(5 Out of 5 Stars)YA Debut from British author William Hill is a gem in the bottomless pile of vampire novels.
DEPARTMENT 19 is a superb novel. It blends together old fashion horror with modern action, creating an excellent book for readers with hard stomachs. Though it is very violent and does go mainly for gore, it does not thin the plot, not in the least. It was intelligently written and very well researched, which formed an overall very intriguing premise. Will Hill managed to carry the premise well, maintaining very complex characters. Readers who read Mary Shelly’s ‘Frankenstein’ or Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’ will have a much richer experience when reading this book.
Hill manages to go back and forth, from past to present, when keeping up his two stories. On one side, we have the vampire organization when it was conceived in the early 1900’s, and on the other, we have Jamie Carpenter, son of legendary John Carpenter, training to become a vampire hunter and save his mother—throughout Jamie’s story, we get hints that his antagonist isn’t the real threat—clues are revealed back and forth through the back story, and at the end, the dots begin to connect themselves. It was very clever plot manage it, and Hill deserves much praise, because he had quite a lot to manage.
Department 19 starts out with 14-year old Jamie Carpenter. His father arrives home early one day, acting suspiciously and trying to hide he and his mother. A bunch of armed men break into the yard, and before they can take his father away, John Carpenter shoots himself. Fast forward to two years later- Jamie is sixteen years old. He is told that his father was a terrorist, who unsuccessfully worked for a country that was trying to destroy Britain. Jamie grows to hate his father- hates him for the lies he fed to him.
Little did Jamie knows that he was right about the lying part. After being attacked one day in his home by a violent teenage girl, Jamie is saved by a large, wide man. Frankenstein. He wakes up in Frankenstein’s car, where he is told that his mother has been kidnapped. They go to Department 19, where Jamie learns what his father had been hiding all those years.
After the discovery of vampires, the British government opened up an organization called Department 19. It was a vampire organization, dedicated to hunting those who had been bitten by the first vampire, Dracula, and his vampire horde. The two second and third oldest vampires, who were almost as evil as Dracula, still roam the earth. Alexandru was the second oldest, and he kidnapped Jamie’s mother. His father had killed Alexandru’s vampire wife, who was just as dangerous.
After weeks of intensive training, Jamie learns that vampire hunting is in his blood. He is a natural at it, getting farther in his first simulation than any other operative. He leaves with Frankenstein, as well as an attractive female vampire who claims to know where Alexandru is.
Through a few plot developments (filled mostly with flashbacks of how Department 19 was formed) Jamie, frustrating himself as well as the readers, searches for his mother but unfortunately, to no avail. Jamie unhinges some hidden secrets about his past, as well as some about his ancestors and Frankenstein’s, Jamie uncovers some things that determine his search for his mother. By the end of the book, Jamie turns into a vampire hunter, and that’s no spoiling the ending—there is SO much more to it. A purpose for the series is set at the end, (and do not skim through the flashback pages- they’re important!) which makes the conclusion all the more satisfying.
Again, Department 19 really was a great read. It’s got classic horror, modern horror, GREAT gore and blood, (and that’s coming from me, the guy who says sunny days are best spent curled up with a book…) and basically makes Darren Shan look like Nicholas Sparks. It’s got intricately drawn characters, and surprising plot twists at every corner, which is so vital for a book like this to succeed. I cannot stretch how great this novel is—the internet hype over the past few weeks has been totally warranted.
There’s also a little romance, too. (Though it’s kind of gross, i.e. he has the strange urge to lick the blood of his vampire girlfriend’s face…) It is kind of sweet though, because it represents two average teens, forced to toughen up under involuntary circumstances, finding solace in each other. The girl, Larissa, is a bit provocative, though, so no strong role models there.
Read this book. Just read it. Unless you don’t like having to visualize a vampire’s heart being squished by someone’s bare hand. In that case, go see a Pixar movie.