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Title: If Angels Burn: A Novel of the Darkyn (Signet Eclipse) |
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Review of If Angels Burn: A Novel of the Darkyn (Signet Eclipse)
- Alexandra Keller is Chicago's most brilliant reconstructive surgeon. Michael Cyprien is New Orleans' most reclusive millionaire-and in desperate need of Dr. Keller's skills. In the heart of the Garden District, Alex encounters the extraordinary Cyprien, uncovering a love Alex is willing to embrace, even if she must sacrifice her heart and soul to do so.
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Comments for If Angels Burn: A Novel of the Darkyn (Signet Eclipse)
- Posted on 2008-03-23
This book is amazing!!!
Really, it is. I couldn't put it down once I started it until I ended it, it was SO marvelous!!!!
It's dark fantasy, a brand that I love, and the plot and the chracters are really good and developed.
I don't want to make a description of the plot in here, as you can see it on the back cover of the book and also read a fragment of it in Amazon, so I'm only going to say that this book is superb. The writting is well done, with a nice style and really a good way with words; the characters are well developed and you feel like if you really got to know them close up and personal, and the story told ias a good and strogn one. Also, it's dark, not everything is perfect and covered on gold, you see some very dark sides of things in there.
Really, a recommended read!!!
Score: 5
- Posted on 2008-02-27
Not Really a Romance
Dr. Alex Keller is a rockstar in the cosmetic surgery world. She's been on the cover of Time Magazine and been proclaimed as the "Fastest Scalpel in the World". What's more is she works pro bono, taking on cases of disfigurement from accidents and violent crimes, preferring to help those who most need her skills over rich, vain clients. As she and her brother are wealthy from the deaths of their adoptive parents, Alex can afford to be scrupulous.
However, there is one patient who persistently requests her services, and won't take no for an answer. The mysterious Mr. Michael Cyprien, via his assistant offers Alex up to $4 million to fly out to his home in New Orleans and perform surgery on him--which Alex takes as a blatant show of wealth and arrogance, and detects something sinister. She informs Cyprian's assistant that he has to go to a hospital to have any surgery performed, recommends colleagues that could perform the surgery, but firmly refuses to consider his case. Michael, however, is not having any of it, and has Alex abducted (read: drugged up on ether) and forcibly brought to his Louisiana manor to perform the surgery. Upon awakening, Alex is justifiably outraged...until she finally sets eyes on Cyprian and sees the extent of his injuries. His face has been brutally crushed, and covered in thick ragged scar tissue. He has no eyes, as the tissue has healed over them, no nose, and a gaping hole for a mouth. Alex is a healer and empathetic by nature--her curiosity is piqued, and as a medical doctor she cannot resist the mystery in front of her. That Cyprian survived such a brutal mauling that left him without a face is astounding enough--and then he shows her why he needed the Fastest Scalpel in the World. Upon being cut, Cyprian heals almost immediately. Any other surgeon would take too long, and his face would heal over mid-procedure. Seeing the once in a lifetime challenge before her, Alex accepts and is successful beyond all expectations--Cyprian is restored to his former beauty. He awakens and opens his beautiful eyes, and unfortunately for Alex, succumbs to bloodlust. Cyprian is not, as Alex postured, a medical miracle but in fact a Darkyn; a creature akin to vampires, an ancient race that survived the Black Death and roam the earth damned to eternal life. Michael manages to stop himself from killing Alex but in the process has infected her, and she begins her own journey from human to undead. Determined to ignore Michael and the magnetic pull they have towards each other, Alex tries to fight the infection using her medical savvy. Meanwhile, her brother (who is a priest) searches frantically for his estranged sister, and stumbles into The Brethren--a secret order of priests dedicated to hunting down and destroying the Darkyn.
Overall, this was a good read. I enjoyed Ms. Viehl's characters, and I liked the spunky heroine she created in Alexandra (even if she was just Cherijo with a regular scalpel in Louisiana as opposed to a lascalpel on K-2). Alex's dogged refusal to drink blood and accept becoming a Darkyn as she searched for a `cure' felt genuine. Similarly, her brother's struggle with celibacy and faith certainly was not a comfortable topic to read, and the torturous scenes involving him weren't pleasant either--but they were effective and lent dimension to these characters. Ms. Viehl writes a smart story, and she doesn't pull her punches.
The actual romance between Cyprian and Alex was enjoyable as well--they are two very stubborn characters, and the attraction they feel for each other is realistically portrayed. Alex has rough edges and refuses to be dominated immediately by Michael, exhibiting her strength of will and spunk (even telling him at one point to bite her...butt, packing a nice punch as well). Michael himself was a bit of a wanker though---a bit stock in the growly possessive mate department. I enjoyed the romance as an almost afterthought to the actual story however, and I suspect this is why the book garners negative reviews.
What Ms. Viehl does best though is weave multiple storylines with deftness. The subplot involving Alex's brother and the hideous torture and rape he undergoes at the hand of the Brethren is terrifying, yet engaging and relevant to the overall story. The baddies here really are bad; not your typical incompetent idiot villains. There are other subplots involving other characters, most notably the character of Thierry Durand who has been driven mad after being forced to watch his mate raped, tortured, then murdered by the Brethren.
This is a complex and dark book--not so much a paranormal romance as it is dark fantasy or horror. I'd warn romance fans that are expecting another sexy vampire fluff tale; Ms. Viehl isn't about that. Think more along the lines of Anne Bishop than Kresley Cole--except Ms. Viehl is far superior to both authors, in this reviewer's humble opinion.
I enjoyed this book. Ms. Viehl proves again that she can write an engaging, fast paced story, and I'll probably be picking up book 2 sometime in the near future. I still prefer the Stardoc series, but her foray into the paranormal genre has everything I could have asked for.
Review Courtesy of thebooksmugglers.blogspot.com
Score: 3
- Posted on 2007-10-10
Four and a Half Stars
If Angels Burn is the first of Lynn Viehl's Darkyn series. Alexandra Keller a reconstructive surgeon is kidnapped and forced to repair the face of Michael Cyprien - a reclusive millionaire and member of the Darkyn. Unbeknownst to Alexandra once she has entered the world of the Darkyn it's going to be much harder to leave.
In the first few pages I get an immediate sense of who Alexandra Keller is - the fact that she is far from perfect and makes mistakes. It's how she deals with those mistakes and their consequences that make her such a ballsy character. She is constantly re-evaluating whatever situation she finds herself in and acting in accordance with that information. A heroine that thinks. Readers should be aware that Michael and Alex's continuing story is one of the main plot threads throughout the series. The story of their relationship does not end here.
This book is marketed as a paranormal romance and I think some readers will be disappointed by the lack of romantic romance in the story. Michael and Alex's relationship is more sexual than romantic to begin with. I'd also say this is closer to urban fantasy and a story of relationships - the ones we choose, the families we make, the families that are forced upon us. The book also focuses on the dysfunctional relationship Alex has with her brother John - one of the main subplots. From reading other reviews I know some readers would prefer less time be spent with John. But I think there is definitely more going on with him than we are aware of.
As this is a re-read for me and I've read the following books I was able to count out the various plot threads that started in book 1 - I counted nine and could have missed some :) . Some of them are only hints but it's fascinating to look back and see where the seed of a plot was first planted. One of the things I enjoy is not being able to predict where the story is going, and also not knowing which parts of the story are going to have greater relevance later in the series. It means the books are very re-readable.
This first book in the series is not the start of one story but of many stories, only some of which are resolved ( or apparently resolved). If you prefer a story where everything is neatly wrapped up at the end, then perhaps this is not for you. If however you prefer a more complex story, with interweaving plotlines, where characters make the best of the bad situations in which they find themselves and don't always behave in an honourable manner. Then it's well worth checking out.
Score: 4
- Posted on 2007-09-11
Disappointing
Since I'm on this new vampire kick, I was totally prepared to embrace this series (especially since the cover doesn't have some half-naked couple entertwined...NOTE TO PUBLISHERS: it'd be nice to be able to read some of these books in public without providing nearby children with a free sex-ed class) but was let down. The characters just sort of tumble together with no real foundation and new characters are randomly tossed in.
All-in-all, not among the absolute worst reads I've had lately. I'd say if your desperate for something to read and can find a used copy for $1 or so, it may be worth it.
Score: 2
- Posted on 2007-09-08
They don't make out til...
Page 243 of about 300 in this novel brings the first sighting of consensual pleasureable biblical relations. Sorry. That's too little, too late for me.
Before that. All the described couplings are expressions of humiliation or power. And they're not even between the hero and heroine.
The over-riding theme of this story is torture, torture, torture. Of men, women; young and old. Plus two other scenes of degradation which I would not be allowed to detail on this family oriented website. Obviously if I'd known about this I wouldn't have bought the book. Maybe I missed the clues given by other reviewers.
I skim read my way through the final third. I still felt contaminated.
Score: 2
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