After reading Stephenie Meyer’s ‘’Twilight’’ and really enjoying it, I fancied trying ‘’The Reformed Vampire Support Group’’ by Catherine Jinks. Meyer has proved that fiction aimed at teenagers can really be a good read and that vampires are interesting and even sexy!
Jinks has a different ... Read review
Advantages: Entertaining read, interesting take on vampires Disadvantages: Bit hard to get into
...ordinary.
The hardships of being a vampire are described through the eyes of our heroine, Nina, forever stuck as a fifteen-year-old after being bitten in 1973. She explains her condition means she suffers a variety of side effects, including nausea, weakness, pale skin and bleeding from the eyes if they aren’t protected by sunglasses during daylight.
Nina is part of a group called the Reformed Vampire Support Group, ... ...on the ‘’right path’’. For these vampires have vowed not to bite other humans, instead surviving on a diet of guinea pigs and supplements.
The Support Group is a mish-mash of different kinds of vampires from knitting old ladies to a former rock star. As with any group, there are good and bad apples amongst the buch and one of the bad ones – Casimir – is soon found killed. This leads the group to a quest of finding his killer and assuring ... more
After reading Stephenie Meyer’s ‘’Twilight’’ and really enjoying it, I fancied trying ‘’The Reformed Vampire Support Group’’ by Catherine Jinks. Meyer has proved that fiction aimed at teenagers can really be a good read and that vampires are interesting and even sexy!
Jinks has a different angle of approach to our fanged friends though. Vampires are not seen in such a romantic way, but instead are more down to earth and ordinary.
The hardships of being a vampire are described through the eyes of our heroine, Nina, forever stuck as a fifteen-year-old after being bitten in 1973. She explains her condition means she suffers a variety of side effects, including nausea, weakness, pale skin and bleeding from the eyes if they aren’t protected by sunglasses during daylight.
Nina is part of a group called the Reformed Vampire Support Group, where the local vampires help each other and keep themselves on the ‘’right path’’. For these vampires have vowed not to bite other humans, instead surviving on a diet of guinea pigs and supplements.
The Support Group is a mish-mash of different kinds of vampires from knitting old ladies to a former rock star. As with any group, there are good and bad apples amongst the buch and one of the bad ones – Casimir – is soon found killed. This leads the group to a quest of finding his killer and assuring the group’s safety and security. This leads them on an interesting adventure, where they meet some frightening men in the Australian Outback and a teenage werewolf.
Although I found the book slightly hard to get into, I did enjoy it and would recommend it to any ages from teenagers upwards. It has a bit of everything – drama, comedy, farce, horror, thriller, adventure – yet is never too scary or gory. It is fun and involving, written in a style which makes you smile and quickly warm to our heroine, whose viewpoint the reader follows.
There are some excellent characters, besides Nina. I personally related to her mum, a non-vampire who ends up being hostess to a group of non-humans and – as a mum would – worries about them eating properly, while stressing out over keeping the house clean.
The priest Father Ramon is a fascinating character too, being human but a kind of charity worker here, devoting his life to helping the disadvantaged. He is useful to the vampires too, as he is able to function in daylight!
I liked the way Jinks reworked the vampire folklore, which brings it up to date and moves it away from Hammer Horror films and Dracula. We learn about ‘’fanging’’ and ‘’blooding’’ and it all sounds convincing enough to draw you into the story.
Despite the slow-ish start, I enjoyed the book overall and would be interested to read more about these characters in the future. If you’ve finished all Stephenie Meyer’s books, why not try this one?
*A version of this review first appeared on The Bookbag website under my name.*
Product Information for "The Reformed Vampire Support Group - Catherine Jinks" »
Product details
EAN
9781847247780
Publisher
Quercus Publishing
Type
Fiction
Genre
Children's
Subgenre
Reference Books
Title
The Reformed Vampire Support Group
All Authors
Catherine Jinks
Author
Catherine Jinks
ISBN
1847247784
Manufacturer's product description
The trouble with being a vampire is...You can't get a decent haircut. You live on guinea-pig blood. And even worse, most of the world's population wants to kill you for no good reason. Nina Harrison became a vampire in 1973, when she was fifteen.
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