faeriemyst's Reviews > Bloodshot

Bloodshot by Cherie Priest

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290082
's review
Mar 02, 11

bookshelves: vampires, urban-fantasy, amazon-vine, own, creme-de-la-creme
Read from February 15 to 26, 2011

What a truly awesome and fresh take on vampires in the crowded genre of Urban Fantasy! The star of Bloodshot is vampire Raylene Pendle, a top thief of priceless artifacts, who takes on a case from another vampire. This vampire, Ian Stott, was blinded by a top-secret government program and wants Raylene to steal back papers dealing with those experiments. What follows is a fast-paced, scene-changing adventure filled with unique characters that fulfills everything the book promised and more.

Raylene is your typical vampire in a lot of ways: the sun gives her a nasty sunburn to the extent of death, there's no awakening to dusk after decapitation or going up in flames, and of course, she's preternaturally fast and strong. However, she differs in that she's paranoid, self-deprecating, neurotic, and a tad OCD. So while Raylene can kick some major ass and make sarcastic remarks like the rest of the UF heroines, she also second- (and third and fourth) guesses herself a lot and is always prepared for the worst, usually thanks to her quick wits and sometimes even to the helpful contents of her "go-bag". I found Raylene to be a terrific protagonist, and for someone who claims to be anti-social, she sure picks up a lot of "pet people" throughout the duration of the book, which makes her a big, warm, gooey marshmallow inside (even if she doesn't own up to the fact).

What did surprise me was how funny the book was. I laughed, giggled, chortled, snorted, and smiled (usually rather goofily) quite often (there was many a line that left me in hysterics -- good thing I was reading in the privacy of my own home). Judging by the cover, I expected a more serious and suspenseful read, but while I wouldn't say this was exactly light, it wasn't as heavy as I imagined either. The plot moves swiftly each step of the way and kept me glued to the pages; there wasn't one dull moment to be had. Every character that popped up in the book was interesting and fully fleshed out, no bores within these covers, and helped move the story along. The writing was great, from Raylene's first-person inner dialogue to the action scenes, not one thing bothered me overly much.

While there is a sense of closure to the book as a whole, the story is really just beginning and I am left eager (and impatient beyond belief) for the next installment, Hellbent (set to come out August 30, 2011). If one book can make you a fan of an author, surely this one did it for me. Cherie Priest created a great intro to a character whose very vitality is evident every page of this book and has made Raylene one of my new favorites in the UF field.

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Reading Progress

02/15/2011 page 133
37.0% "Raylene is a terrific protagonist, I especially love her self-deprecating sense of humor."
02/21/2011 page 250
70.0% "Sample quote: "Not unless they're magically tracking me by the pixie dust that spills out of my ass." (pg. 178) :D"
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Comments (showing 1-6 of 6) (6 new)

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Lolly's Ooh, this sounds like a good one! Now I'll have to see about picking me up a copy. :)


faeriemyst Yeah, but since I liked the book, you'll probably hate it. ;D


Lolly's Hey, now, that's not necessarily true! So far, I've never hated a book you've liked; my worst feelings towards a book have only been in the so-so range. :D


faeriemyst There's always a first time for everything. Are you sure? Maybe there's one we've forgotten? But don't go looking anything up! Let sleeping dogs lie. ;D


Lolly's I'm fairly sure, but, no, I won't go looking anything up. I don't want to rouse those mutts. ;D


faeriemyst Good. :)


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