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Book Reviews of Hotel Transylvania

Hotel Transylvania
Author: Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
ISBN: 57601
Pages: 252
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 2

3.3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Jrzy avatar reviewed Hotel Transylvania on + 35 more book reviews
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Path of the eclipse

Fourth in the Count de Saint-Germain series of historical sex/blood/horror novels, as the immortal vampire is trapped in Asia during the mongol invasion, St. Germain finds love, and loses it.

Forced to flee, he confronts the demons that plague his heart and tear at his soul. Warlord T'en Chih-Yu, daughter of a dead general, is in the capital city Lo-Yang to beg aid in fighting Temujin (Jenghis), whose men leave pyramids of severed heads throughout her district. But official help is unavailable.

She turns at last to 3000-year-old Saint-Germain, known in this period of his interminable life as Shih Ghieh-Man. He closes up his home, rides out to Chih-Yu's fortress, orders a moat dug, stakes sharpened, a drawbridge built. Battles ensue.

After she dies in battle, he goes to a Tibetan lamasery, meets its very Great Master (a nine-year-old Buddhist) and the beauteous rajah's daughter Tamasrajasi; and all ends in an apocalyptic fantasy as naked and blood-drenched Tamasrajasi dances at a death-orgy for goddess Kali, castrating twelve willing lovers and slitting their throats. . . .

Hotel Transylvania

The Comte de Saint-Germaine turns up in Paris in 1743 to renovate his old haunt, the Hotel Transylvania. He is not only an alchemist, possessor of the Philosopher's Stone (and therefore fabulously wealthy), but also a vampire, and therefore immortal, with memories of Akhenaton, Socrates, and Velasquez.

But discard your preconceptions--this vampire is no force for evil; he merely has kinky tastes in food and sex. He falls desperately in love with beautiful, innocent, bluestocking Madeleine de Montalia, fresh out of the convent - where she was often criticized for her own "bizarre interests" in the occult. She returns his love, fascinated, and though knowing what he is, eagerly overcomes his scruples, "feeding her rapture on the sharp passion of his kisses."

Uptight vampires are not the main problem around the court of Louis XV; there has been a revival of Satanism, lately practiced under Mme. de Montespan, and Saint-Sebastian, the leader of her disgusting circle, is up to his old tricks, determined to claim Madeleine as sacrifice for the winter solstice...

But Madeleine wants only to join her beloved vampire in the eternal love of the undead, "to live in the blood that is taken with love."
Jrzy avatar reviewed Hotel Transylvania on + 35 more book reviews
The Comte de Saint-Germaine turns up in Paris in 1743 to renovate his old haunt, the Hotel Transylvania. He is not only an alchemist, possessor of the Philosopher's Stone (and therefore fabulously wealthy), but also a vampire, and therefore immortal, with memories of Akhenaton, Socrates, and Velasquez.

But discard your preconceptions--this vampire is no force for evil; he merely has kinky tastes in food and sex. He falls desperately in love with beautiful, innocent, bluestocking Madeleine de Montalia, fresh out of the convent - where she was often criticized for her own "bizarre interests" in the occult. She returns his love, fascinated, and though knowing what he is, eagerly overcomes his scruples, "feeding her rapture on the sharp passion of his kisses."

Uptight vampires are not the main problem around the court of Louis XV; there has been a revival of Satanism, lately practiced under Mme. de Montespan, and Saint-Sebastian, the leader of her disgusting circle, is up to his old tricks, determined to claim Madeleine as sacrifice for the winter solstice...

But Madeleine wants only to join her beloved vampire in the eternal love of the undead, "to live in the blood that is taken with love."
Jrzy avatar reviewed Hotel Transylvania on + 35 more book reviews
The Comte de Saint-Germaine turns up in Paris in 1743 to renovate his old haunt, the Hotel Transylvania. He is not only an alchemist, possessor of the Philosopher's Stone (and therefore fabulously wealthy), but also a vampire, and therefore immortal, with memories of Akhenaton, Socrates, and Velasquez.

But discard your preconceptions--this vampire is no force for evil; he merely has kinky tastes in food and sex. He falls desperately in love with beautiful, innocent, bluestocking Madeleine de Montalia, fresh out of the convent - where she was often criticized for her own "bizarre interests" in the occult. She returns his love, fascinated, and though knowing what he is, eagerly overcomes his scruples, "feeding her rapture on the sharp passion of his kisses."

Uptight vampires are not the main problem around the court of Louis XV; there has been a revival of Satanism, lately practiced under Mme. de Montespan, and Saint-Sebastian, the leader of her disgusting circle, is up to his old tricks, determined to claim Madeleine as sacrifice for the winter solstice...

But Madeleine wants only to join her beloved vampire in the eternal love of the undead, "to live in the blood that is taken with love."