Under the Blood Red Moon Review

Under the Blood Red Moon review by Harriet Klausner
In 1871 half Russian Princess Angelica Belanov detests going to parties,
events, or anything with crowds because of her ability to hear what people
think. The chatter is overwhelming her mind; her preference is to avoid society
and hide at her Russian father’s English estate reading a book. However, with
the family fortune in jeopardy with the disappearance of three ships they own,
she is in London with her brother Prince Mikhail seeking a wealthy spouse.
However, the silent noise from others is driving her crazy.
Also in London is the head of the Eastern Vampire Clans Prince Alexander, who
is on the trail of a serial killing vampire Sergey; he and his clans and those
of the Northern Clans worry about their species dwindling numbers and Sergey
exposing them to humans. When Alexander meets Angelica, they telepathically
communicate. He assumes she is a vampire like him, but soon realizes she is a
mortal. As she learns he is vampire, they fall in love with Servey and an ally
stalking them.
Readers will fully enjoy this exciting paranormal Victorian romantic suspense
thriller as Mina Hepsen makes vampires living in Europe seem genuine and even
more so Angelica’s ESP skills as the supporting details are wonderfully
interwoven into a strong tale. The lead couple is a strong pairing and the
support cast enhances the belief in the supernatural as natural. Sub-genre fans
will welcome Ms. Hepsen with accolades and look forward for more exhilarating
novels from her.
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