I really, truly, honestly have some fantastic friends - take, for
example, this very touching review of my neo-noir queer vampire novel,
The Very Bloody Marys (newly re-released by Sizzler Books),
by my pal
Kit O'Connell ...
thanks so much, Kit!
It’s
no secret that M. Christian and I are friends. I’ve introduced one of
his books and we’ve guest blogged for each other too. So even if I’m not
the most unbiased critic, I still like to highlight interesting books I
read from time to time even if they are by friends of mine.
One
of Chris’ many recurring themes are alternate visions of the police.
One of the characters in his wonderfully weird novel near-future novel
Finger’s Breadth is a freelance officer who receives his orders and
files reports via a distributed police ap on his smartphone. “Bluebelle”
in The Bachelor Machine explores a future cop’s intimate relationship
with his police vehicle, and Christian even co-edited the anthology
Future Cops.
The most recent book I read by him is The
Very Bloody Marys. Like Finger’s Breadth, it takes place in an alternate
San Francisco but creatures of the night. Our hero is Valentino, a
young gay vampire so uncertain of his place in the world that he can’t
even decide how to start telling his story at the beginning of the book,
so he begins again 2 or 3 times. Somehow, despite his Lestat-like
confidence or prowess, he’s been selected to join an undead police force
charged with maintaining the secrecy of the undead and the weird. Here,
Valentino laments his own impending doom after his superior officer
disappears:
Two hundred years. It’d been a good
run. Lots of … well, there’d been blood of course. Moons. Stars. Rain.
Fog. Hiding, too: all-night movie theaters, bars, discos, stables,
warehouses, churches, a few synagogues (even a mosque or two) [...] Lots
of … I was going to say friends but, to be honest, the nightlife might
be advantageous to boogying but doesn’t make for long-term
relationships. Some back-alley assignations, sticky stuff in my mouth or
pants; not blood, or at least not up until a few years ago.
Two
hundred sure sounds like a lot, but … the time just seemed to have
hopped, skipped and jumped by. Never skied, never sailed, never surfed,
never had two guys at once [...] What surprised me the most, though, was
what I wanted more: orchids, bow ties, potato salad, string, oil or
watercolor, hooks and line, two of everything.
The
book has a breezy, playful noir style which would make it perfect
summer reading. Though it doesn’t have the usual romance (though it has a
handful of interesting unrequited ones), I found it especially
interesting as a queer take on the torrid vampires-and-werewolves
subgenre of urban fantasy.
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