Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Dark of the Moon

Dark of the Moon
Dark of the Moon
Author: Susan Krinard
His iron hand once kept the warring vampire clans of decadent 1920s New York from one another's throats. But now, outcast from his own kind, Dorian Black haunts the back alleys of the city alone.… Until the night he meets reporter Gwen Murphy and feels something stir within him for the first time in centuries. Gwen has stumbled upon t...  more »
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9780373772582
ISBN-10: 0373772580
Publication Date: 3/1/2008
Pages: 384
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 67

3.2 stars, based on 67 ratings
Publisher: HQN Books
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Dark of the Moon on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Warring vampire clans??? Hardly any action war wise or romance wise. Wolf series was much better. I'll be staying away from any of her future attempts with vamps.
ccmarketgirl avatar reviewed Dark of the Moon on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Dense writing style that did not necessarily develop the characters adequately. I would probably not read more of this series.
TSarien avatar reviewed Dark of the Moon on + 55 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I actually liked this book. I've read some the Wolves cycle from Ms. Krinard, and I can honestly say that the slow building of the plot -and the twist at the end!- was very nice. Warring vampire gangs in the 1920's sounds a bit farfletched, but if you look at the actual history of the time period, it makes sense.
The relationship between Gwen and Dorian takes its own sweet time, which makes it completely believable. Ms Krinard has a very stylized prose that actually takes you there to the bleak humdrum of Hell's Kitchen and the misery of the docks and back alleys. It reflects on the journey of the heart that Gwen goes thru, from desolate to bright and in the middle of a war between good and evil.
Ms. Krinard introduces a concept almost unheard of in the genre: a Vampire dedicated to God. She has (masterfully) pushed this beacon of light into the background, to serve as a guide for those less altruisticly inclined... oh but I reveal too much.
This book has very little (sexy) romance, but the way Dorian and Gwen gravitate around each other is a thing romantic dreams (and nightmares) are made of.
Read All 4 Book Reviews of "Dark of the Moon"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

sabrinalynn avatar reviewed Dark of the Moon on + 6 more book reviews
This one was just OK for me. I tend to enjoy supernatural thrillers, but I felt like they could have done so much more to play up the time period in this one too. It's set in 1920s New York City and features a female newspaper reporter and her quest to discover if her deceased father's writings about blood-thirsty gangs ruling the New York underworld are really true or just fantasy. There are some cool vampire moments, and a weird cult of vampires trying to wipe out all vampires (?), but the idea of this secret "book" the main character is searching for the whole time seems to fall a little flat in the end. And other pretty crazy things happened to her along her quest that I felt she should have been more upset about. Well-written for what it is - a romance novel, but not good as historical fiction or even a thriller, really.


Genres: