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Vampire Vow
Alyson Books
$14.95



Vampire Transgression
St. Martin's Press
$23.95



Without Reservations
Samhain Publishing
$14.00



Body and Blood
St. Martin's Minotaur
$23.95



Male of the Species
Ellora's Cave Publishing
$12.99



The Tin Star
Loose Id, LLC
$10.99


  
Vampire Thrall: A Novel
by Michael Schiefelbein

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Paperback
Publisher: Alyson Books

He's back. Once a Roman officer rejected as a lover by -Jesus of Nazareth, now a vampire still haunted by Jesus after two millenia of grisly revenge in monasteries around the world, Victor Decimus returns to his hometown, the Eternal City of Rome. At the Monastery of San Benedetto, "Brother Victor" continues his campaign of defiance against the Christian God, while remaining near his first love, whose apparitions have never ceased. Meanwhile, across the ocean in a small Kansas town, the gentle, sensuous artist Paul Lewis sees strange visions of a shadowy vampire. When he is hired to illuminate a new manuscript of the gospels undertaken by the monks of San Benedetto, Paul goes to Rome and falls in love with the bold Brother Victor. Sensing danger in this handsome visitor, Victor resists his attraction to Paul until the young artist witnesses Victor committing murder. Unwilling to destroy Paul, Victor transforms him into his vampire thrall. In a limbo between the living and the undead, Paul may choose full life as a vampire, but not without a price: the release of his beloved Victor to the Dark Kingdom and his own solitary existence for 200 years as stalker of the night. Complicating this choice, the strange force that caused Paul's early visions now aims to turn Paul against his vampire creator. And Victor must defeat this powerful opponent before it is too late.

Michael Schiefelbein is the author of Vampire Vow. After spending 10 years studying for the priesthood, he graduated from the University of Maryland with a doctorate in English. He has lived in Italy and Washington, D.C., and now resides in Memphis, Tennessee, where he is a professor of writing and literature.




Customer Reviews:
 
gorgeous
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
Just after reading Vampire Vow, the first book in the series, I could not help myself, I had to pick up Vampire Thrall. I read it as feverishly as the first book, enthralled (pun intended) by the two main characters, Victor the Vampire (from the first book), and Paul, a painter. They alternate chapters in POV, and that is so enlightening, not because of Victor's chapters, but because of Paul's. You can see him descend into his own darkness.

I know a lot of people do not like to see gay characters in a novel, but if you do like that, and love vampire novels, go pick up this one. You won't regret it.

And now I have to go sit and wait until book 3 arrives at my doorstep :)

a hint short of perfect
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
Much of what I said in my review of Vampire Vow can be repeated for this second volume of Victor's story.

Mr Schiefelbein is a distinguished writer, and his plotting cannot fail to raise his reader's attention, but this time unfortunately his work shines a little less brightly.

The first part of the novel, the first 80 pages or so, are permeated with a lazy tourist guide attitude, every paragraph scattered with redundant descriptive details about Rome, probably aiming at depicting an exotic setting instead of creating a gothic atmosphere.
This problem is probably magnified by my being Italian and by my knowing Rome and its true atmosphere. The author's clumsy attempts at Italian, put in the mouth of Victor, who after all is supposed to have spoken the language for centuries and should know it quite well, may sound appealing to an English speaking reader but did not help me in the least.

Luckily enough Mr Schiefelbein finally gets to business and the temperature rises steeply, revealing the author I cherished in the first book. The reader meets here an older Victor (not so much in years, but in spirit): a vampire who no longer seems to kill out of rage but out of necessity. Once again I was a little disappointed: the great novelty of the first book was the blodshedding raw rage of a heart/pride broken man who, not being able to get the object of his desire, the object being no less than "the" Jesus, exacts his revenge by massacring his followers and defiling all that is sacred to him. Here Victor seems tired, more heart broken than vicious. The change is legitimate but disappointing.

Anyway the plot develops nicely: the shift of p.o.v. between Victor and his new love, Paul, allows the author to explore new depths in characterization. It is also interesting to face the change of Paul who, starting from a harmless boy next door kind of guy, slowly and consistently changes into something dark and frightening, not because Victor changes him, but as a "natural" development of self.

I do not know whether Mr Schiefelbein plans a third volume. The end of this one, which I will not spoil because it is totally unexpected, is entirely satisfying.
In case he does, I wish he would reconsider his style critically and stick to the breathtaking perfection of the first volume; his second volume his worthy and surely 5 stars worth but compared with the previous one it is lacking.

As for the first volume, I recommend conservative/religious/touchy readers avoid this book; yougsters should be kept at large too: this story is not suited for them.

Entrhalled in the Thrall
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
My reading of "Vampire Thrall" occured during Holy Week and the death of the Pope. So reading this story took on an even greater affect. The story was enthralling. I wish circumstances would have allowed me to read it in one sitting. However, now we see the character of Victor grow. Will he give in to the redemption Joshu offers him or his thrall, seek his assistance in aid to Paul, Victor's Thrall, or will he continue on in his journey towards the Kingdom of Darkness. I must admit that at first I thought this book would follow the same formula as its predecessor. Thank goodness I was wrong. Some degree of redemption was found for the characters here. The author however, provided yet another wonderful story and is not in need of redemption for this story. I eagerly await the next chapter in this story.

Bad, Bad, Baaad Porn
Customer Rating: 1 out of 5 
This book failed in all ways. I picked it up, flipped it open, and was bored, five pages in. The ideas intrigued me -- Gay Vampires! Non-Anne-Rice Gay Vampires! -- so I read on. And on. And on.

By the mid-point, I was treating the book more as a marathon than an enjoyable read.

I'll give the author this: it is a quick read.

What I will not give him: any sense of realism to the sex. Not only is it tersely written and utterly unsexy, but sex like that leads to hospital visits, not mutual orgasm. Spit? It is not lube. Lotion? I'd almost give him that one, but I'm not feeling charitable. The sex was just bad.

One other reviewer mentioned that this book was gory. I find the news to be gorier. Much like the sex, the violence was painted with the lightest of cursory touches. Blood-letting and death are to be expected with a vampire novel. If you want a gory book? Skip it. If you are worried it is a gory book? Don't worry -- there's all sorts of other badness to turn you away.

The characters were actually not that bad. The way they were described? Well. People were either beautiful or they were ugly and Paul and Victor were the prettiest of them all. I think if there had been one more reference in those pages to how Manly Victor looked, I'd have given up and not bothered to finish it.

Another reviewers calls the writing fluid; the writing was about as fluid as a rock. There was nothing sensual about the prose. It was short and terse and concise. These aspects leant themselves to the one virtue, mentioned above, that the book did possess: it was a quick read.

That Victor wants Jesus? It really almost doesn't matter in the face of all the rest of the cheap porniness. This isn't erotica; it isn't erotic.

Better then the first book! More sex, blood, and Victor!
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
I was not as impressed by Vampire Vow as I have been by the second in the series, Vampire Thrall. In this book there is more of everything. There is more of a relationship that Victor so longed for in the first book. This book has intimacy and longing in it that the first book lacked. There is still the ever-present Taboo of Jesus being a homosexual and Victor being in love with him; however in this book Victor is able to over ride his longing for Joshu, and find a love in Paul that can finally last the tests and trials that is the Vampire Victor. Although, this is a better book then Vampire Vow, I would definitely read it, as all of the same characters in the first book are also present in Vampire Thrall. If you like to read books that has violence, vampires, ghosts, and gay erotica; then this is the book for you.




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