Incarnation, by Emma Cornwall (which is apparently the pseudonym of a best-selling author) was a fun read that also made me think of some modern issues. Set in the backdrop of a steampunk Victorian England at the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries, we come across a conspiracy involving the characters from Bram Stoker's novel, Dracula.
I can hear you now. That is cliche and been done before. Well, yes, but rarely this cleverly. When Lucy Weston digs her way from her grave, she finds herself compelled to do two things. First of all, she wants to find the creature that made her this way (she doesn't know what she is yet for certain), and secondly, she wants to take Mr. Stoker to task (interrogate, not harm him) for lying about her and find out what he knows about her transformation into what she now is.
Little does she know that her quest will pull her into a world of secrets, intrigue, and betrayal. You see, vampires are very real, and they and humans have co-existed in peace for nearly a thousand years in Britain. Each side has helped preserve the order and security of the realm, but all of that is at risk. Radicals on both sides who seem to embrace radical eugenics (it's not called that in-story, but the misappropriation of Nietzsche to science in a quest for supremacy over nature and perfection mirrors how real-world villains grew obsessed with such stupidity, so I use the term) are determined to unsettle the balance and cause a war for their own selfish ends.
Worse yet, the king of the vampires is missing, all but ensuring the rogue elements will go to war with humans. Before he went missing, however, he found and turned Weston, whose family has it's own secrets, and created the first genuine half-human, half-vampire. Now, Lucy must find the king of vampires, or many, many people will die.
The story was quite fun, as I already said, but it also was cool in that it had some real applicability to today's issues. The steampunk parts of the setting are in the background, but are useful in establishing the story. This is an alternate version of 1897 London that is far beyond it's time, and thus has the ability to surveill it's citizens, and claim more and more power for the state against ever-shrinking civil liberties.
The parallels to today are obvious. The use of, and ability to use, for that matter, force by the state, is presented as both good and bad. Some of the suspension of civil liberties, and lies by the government are also presented as both good and bad. You see, ultimately these tools helped save the day, but at what cost? How many have died, been thought insane, or otherwise had their lives ruined via the secret "understanding" between a few elite humans and supernatural creatures? Or been harmed, even killed, by the large government apparatus designed to protect them. Their is even a mention of the type of roving band of hoodlums enforcing government policy on those out of favor, reminiscent of the thugs later employed in real life by first Wilson in the US in WWI and then horrifically Hitler in Germany in WWII.
The question is, what cost is worth giving up our rights, and the lives of a few, for the "safety" of most? Can our goals for safety be accomplished by not doing so as much. A tidbit I'll add the author didn't mention is that during the Cold War, the safest place in the world to be was Moscow. Do we want to take that as a lesson of embracing totalitarianism? These questions are important, and Emma Cornwall uses this fun vampire story to get us to ask and answer them.
The only issue I have is that there are some hanging plot threads about Lucy's romance with her Protector boyfriend and the fate of an escaped villain. So far, there is also no sequel. Please write a sequel Ma'am. I can't wait to read more of the adventures of these characters.