get exposed to his family (his mother, father, sister and cousin) and also see how he came to be a vampire, from the very beginning (falling in love with a strange girl, Nora) to waking up in his coffin and convincing his family and the townspeople he isn't dead. I loved this book not only because it presents the American Revolution from a decidedly anti-Washington view (very uncommon in historical fiction) but because unlike the Vampire Files, in this book we see Jonathan as human. He's young, he falls in love, doesn't get along with his mother, goes away to university, makes new friends, and 'learns the world.' The changes he makes while he is alive mirror the kinds of things he goes through after death-both are a type of change, of growing up. And unlike Jack Fleming, Jonathan has no idea what's happened to him when he wakes up in his coffin. He doesn't know where he is, what he is, why he survived his death, what he has to do to continue to survive, or how to judge and use his strength and gifts, and what his weaknesses are. The book ends not with him learning those things, but with him accepting that there is still a lot he doesn't know.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good vampire book,
By Ted Lambert (Ann Abror, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Red Death (Vampire Files) (Paperback)
Having read the vampire files I had high expectations for this bookand was not disappointed. I have one suggestion for anyone planning on reading Red Death, and that is to buy the next one in line Death and the Maiden. This book gets you so involved in the main character that you may find it hard to sleep at night as you lay awake wondering what happens next.
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