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L. A. Banks

Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
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L.A. Banks fantasy author
L.A. Banks
is the pseudonym of Leslie Esdaile Banks. She writes paranormal urban fantasy. You can read excerpts of her novels at the Vampire Huntress website and the Crimson Moon website. Here's L.A. Banks' website.





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Vampire Huntress — (2003-2009) This series is complete with The Thirteenth, but new manga editions are being produced by Dabel Brothers. Publisher: There is one woman who is all that stands between us and the eternal night. Here is an account of her legend... Minion... All Damali Richards ever wanted to do was create music and bring it to the people. Now she is a Spoken Word artist and the top act for Warriors of Light Records. But come nightfall, she hunts vampires and demons-predators that people tend to dismiss as myth or fantasy. Damali and her Guardian team cannot afford such delusions, especially now, when a group of rogue vampires has been killing the artists of Warriors of Light and their rival, Blood Music. When strange attacks erupt within the club drug-trafficking network and draw the attention of the police, Damali realizes these killings are a bit out of the ordinary, even for vampires. Instead of neat puncture marks in the neck showing where the blood has been drained from the body, these corpses are mutilated beyond recognition, indicating a blood lust and thirst for destruction that surpasses any Damali has encountered before. Soon she discovers that behind these brutal murders is the most powerful vampire Damali has ever met-a seductive beast who is coming for her next...

L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The Shadows

L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The Shadows L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The Shadows

L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsL.A. Banks Vampire Huntress 12: The Thirteenth
Manga and young adult versions of Vampire Huntress are in the works.

L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress Minion book reviewMinion

L.A. Banks Vampire Huntress review 1. Minion 2. The Awakening 3. The Hunted 4. The Bitten 5. The Forbidden 6. The Damned 7. The Forsaken 8. The Wicked 9. The Cursed 10. The Darkness 11. The ShadowsIn the interest of accuracy, let me note that the edition of Minion that I have is the “Special Huntress Edition.” This is a sort of “director’s cut” that contains scenes not in the original edition of the novel. I have not read the first version and do not know which scenes are new.

Minion tells the story of Damali, a young African-American woman, and her friends, who together make up a rap band and, secretly, a vampire-hunting team. Damali has been chosen Buffy-style as the champion of Light against the forces of Darkness, and her friends are the Guardians sworn to protect her until she comes into her full powers. There is a second plot as well, dealing with Damali’s ex-boyfriend, Carlos, who was once a Guardian candidate but has fallen into a life of organized crime.

L.A. Banks draws many parallels, throughout Minion, between vampires and those who prey upon the urban poor in real life: the gang leaders and drug kingpins. On one level, Banks’s vampires are a metaphor for these human predators.

The characters speak in urban slang, and whether you like this aspect of the novel will likely depend on whether you like authors to write out their characters’ accents.

Minion contains heavy Christian themes. This is both a good thing and a bad thing. The bad news is that the novel feels a little preachy at times. The good news, though, is that it works well within the plot. The characters’ deep Christian faith gives them motivation to fight evil, and also gives meaning to the cross-and-holy-water methods of warding off vampires. There are some vamp novels in which religion is never mentioned except when the characters are splattering holy water across the scenery. One might wonder whether it would even work if the wielder didn’t actually believe in the deity and was just using the water because “everyone knows” it works against vampires.

What didn’t work for me: First, the aforementioned preachiness. This tone isn’t limited to religion, but also includes diet and music lyrics. On the positive side, much of the sermonizing comes from a single character and can just be chalked up to her personality.

More importantly, Minion is just too “talky” overall. It starts with some action and some tragedy, but sinks into a morass of endless talk among the characters. Much of this talk is preachy, filled with bickering, or worst of all, info-dumpy. Characters take up a lot of page space telling each other things they already know in order to convey that information to the reader. There was probably a less clumsy way to do this.

I also wish more had been done with the group’s musical interests. They theoretically have a band, but we only see Damali perform once (briefly), and never see any of the other characters play music. There is talk about the power of music to help people save their souls, but while jamming together might have helped the group keep up their morale and reinforce their bond, we never see them so much as rehearse.

Finally, I had been told that Minion ended on a cliffhanger. It’s more like it screeches to a halt about two miles back at the first sight of the “Caution: Cliff Ahead” sign. There is an event that the entire plot is building toward, and we never get there.

Banks shows promise in this first VAMPIRE HUNTRESS novel, but doesn’t do enough with it. The plot may thicken later in the series; however, the first installment is the one that needs to hook the reader.
Kelly Lasiter

Crimson Moon — (2008-2010) Publisher: Sasha Trudeau knows all about working beneath the shadows, back-alley deals, and things that go bump in the night. She also knows that the world is unaware of the existence of the paranormal — and that the government would like to keep it that way. As a highly trained Special Ops soldier, Sasha and her team are an elite group of individuals who are survivors of werewolf attacks, now trained to be loyal to only to each other and their government. But when she returns from a solo mission, she finds that her team has mysteriously gone missing. Shocking government conspiracies, double-dealing vampires, and a host of stunning revelations about who-and what-she really is are only just the beginning...

L.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3L.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3. Undead on Arrival 4. Cursed to DeathL.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3. Undead on Arrival 4. Cursed to DeathL.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3. Undead on Arrival 4. Cursed to DeathL.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3. Undead on Arrival 4. Cursed to Death 5. Never Cry WerewolfL.A. Banks Crimson Moon 1: Bad Blood 2. Bite the Bullet 3. Undead on Arrival 4. Cursed to Death 5. Never Cry WerewolfLeft for Undead

Neteru Academy — (2009) Publisher: Sarah Rivera has a lot going on in her life right now. It's bad enough that she's being shipped off to Temt Tchaas Academy also known as Neteru Academy, a high school for future Guardians of the Light who have special powers, but she has to go there with her cocky twin brother and the rest of her compound brothers and sisters. To make matters worse, everyone has ridiculous expectations of her all because her parents are like supernatural rock stars for saving the planet sixteen years ago. But what nobody, not even her best girlfriend Tami seems to be getting is the fact that, Sarah doesn't think she's special, doesn't want to be a demon-hunting hero, and is even afraid of the dark! So what that her mother was a Warrior Angel and her Dad used to be a Hell Council-level Vampire? Opposites attract. Go figure. As far as Sarah is concerned, all she got from the combination was a pair of fangs that lengthen at inappropriate times to embarrass her in front of her secret crush; whereas her brother, Alejandro, got the good looks and cool wings. However, what her parents' status has created is drama in her life by ensuring that the mean girls at school will make her life a living nightmare. Sarah knows her family's renowned slayer reputation will also ensure that everyone at school will assume she had it easy and should be able to do everything her famous rebel parents can do, when the heartbreaking truth is, she cant. Not by a long shot. Once at the hidden boarding school in the Appalachian Mountains, things go from bad to worse as Sarah tries to fit in. Her nightmares increase and it isn't just anxiety; her second sight is suddenly developing at a record pace. Layers of secrets are held in the building, held by her parents, and nothing is as it seems. There is something really bad going on at the school, worse than bad — deadly. Only, faculty and administrators don't know where to begin to look for the cause as students start to disappear. Sarah must then make a choice to stand on the sidelines or to help use her gifts to save someone dear. But to do that means facing all of her greatest fears, along with a demon or two.

L.A. Banks Neteru Academy 1. Shadow Walker

Fallen Angels — (2011) Publisher: The first in a spellbinding new urban fantasy series about fallen angels from New York Times bestselling author L.A. Banks. Celeste Jackson’s life has been a series of tragic occurrences. Haunted, the thirty-three-year-old woman has bounced from therapists to group homes, to drug halfway houses. Plagued by nightmares and hallucinations and misdiagnosed as schizophrenic, she is found by the angel Azrael — her protector. But as Azrael helps her to unlock her powers, and they work to amass an army of those with powers like Celeste’s in order to fight the forces of darkness, Celeste has as much to teach Azrael as he has to teach her. She’s been down the path of temptation and addiction. Now she must help Azrael overcome the one temptation that could make him an eternal prisoner — his addiction to her.

L.A. Banks Fallen Angels 1. Surrender the Dark 2. Conquer the DarkL.A. Banks Fallen Angels 1. Surrender the Dark 2. Conquer the Dark

L.A. Banks Fallen Angels 1. Surrender the DarkSurrender the Dark

L.A. Banks Fallen Angels 1. Surrender the DarkThe angel Azrael has been sent to earth in a human body, with a very important mission. He must find Celeste Jackson, a woman who is one of the Remnant, the last remaining descendants of angel/human couplings in ages past. The Remnant must be gathered so they can lead the human race when all hell breaks loose in 2012.

When we first meet Celeste, she’s an unlikely leader. Labeled “crazy” all her life because she sees demons, she has fallen into an abusive relationship and heavy drinking. One night she’s sure it’s over — that her boyfriend is finally going to kill her — but instead he is killed by the demon that has been inhabiting him. Celeste escapes the demon but finds herself lost and hopeless, until she meets a drop-dead gorgeous man who claims to be an angel.

The interactions between Azrael and Celeste are, for the most part, terrific. Celeste doesn’t believe the angel story at first, Azrael is baffled by much of what he finds in the human world, and the trust that develops between the two characters is sweet and uplifting. The relationship between Celeste and her beloved Aunt Niecey is also endearing, as is the camaraderie that develops between Azrael and Niecey. L.A. Banks gives each character a distinctive voice and creates several adorable scenes — most notably a grocery shopping trip in which Azrael discovers the sensual joys of earthly food, and the scene where the two go to Niecey’s house and banter affectionately — that will give you the warm fuzzies.

The relationship between Azrael and Celeste progresses at improbable speed, though, as does Celeste’s transformation from mess to dispenser of wisdom. It might have been easier to swallow if Surrender the Dark took place over a period of weeks rather than a day or two.

The larger problem in Surrender the Dark is the lecturing. Several times, the plot comes to a halt so that one character (usually Azrael) can expound about something to another (usually Celeste). I also had this issue when reading Banks’s Minion several years ago. The subject matter is a little different this time; Minion had a lot of religious preaching, while Surrender the Dark has some of that but is largely focused on the benefits of an organic vegan diet. I can’t complain too much, since it does lead to the grocery store scene — but the copious filibustering wears thin (even during that scene, which I otherwise liked).

The latter half of the novel features more action, as the forces of darkness scheme to gain control of Celeste. I’m not sure how much the larger plot of the series is advanced, as Banks could go several different directions from here. I’m curious whether she will continue to follow Celeste and show how she fulfills her destiny, or if she will backtrack and tell the stories of the other Remnant characters first. This series opener is a promising start… especially if Banks dials back the lecturing. —Kelly Lasiter


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