owling's Full Review: Savannah Russe - Under Darkness
Daphne Urban is a 400-year-old vampire with the body of an 18-year-old. She and her colleagues, the Darkwings---vampires blackmailed by the US government into working as spies and operatives---are about to start their next mission. An entire military vessel has disappeared, vanished from plain sight. It's possible there's a terrorist plot afoot. And just to make things more complicated, New York seems full of vampire hunters---hunters who might be linked to Daphne's on-again off-again lover, Darius.
The sexual content marks this clearly as a book for adults, but so much of it feels like the kind of material only a teen could appreciate. Given that the vampire lead character is stuck at age 18, I suppose I could assume it's aimed at late teens, and that might make sense.
The sexual content is explicit and, in at least one case, violent. It also is filled with eye-roll-inducing euphemisms such as "rod of love," at least when it isn't clinically describing sexual positions from the Kama Sutra or engaging in purple prose like "I ... ran free across the glistening vales of ecstasy."
The terrorist plot could be somewhat interesting, were it not for the fact that it comes across like adults playing an updated game of cops-and-robbers. The Darkwings decide to have a discussion amongst themselves "out in the street, where no listening devices could pick up our conversation." Umm, got news for ya, but it isn't that easy to avoid being listened in on.
Their military liaison acts more like a stereotype (or even caricature) of a military man from a movie out of the 80s or 90s than an actual officer, and the idea that most of the people in this book could actually get high-level government clearances is laughable; these folks are so consistently shoddy that it completely breaks the willing suspension of disbelief for me. Hell, they regularly hold sensitive conversations about both government business and the vampire community in cabs.
It's similarly difficult to buy the idea that Daphne is so childish. I know tweens who are less childish than her, and her behavior is dismissed casually as her being in some sort of eternal hormonal state due to being turned into a vampire at 18. 400 years of experience should have more of an effect on her attitude than it seems to.
This book also hit a couple of pet peeves with me. The idea of spending money on wildly expensive items that one doesn't need as a perfectly valid sort of 'therapy' annoys the heck out of me. I also dislike the idea of an author introducing a violent and coerced sexual encounter and then breezily introducing a plot development to make it more or less acceptable. This particularly bothers me in a book that seems to be aimed at young women.
To top it all off, I didn't feel much chemistry between the main characters, thought Daphne acted like a nagging shrew whenever she was with Darius, and found Darius lacked the depth required for a romantic lead.
By now you're probably wondering why I gave this a 2 instead of a 1. Quite simply, it's because I think there is an audience for this book, and there are plenty of people it would appeal to. Before I moved to the DC area and got to know quite a few military and ex-military people, I probably wouldn't have rolled my eyes at nearly so many parts of this book. Also, plenty of readers won't care as much about the silly euphemisms, the childish characters, etc. I don't think this is a horrible book---it's just definitely not the book for me.
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