Cat The Vamp – Christina Martine

  • Paperback: 222 pages
  • List Price: $12.00 US/$16.00 CDN
  • Publisher: By Light Unseen Media (December 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1935303015
  • ISBN-13: 978-1935303015

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As a child, Catherine Taylor never understood why her parents were so secretive and distant. After the death of her grandmother, Cat’s parents take her to a mysterious castle called Blacklune. They explain to her that they, and she, are vampires, part of a hidden community co-existing with humans. Now that she’s of age, Cat will be initiated into the community and undergo a period of training in its methods and morals, along with several other vampire students her own age. At Blacklune, Cat meets a young man who had appeared to her in dreams, Morgan. She and Morgan form an instant bond, but success with their vampire lessons doesn’t come so easily. Tempted by the lure of blood and the powers they now have, Cat and Morgan push the limits over and over, ignoring the concerns of their classmates and the scolding of their teacher, River. As they become ever more reckless, Cat and Morgan risk going too far. It’s only when serious harm comes to someone else that they realize they have to control themselves–and it may be too late.

Cat The Vamp follows 18 year old Catherine (Cat) Taylor through finding out she is a vampire after her grandmothers death and moving to a castle to “learn” the ways of a vampire. What I liked about Christina Martine’s take on vampires is that they can go out in the sun and the only difference they have from humans is they are born with less energy which requires them to drink small amounts of blood. Cat ends up meeting Morgan, who she has been dreaming about and finds out he’s also a vampire.

I was not happy with this book, for a young adult novel it just didn’t sit well with me. A few times I actually felt disturbed by some of the things that happend and thought to myself, I wouldn’t want my nieces reading this at all. I do believe this book should come with a warning and maybe should be targeted at much older young adults.

There is a scene where Cat and her boyfriend Morgan, cut their names into each other’s flesh with a razor blade and drink from the wounds, when another character (Amber) finds out, she thinks it’s “cool”. Cutting is a BIG problem with YA’s right now, so I don’t make light of things like that. There are constant mentions to smoking cigarette’s and drinking, though these characters are 18 they act like 15 year olds. There’s a scene where Cat drinks a lot of Morgan’s blood and he faints, both characters again make light of the situation. Cat and Morgan also have unprotected sex, there is little mention other than Cat is happy when she gets her period and isn’t pregnant. There are plenty sex scenes, which again I do not feel is appropriate for a YA novel.

At one point, “high” on blood they attack a human blood donor. When their teacher River finds out, there are little consequences to Cat and Morgan for their actions. Once again, they attack another person and escape for a few days. And again, little consequences for their actions even if they are getting completely out of control. For a “school” that’s supposed to be teaching them, they seem to do more hanging out and partying then anything else. When Cat is told by her parents she is a vampire, she accepts it right away, no outburst or questions asked. That to me seemed an odd reaction for a teenager to have, especially when they drop her off at this castle and she basically has no other contact with them.

While Christina Martine’s writing is okay and her descriptions are very visual, the story just didn’t work for me. This book may appeal to others, just not me.

Read Ellz Readz review of Cat The Vamp here

Posted by Wicked Lil Pixie   @   February 1 2010

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12 Comments

Comments
  • Book Chick City February 1, 2010 at 11:09 am

    This sounds like a pretty awful book. I definitely won’t be getting a copy of this one. It sounds, by what you have described, that this book would annoy me and not be my kind of thing at all. Thanks for the review!

  • Elie N February 1, 2010 at 11:51 am

    I fogot about the cutting scene. I was shocked at how much sex there was in the book. Many of the adult paranormals I have read have not been so descriptive. Great honest review.

    • Wicked Lil Pixie February 1, 2010 at 11:52 am

      Thanks Elie. I linked your interview because I felt maybe I was too old to actually “get it” but I took notes during the whole book and was stunned by the end of it all. The cutting scene really bothered me.

  • The Mighty Buzzard February 1, 2010 at 12:33 pm

    Either has to be a deliberate satire of the paranormal genre in general or the author is as insane as I am. Could be interesting as long as you’re forewarned of the heaping mounds of suck.

    Regardless, I have to disagree about the worries of marketing it as a Young Adult book. The word adult should clue us in to get them ready to be an actual adult than treating them as children protecting them from the world.

    pre-submit edit: After a bit of googling it appears she started writing the book when she was seventeen. That makes me want to go with insanity since most teenagers qualify for that category by default and don’t have the fine appreciation of satire they usually gain later in life.

    • Wicked Lil Pixie February 1, 2010 at 12:35 pm

      I would love for YOU to actually review this! Your take would be pretty damn interesting. But trust me, it’s so not satire…and I am all for YA’s reading books that teach them something, but these characters had NO CONSEQUENCES for their actions.

      • The Mighty Buzzard February 1, 2010 at 3:59 pm

        That was kind of the idea. They have to be able to deal with something that’s decidedly a bad influence before they go out into the big wide world alone. If they don’t they’re in for a much worse time of things in their adult life.

        Reviewing it could be a bit difficult. See, there’s no way I’m paying $25 for a hardback or $12 for a paperback (what in the hell?! has to be one of the oversized trade paperbacks) of a first time author who’s gotten terrible reviews unless Jim Butcher, Kim Harrison, and one of my close friends all give it reviews that sparkle like pansified emo-vamps in the sun. Maybe a library around here will a copy.

  • Ale February 2, 2010 at 12:41 am

    Funny, I actually have this book, my cousin stole from me to read it after getting it for me =/… I have not been able to start yet =P But I want to read it still, so I can formulate my own opinions of it, I guess… Though thanks for the review, it is always nice to hear someone else’s outlook on things =)

  • Moonsanity February 2, 2010 at 8:36 am

    I have two teens, 15 and 16, and we are very close; talk about problems with their friends; cutting, bad home lives etc. When I read YA books I can’t help but read them with my kids and their friends in mind. Maybe the author did start writing this at 17, but that doesn’t make it any less irresponsible to show cutting, sex, and drinking with NO consequences. In the “real” world they wouldn’t do this stuff without some type of backlash. You can’t be that self destructive and not have some type of consequence. I’m not a prude, and I’m not naive about the things my teens have to handle, but this type of book just doesn’t cut it for me. Hopefully, enough reviews like Wicked wrote will warn parents. Okay, off my soapbox now…thanks for the honest review:)

  • Christina Martine February 16, 2010 at 7:00 pm

    I’m sorry if my novel offended anyone. When I started writing it, I was in a “darker place”… I came across “real vampires” and the underground vampire community. I was intrigued. Having an energy leak could explain my depression right? I tried to incorporate some of the new age ideas that real vampirism had… all the while tying in my take on addiction, etc…

    I don’t condone drug-use or blood drinking obviously. My story is a fantasy, albeit a dark one, and yes, I realize now that it should come with a warning. When my website is up, I’ll be sure to have a HUGE one on the front page! Lol… I’ll be marketing to an OLDER YOUTH AUDIENCE!

    I’m sure there will be others out there who will be able to relate. Understand the ongoing metaphor…

    p.s. My characters did have consequences. They got scolded, almost kicked out of school, etc. No one else wanted to be around them. (As new vampires, they were expected to mess up.)

    Also, I of course, DO NOT condone unprotected sex. I’ll make sure to warn readers of the repercussions.

    I don’t think adults give teenagers enough credit. Today’s youth is intelligent and growing up faster than ever due to the harsh reality we live in. To say that a book will cause someone to do harm is foolish. It’s exactly like saying music causes kids to kill. We should be educating our kids, not blinding them.

    I tried to write an accurate account of what it would be like to live as a “real vampire.” Go online. Search up forums surrounding the topic and you’ll find that others share the same theories as me.

    Thank you for the honest review! :)

    <3 Christina Martine

    • The Mighty Buzzard February 16, 2010 at 10:30 pm

      Word of advice… Never argue or try to explain yourself in response to criticism on the Internet unless it’s on your own site. It absolutely never ends up with you even breaking even.

  • K.C. Smokinhotbooks February 16, 2010 at 7:17 pm

    As a teen I often bordered that “dark line” this book probably would have been right up my alley, lol. I can understand that Young Adult spans such a vast age group from 14 – adults. Maybe there needs to be a YA-17 :) (I feel a WLP wants to know post coming on). As a young teenager I can remember reading Flowers in the Addict by VC Andrews which as we all know has a relationship between 2 siblings..I’m often curious on how far is too far for young adult?

    WLP you know I heart your reviews and your “country” myspace friends.

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