The beginning of the end for both Anita and me. What do we say about the girl with the bad reputation? I had decided to suspend judgment on the Anita Blake books until I had read some of them. I thought the first three were pretty fun (click here to read part 1 of Anita Blake: Love her or Loath her), but after reading Midnight Cafe (Anita Blake Vampire Hunter Omnibus books 4-6 Lunatic Cafe, Bloody Bones and Killing Dance) I’m less then keen. In The Lunatic Cafe there are scenes of rape and bestiality. In Bloody Bones we are introduced to necrophilia and pedophilia. In The Killing Dance we are see a ménage a trios and a pretty hardcore sex scene that spans several pages. I have to say I was pretty bummed when I finished reading The Midnight Cafe (and a not a little disgusted). I was really starting to enjoy this series and mentally kicking myself for not starting it sooner. It started out as a great ride that went irrevocably(in my opinion) off course. One reviewer said it this way:
The tragedy is that the promise of these early novels was so thoroughly unfulfilled, the incredible potential so comprehensively derailed. If we choose to believe Laurell K. Hamilton, the author of this once-fine series, the story arc--if it could be described as such--is exactly as she envisioned from the start. If we choose, however, to believe the rumors, Hamilton's marital difficulties are to blame for the dramatic and horrendous swing in the character of the series. The character of Richard, it's claimed--allegedly on the testimony of those close to the author--was based upon Hamilton's husband and his subsequent humiliation, emasculation and vilification were little more than vengeance for their divorce. Whatever the explanation, the series has sunk to the level of cheap and tawdry pulp erotica. Blake is forced into increasingly unlikely situations simply in order to copulate with an increasingly large number of increasingly well-endowed male characters. Anita--who once told Richard that she would not sleep with him until she was sure that his love for her was genuine--ends up getting serviced on a regular basis by what seems like half the vampires and most of the various wereanimals in the state of Missouri. Some characters even travel across the USA--and beyond--in order to enjoy the privilege of bedding the former vampire hunter with the consent of her vampiric pimp, and there is no more appropriate descriptor for Jean-Claude--certainly there is no love in that relationship. –Doombreed
So what does LKH say in response to all this? She addresses all this and more at great length on her blog:
(from LKH Blog Posted by LKH on 05/03 at 01:51 PM )
You complained that there was too much sex…you wanted less sex in the books...you wanted Richard to win...the sexual content? Is it going up or down? I think up, definitely up. I'm going to have to take a nod from Ms. Rowling. She said in an interview that nothing anyone says, or wants, will change a single word she's writing in her wonderful series. Well, folks, guess what, me either. But unlike Ms. Rowling, you are having an effect on me, one I keep fighting against. A very negative one. You tell me that there's too much sex, and part of me thinks, you ain't seen nothing yet...tell me how am I to please everyone? There is no way, so I shall please myself, because in the end if you don't please yourself, then what is left to you? You are all allowed to disagree with the direction the series has taken...but be nice about it...The arduer is a major metaphysical ability, and curse/blessing. It cannot be brought into the series and then fixed just like that...I've always planned on Anita getting to the point where she can control the arduer and not have to have sex every few hours. (And already I hear some fans complaining that I'll be cutting the sex down. We actually have vastly more people who love the higher sexual content than hate it. ...as the sexual content has gone up, so have the sales of the book...The arduer traps her here in St. Louis, unless she takes a harem for food. You can't do police work that way, not out of town. So, have patience, and it will calm down. I honestly don't know where her domestic arrangement will go. I didn't plan on us being where we are. Anita is more contrary than I am, and every time I push one person over another, she digs her feet in and does the opposite of what I had planned. A trait we share, for good, or ill. But I will not rush the transition. I will not hurry my overall plot because some of you are not happy with it. I am sorry you seem so unhappy. If you are truly that unhappy with the direction the series has taken, then stop reading it. Stop reading what I write. There, simply, fixed. If you don't like it, don't buy it, don't read it.(from LKH Blog Posted by LKH on 05/03 at 01:51 PM )
I, for one, have noted my objection--in a polite way-- to the drastic change this series has taken. But LKH is the author of the Anita Blake series and can chose to have Anita become an astronauts if she chooses; that’s her right. And I, in turn, have my rights. So I intend on taking LKH up on her offer: I don’t like it, I’m not going to buy it, not going to read it.
Book blurb The Lunatic Cafe: Members of the local werewolf pack have gone missing. Not only that, but other shapeshifter groups have lost members as well. They need Anita's help to find their family and friends. Anita must use her contacts with the police and the preternatural community to solve this one. With all the missing shapeshifters and the different patterns, Anita realizes she may have more trouble than she thought tracking them all down. When the clues finally fall into place, it is too late. Anita and her friends are captured and Anita is locked in a cage with a brand new werewolf - on the night of the full moon.
Book blurb Bloody Bones: Anita Blake has been called to Branson, Missouri to raise a family graveyard. There is a land dispute between two families and she must raise the corpses to find out who owns the land before a planned resort can be built. It all seems routine at first.
Then Anita is called to a murder in a nearby Missouri. Her zombie raising has been put on hold, because three teenage boys have been killed by preternatural means. Anita discovers that the land in question is being closely guarded for a reason. It had been holding a powerful creature at bay for centuries - and now that creature has been released and the slaughter has begun.
Book Blurb The Killing Dance: Bounty hunter and assassin, Edward, calls Anita with bad news. He has been offered a contract on Anita's life. Someone wants her dead and no price is too high. While Edward stalls with his answer, local muscle has been hired to take care of the problem. With two attempts on her life, Anita goes into hiding and Edward comes in as backup. Sabin, a master vampire and friend of Master of the City, Jean-Claude has come to ask Anita for her help. Years ago, his mate asked him to stop drinking human blood, and in doing so it has rotted his mind and his body. Anita agrees to help restore him, but when she is not fast enough, Jean-Claude and werewolf pack leader, Richard, are taken to serve as sacrifice for Sabin. Will Anita be able to save them before it is too late?




















When I started the series, I couldn't get enough of it. I wanted Anita and Jean-Claude to get together and I really enjoyed the scenes when she raising the dead or helping the police.
ReplyDeleteThe series started to go downhill, IMO, after Obsidian Butterfly. I felt the books focused more on sex and less on her occupation. And there were so many new characters introduced in each book; I got confused!
I have the series through Danse Macabre. I feel I have invested so much time in this series, I really don't want to stop reading it, so I will be buying the other books, eventually. I heard the latest book, Skin Trade, was close to the original books; meaning there was a lot of action and thrils and less sex.
Thanks,
Tracey D
booklover0226 AT gmail DOT com
Well you lasted longer than I did. I have heard that Skin Trade is supposed to be a throwback to the early books, but I'm pretty skeptical. Let me know if it is worth a read.
ReplyDelete