I am not an enormous fan of supernatural fiction in general, although I am drawn to stories that use the supernatural as a vehicle for exploring other elements that are common struggles for human nature. The reason I love the TV series "Being Human" (especially the UK version), is because of this--the idea that we all struggle, in some ways, to fight our worser nature and fit in with society, find our place.
I was recommended the Brethren series because of Brandon Noble--the main character of the first book (and I would argue, of the series as a whole, although I'm not sure if the author would agree with me)--because he isn't your typical romantic hero--he's definitely not your typical vampire hero. Why? Because Brandon is both deaf and mute, the result of a childhood accident in which his throat was slit and his head was battered when he accidently stumbled on a robbery in progress.
What makes the Brethren series compelling is the lore itself, for one thing, and Brandon, on the other. I'll address the mythos first.
Reinke has tried very hard to create her OWN vampire world, separate from other sources (although you can maybe see some of her influences). The Brethren, as they are called, are a race of vampires, almost another species of beings, separate from humans, who have lived in rural Kentucky isolated for hundreds of years. The Bretheren trace their roots back to Medieval France, and live large houses on a nearly 2000-acre estate in the heart of Kentucky horse country. Here, they have amassed multibilllion dollar fortunes in the horse-breeding/racing and bourbon industries.
Vampirism is not a disease, which I found refreshing; instead, it is genetic--and the Brethren Elders have worked hard to try to maintain the purity of their race by preventing inbreeding amongst themselves as much as possible while avoiding "diluting the blood" with humans. Several families each live in their own large manor houses, with all males and their wives and children living in the house together; once a woman is married off to a man (marriages are arranged carefully by the elders after consulting the Tomes that deliniate the bloodlines), she joins his family and is no longer considered part of her birth family (much the way it was in China, for example). While a woman has only one husband, many men have several wives, partially because over the years Brethren fertility and infant mortality have decreased and increased, respectively.
The Brethren are ruled strictly by tradition and the council, which is made up of all men who have undergone their bloodletting (more on this later); the head members of the council are the elders, the oldest males, and the head of all of them is the most powerful Brethren male; for most of the series, this is Brandon's grandfather, Augustus Noble, also known as "The Grandfather." The leading family is determined based on the number of males (who have undergone their bloodletting), with the leader being the oldest male of the family. Because women have no rights and must do whatever their father (or husband) commands them to do, the desire for and importance of sons is important (again, another similarity to ancient Chinese practice).
Thus, the Brethren society feels very much like a strict religious cult - and at times, Lina, the female protagonist whom Brendon quickly befriends early in the book-- suspects as much. I found this concept very intriguing, fresh, and unique. The Brethren are quick and brutal in their punishment of anyone who seeks to disobey their rules, and someone like Brandon, with his independent and caring personality, quickly comes to clash with the clan's ways.
The story begins harshly and violently. Brandon is already on The Grandfather's bad side; normally when Brethren men and women reach 18 years of age, they undergo the bloodletting--a coming-of-age "celebration" in which the young people kill for the first time and the clans gorge themselves on the slaughter of the illegal immigrants they have on their land to help them manage their farms. Normally, the Brethren don't kill so extravagantly, but the bloodletting is a special rite of passage and an exception. All humans are killed, with the exception of the Kinsfolk, a select group of humans who work for the Brethren loyally and are spared in exchange for their cooperation.
The bloodlust is an interesting concept--a mixture of sexual desire and longing for blood that transforms the otherwise fairly "human" Brethren into primal monsters with super-human strength and speed. When the bloodlust takes over, their eyes fully dilate, making their pupils take over their entire cornea, their fangs discend, and their jaws unhinge. They look and are terrifying.
Brandon refused to undergo his own bloodletting, not wanting to be a monster--in fact; he learned that The Grandfather was going to force him to kill Jackson and Lina (his tutor, who taught him ASL and how to read and write; and his sister, whom Brandon has a crush on). He manages to convince them to leave the farm so they can avoid their fate, and spends the bloodletting hiding from his family so he can avoid having to kill anyone. As a result, his twin sister, Tessa, and his younger sister, Emily, go in his place, much to The Grandfather's displeasure. Jackson was quickly dismissed for his troubles after that, leaving Brandon alone again.
The story picks up several years later--Brandon is now 21, far past his bloodletting; his twin sister has been married off for several years, and The Grandfather is losing patience, especially when he discovers Brandon has applied (and been accepted) to Gauladet University--behind The Grandfather's back. Leaving the farm is forbidden, and, already enraged by Brandon's disobedience, he decides the young man needs to be punished--severely.
Because Brandon is deaf AND mute, his only means of communication is using his hands--ASL (although The Grandfather forbade anyone to learn, so only his twin sister knows it) and writing; while the Brethren have the ability to communicate telepathically, Brandon's abilities are weak, believed to be another side effect of the brain injuries he received as a child. The Grandfather decides the only way to trutly teach Brandon a lesson is to break his hands--so he breaks one of Brandon's hands, destroying all the bones. But he doesn't want to seem unmerciful, so he offers Caine, Brandon's older brother (and who has abused him constantly since he was a child) the opportunity to be lenient to Brandon. Of course, Caine, who is a cruel SOB, breaks Brandon's other hand. Because Brandon refuses to kill and drink blood, his healing isn't as accelerated as his fellows. So while his hands will heal, it will take a year at least of agony, during which time he will have no means to communicate since--to add a further element to his punishment--The Grandfather ahs forbidden him from using psi-speech as well.
Quite an opening, huh? The book then picks up thirteen months later, once Brandon's hands have healed and he's managed to escape the farm. He's on the run, though, because The Grandfather isn't going to stand for that kind of disobedience, not to mention the fact that the Breathren law is very clear: the punishment for anyone who leaves the compound is death.
Thus, the book is largely focused on Brandon, ever the outsider, finding belonging with Lina, struggling against the bloodlust and his inner monster, while running and battling those who would come after him and seek to take him back to Kentucky for punishment.
A lot of people complain because Brandon is so young--only 21. But I think that makes him more interesting in some ways; he's young, he's been sheltered, despite the fact that he's perfectly capable of fighting back (he's a black-belt in aikido, for example, thanks to his tutor Jackson), he's spent most of his life as a doormat. Thus, the story is almost a coming-of-age for him as much as is a romance.
The book is also unique in that it features an interracial romance--Brandon is white and Lina is black--although, as some have pointed out, the author seems to go a little too much out of her way to establish Lina's "blackness." Still, while Lina could have been developed more in this book (you get much more of her in Book #6), it was refreshing to see a strong, confident heroine, as it was to see the older woman with the younger man.
The book is very plot-focused for the most part, with big, bombastic (and shallow) villians, but it's only the first book in a series of six (going on seven) books, and you really need to start with this one in order to understand what happens later. Besides, Brandon is a great character, and I love that the author took the chance by having a deaf and mute vampire as her lead hero.