Empire
Of The Vampire: Book One by Jay Kristoff
is
a complicated read. It is told from the perspective of a vampire hunter named Gabriel
who has been captured by vampires and is telling his life story to them. The
tale is told interrogation style and out of sequence. For example, one chapter
may be set in his childhood while the next chapter is two years prior to the
current interrogation. The vampire who is interrogating him is attempting to
find the Holy Grail and the person who was last known to be in possession of it
is Gabriel. The vampire claims to be a historian and just trying to write down
the tale of their greatest enemy.
Set in a medieval
fantasy world that has a quasi-Christian ordination that is a pseudo-Europe,
their sun faded out so the vampires were able to overrun the world. Because of
the faded sun that means there are periods of night and days that are not as
dark as night, plants have died, the world is getting colder, and vampires can
walk around during the non-night hours. Basically, what we have under a full
moon overhead on a cloudless night.
The tale is
about how Gabriel went from a devoted and respected member of a religious order
named the Silversaints, who fight vampires, to an outcast former member. Due
his circumstances beyond his control, he is forced to once again hunt vampires
though he does so without backup or support.
This is a book
for adult readers as the read is full of multiple and graphic sex scenes, graphic
violent deaths, and several graphic scenes of child abuse. This read is for
mature readers only and could be intense for some readers. There is frequent
cussing and numerous sex jokes. If you like dark or graphic jokes you should
get a kick out of some of the jokes here as they are very funny.
The story the
author tells in this dark book is not a happy one despite the humor. While utilizing
many clichés, there are original elements as well as work in this complicated read.
This is a long book that poses a bit of challenge to keep straight as the tales
moves around in time and is not laid out anything close to chronologically. There
are also some illustrated scenes that depict key moments in this 700 page plus book.
While the book is advertised in the blurb as illustrated, there are fewer than
twenty black and while illustrations.
Empire Of The Vampire: Book One by Jay Kristoff is the first book of a planned trilogy.
It came out earlier this year and I eagerly await the second book in this
series which is currently untitled. I highly recommend this read to fans of
dark fantasy who are okay with some horror elements as well as graphic elements
as noted above in the review.
Empire Of The Vampire: Book One
Jay Kristoff
https://jaykristoff.com/books/empire-of-the-vampire/empire-of-the-vampire/
St. Martin’s
Press
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250245298/empire-of-the-vampire
September 2021
ISBN: 978-1250245281
Hardback (also
available in audio, eBook, and paperback formats)
752 Pages
My reading copy came from the Polk Wisdom Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott A. Tipple
©2021
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