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Richelle Mead

1976-
Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
and Beth Johnson
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Richelle Mead
Richelle Mead
has an MA in comparative Religion and a passion for all things wacky and humorous. When not writing, she can be found watching bad movies, inventing recipes, and buying far too many dresses. She currently lives in Seattle with her husband and four cats. Learn more at Richelle Mead's website.

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Georgina Kincaid — (2007-2011) Publisher: When it comes to jobs in hell, being a succubus seems pretty glamorous. A girl can be anything she wants, the wardrobe is killer, and mortal men will do anything just for a touch. Granted, they often pay with their souls, but why get technical? But Seattle succubus Georgina Kincaid's life is far less exotic. Her boss is a middle-management demon with a thing for John Cusack movies. Her immortal best friends haven't stopped teasing her about the time she shape-shifted into the Demon Goddess getup complete with whip and wings. And she can't have a decent date without sucking away part of the guy's life. At least there's her day job at a local bookstore — free books; all the white chocolate mochas she can drink; and easy access to bestselling, sexy writer, Seth Mortensen, aka He Whom She Would Give Anything to Touch but Can't. But dreaming about Seth will have to wait. Something wicked is at work in Seattle's demon underground. And for once, all of her hot charms and drop-dead one-liners won't help because Georgina's about to discover there are some creatures out there that both heaven and hell want to deny...

Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows

Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows
Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows Richelle Mead Georgina Kincaid 1. Succubus Blues 2. Succubus On Top aka Succubus Nights 3. Succubus Dreams 4. Succubus Heat 5. Succubus Shadows 6. Succubus Revealed
Available for download at Audible.com

Vampire Academy — (2007-2010) Young adult. Publisher: St. Vladimir's Academy isn't just any boarding school — it's a hidden place where vampires are educated in the ways of magic and half-human teens train to protect them. Rose Hathaway is a Dhampir, a bodyguard for her best friend Lissa, a Moroi Vampire Princess. They've been on the run, but now they're being dragged back to St. Vladimir's — the very place where they're most in danger... Rose and Lissa become enmeshed in forbidden romance, the Academy's ruthless social scene, and unspeakable nighttime rituals. But they must be careful lest the Strigoi — the world's fiercest and most dangerous vampires — make Lissa one of them forever.

Richelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit BoundRichelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit BoundRichelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit Bound

Richelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit BoundRichelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit BoundRichelle Mead 1. Vampire Academy 2. Frostbite 3. Shadow Kiss 4. Blood Promise 5. Spirit Bound 6. Last Sacrifice
Available for download at Audible.com

Dark Swan — (2008-2012) Publisher: Eugenie Markham is a powerful shaman who does a brisk trade banishing spirits and fey who cross into the mortal world. Mercenary, yes, but a girl's got to eat. Her most recent case, however, is enough to ruin her appetite. Hired to find a teenager who has been taken to the Otherworld, Eugenie comes face to face with a startling prophecy — one that uncovers dark secrets about her past and claims that Eugenie's first-born will threaten the future of the world as she knows it. Now Eugenie is a hot target for every ambitious demon and Otherworldy ne'er-do-well, and the ones who don't want to knock her up want her dead. Eugenie handles a Glock as smoothly as she wields a wand, but she needs some formidable allies for a job like this.

Richelle Mead Dark Swan 1. Storm Born 2. Thorn Queen Richelle Mead Dark Swan 1. Storm Born 2. Thorn QueenRichelle Mead Dark Swan 1. Storm Born 2. Thorn Queen 3. Iron CrownedRichelle Mead Dark Swan 1. Storm Born 2. Thorn Queen 3. Iron Crowned 4. Shadow Heir

Dark Swan Graphic Novels — (2012- ) Publisher: Eugenie Markham never asked for any of this. Until now, she''s been content with her job as a freelance shaman, battling and banishing Otherworldly creatures. When a prophecy suddenly makes her the Otherworld''s most popular bachelorette, Eugenie finds herself fighting off unwanted supernatural suitors, as well as the evils that begin emerging from her past...

Richelle Mead Dark Swan Graphic Novels 1. Storm Born

Richelle Mead Dark Swan Graphic Novels 1. Storm BornDark Swan: Storm Born

Richelle Mead Dark Swan Graphic Novels 1. Storm BornThe Dark Swan: Storm Born comics are based on Richelle Mead’s Dark Swan urban fantasy series. The art is by Dave Hamann and the comics are written by Richelle Mead and Grant Alter. I recently had the opportunity to read the first two issues.

The story centers on Eugenie Markham, also known as Odile, who does fairy and spirit banishings for hire. But now, alarmingly, the spirits she encounters have been calling her by her real name, which they’re not supposed to know — and they’re all creepily propositioning her, too. Meanwhile, a young man is trying to get Eugenie to investigate the disappearance of his teenage sister, who has been kidnapped by the fae. Eugenie struggles with the difficult question of whether she’s willing to venture into the fairy realm to find her. Also, she meets the mysterious and very hot Kiyo. The two share a steamy night together, and then each learns that the other is not quite human…

Hamann’s art is gorgeous. The colors are vivid, the characters are striking and seem to come to life on the page, and the story is always clear and easy to follow. It’s also quite sensual; there are a lot of scenes of nudity with the crucial bits artfully draped with hair, a towel, etc.

What’s not grabbing me as much is the story itself. It feels like something I’ve seen before. The tough young woman who slays supernatural beasties, and who is sexually desired by almost all of them, is fairly common in urban fantasy.

(Additionally, I find her faux-Native American roommate really offensive, but I think I’m supposed to. The guy is slime.)

While the plot feels well-worn so far, it’s possible that it develops later into something more original. I don’t want to be too hasty, and I am curious about what’s going on with the missing girl, so I may read further issues of Dark Swan: Storm Born and/or try the first novel, Storm Born. If you enjoy Richelle Mead’s books, you’ll like Dark Swan: Storm Born, which is a sexy, beautifully drawn, action-packed graphic adaptation. —Kelly Lasiter

BloodlInes — (2011-2012) Young adult. Publisher: The first book in Richelle Mead's brand-new teen fiction series — set in the same world as Vampire Academy. When alchemist Sydney is ordered into hiding to protect the life of Moroi princess Jill Dragomir, the last place she expects to be sent is a human private school in Palm Springs, California. But at their new school, the drama is only just beginning. Populated with new faces as well as familiar ones, Bloodlines explores all the friendship, romance, battles and betrayals that made the #1 New York Times bestselling Vampire Academy series so addictive — this time in a part-vampire, part-human setting where the stakes are even higher and everyone's out for blood.

Richelle Mead 1. Bloodlines 2. The Golden LilyRichelle Mead 1. Bloodlines 2. The Golden Lily

Richelle Mead 1. Bloodlines 2. The Golden LilyBloodlines

Richelle Mead 1. Bloodlines 2. The Golden LilyWhen I first picked Richelle Mead’s Vampire Academy off the shelf back in March, I kind of figured it wasn’t going to go well. I’m not exactly the biggest vampire fan in the world. Imagine my surprise when five months later I find myself reading the start of the spinoff series, Bloodlines. VAMPIRE ACADEMY was full of action and romance and was a blast to read, which meant Bloodlines had a lot to live up to.

In Bloodlines, we see the return of a number of VAMPIRE ACADEMY characters and the introduction of quite a few new characters as well. The setting is a human school, where Moroi royalty Jill is being sent to protect her from the machinations of the Moroi at court. A lot of things could go wrong with these circumstances; some things do, some don’t.

One of the return characters, and the main character of the book, is Sydney Sage, an Alchemist. Alchemists are a secret society of humans whose job it is to keep the rest of the human race ignorant of the existence of vampires, but they don’t much care for vampires. Sydney has been taught her entire life to think that all vampires are basically evil hellspawn, which makes her new job all the more uncomfortable. Posing as Jill’s sister, Sydney has to make sure the entire school of humans doesn’t find out who and what Jill really is.

I was concerned when I first found out that Sydney would be the narrator for Bloodlines. She makes several appearances in VAMPIRE ACADEMY, in which I found her dull and neurotic. But to my surprise, I really liked Sydney as a narrator. For one thing, she’s the polar opposite of Rose, the heroine of VAMPIRE ACADEMY. Mead could have simply written Rose 2.0 and likely gotten away with it, so I respect that she wrote a very different character.

Sydney is socially oblivious and very studious, with a great deal of internal conflicts over what she’s been taught to believe — that she needs to dedicate her life to being an Alchemist — and what she wants — to go to college and have her own life. She struggles between the desire to please her family and the hurt when she simply can’t satisfy her overly demanding and critical father. Rose is a real go-getter, and that made her a lot of fun, but as a person I relate a lot more to Sydney. I look forward to seeing how she develops during the series, and I hope she grows into a character who stops allowing her loved ones to walk all over her. Her character in general is a great piece of psychological work.

I’m less sure about returning characters like Jill. I’ve always found Jill’s exuberance a little hard to take, and her goody-two-shoes attitude really needs a shakeup. Also, less of every other guy in the series falling in love with her, please. That’s uncomfortable. Similarly, I don’t know how to feel about the route Mead is taking with returning character Eddie.

There’s also the return of Adrian Ivashkov, my least favorite character in the VAMPIRE ACADEMY series. Adrian has a case of Poor Little Rich Boy crossed with Pretty Fly For a White Guy Syndrome (read: he’s a spoiled poser) and much of his “screen time” in VAMPIRE ACADEMY was spent continually hitting on Rose despite her very firm “no”s. And being dead drunk. His behavior in Bloodlines hasn’t improved; in fact, it’s worse, right down to a situation that constitutes sexual abuse. It’s frustrating to try to enjoy the book, seeing clearly that Mead is setting Adrian up as the “bad boy” who gets redeemed by love. I could foresee that particular subplot making the series as a whole a less pleasant read for me.

The plot of the book combines a murder mystery with the investigation of magical tattoos that the students of the school are using to better themselves in sports, or just for the high. If it sounds a bit silly, that’s because it kind of is, although it takes a more serious turn later in the book. I don’t really read these books for serious literature, though; I read them because they’re fun and entertaining, and they have heroines that actually do something rather than waiting around for some guy to rescue them.

Strangely, the school plot was a lot less ridiculous, and certainly less so than I thought it would be. It worked better than I’d imagined. So at times, Bloodlines was a bit of a mixed bag, but mostly it was plenty enjoyable.

Would I say that it’s a good place for readers new to the world and characters? Well, I don’t think it’s impossible for a new reader to understand what’s going on, but Vampire Academy is still a much better place to start. I can’t even say whether diehard fans will love it, because as I mentioned, Sydney is such a different character from Rose. But it’s remarkably enjoyable for a spinoff and I hope the rest of the series continues to be this solid. —Beth Johnson


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