Break of Dawn Review
Break
of Dawn review by Harriet Klausner
Deep below the paved streets of Los Angeles lies the lair of master vampire
Beneditke. There they wait living the life of luxury while biding time before
coming above ground as performers as they were in a previous life thanks to
plastic surgery helping them modify their appearances. Eva, once the Master’s
favorite, kidnapped her husband Frank and turned him into a vampire while their
daughter Dawn Madison has become Beneditke’s new obsession.
Jonah’s mission is to destroy the Undergrounds and their Masters, but Dawn has
misgivings whether she can trust him any longer. Unknowingly she is already
attached to the Master who is wearing a human guise. A betrayal forces Dawn out
of her refuge at Jonah’s hiding place while her mom and another vampire trick
her into going to the Underground. Circumstances put Eva Dawn in a tenuous spot
regarding Dawn, but she eventually helps her daughter escape. Dawn returns to
Jonah, who has located the underground and intends to kill all its monstrous
occupants. Dawn feels pulled in two directions, but must choose which side she
is on.
This ends the Vampire Babylon trilogy (see MIDNIGHT REIGN and NIGH RISING), but
though complete also sets the stage for a second set of novels in the urban
fantasy saga. Chris Marie Green has written a powerful character driven thriller
that keeps the audience riveted from start to finish with a need to know what
happens next as there is always a shocker every few chapters. The reason this
tale and its predecessors are so good are the belief that vampires live in and
under Los Angeles and in this case the Underground seems like a real place based
on a different perspective of the vampiric mythos. However, from the first page
of the first novel to the climax of BREAK OF DAWN, the heroine with her trials
and tribulations makes this trilogy well worth reading.
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