Thicker Than Water
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Seventeen-year-old Kia barely survived her parents’ divorce several years ago. Now her mom is in the hospital battling cancer and Kia is stuck with her workaholic father, leaving her searching for an escape from the everyday horrors of her life.
She finds this escape with a group of people acting out a dark fantasy. These "vampires" spend all night in dark clubs, wearing gothic outfits, and even baring fake fangs. But when Kia meets Damon, she begins to wonder if maybe a true vampire exists among them, one who could be the answer to all of her problems . . .
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Seventeen-year-old art student Kia has just moved in with her non-custodial father in New York City because her mother's unspecified cancer has reached the terminal stage. Floundering at school, the teen has been "hitting the blades regularly," hiding the cuts she makes in her arms under long-sleeved shirts. At her mother's hospital she meets Hecate, whose grandfather is undergoing treatment, and the two girls strike up an instant friendship. Levelheaded Hecate gets Kia a job at the Goth clothing store where she works and introduces her to an edgy club scene where the preferred beverage is a red wine concoction known as the "bloodbath." This is also where Kia first lays eyes on Damon, a pale, "sizzling hot" disc jockey who becomes her obsession. School, friends, her dad-even her mother's illness-recede into the background for two-thirds of Jablonski's (The Invitation) book, which segues awkwardly from familiar problem novel to campy vampire mystery. Unfortunately, the "cutting" issue is handled as if it is a symptom of latent vampirism, which is to say it is not addressed seriously, and a party scene in which a handcuffed couple, naked to the waist, are slashed while others watch-and feed-is dismissed as "kinky weirdness." Teens tired of Buffy reruns may enjoy this, but it's a mish-mash of motifs and messages. Ages 14-up.