In the Evernight series, Balthazar was one of my favourite – and one of the hottest – characters around. My expectations for his very own simply titled spin-off, Balthazar, were incredibly high, especially since I wasn’t very impressed by the last two installments of the series. Luckily, this book was just as fantastic as Balthazar himself.
Skye Tierney has been seeing ghosts since she was a little girl, and for a while, she thought that her ability was the only supernatural thing out there. After attending Evernight for two years, though, and discovering that she was going to school with, yes, honest-to-god vampires, her world became suddenly much bigger. When Skye returns home after Evernight burns down, her strange visions of deaths aren’t the only strange thing happening – suddenly, a gang of very dangerous vampires are on her tail. Hot vampire Balthazar finds out and heads over to help his friend, and meanwhile to seek revenge on the gang who literately changed his life, but might something besides friendship blossom between the two?
I proudly admit that I could not put this book down! With action coming in to play within the very first chapter, and with Gray’s ease in the third person, there wasn’t an unexciting moment. Gray’s writing is crafty, but to-the-point; while she always delivered with careful detailing and creative attention to the setting, the style was tense, and suspenseful as the scene called. Also, AM I EVER appreciative of Gray’s ability to script chemistry and sexual tension, because oh boy did some of the conversations in Balthazar make me flush.
The characters rocked. Skye was totally admirable – her intelligence, emotional strength, and ability to think things through. Many, many times throughout the book I thought, “Wow. Skye is smart and she shows it.” And, “Wow. Skye is nothing like those other PNR heroines. She actually has a brain and cares about something other than her relationship status.” Balthazar, too, made me smile. Not only was he hot (teehee), but he also had a conscience and sense of ethics, this realness something that made him really special. The side characters were all multi-dimensional, but while I easily pushed aside the Disappearing Parent Syndrome going on, this might be something other readers might be wary of, as though all other characters were well written in this story, the parents were very, clearly missing. Still, what’s something very credible about Gray’s writing is that she never writes characters as only “bad guys” or “good guys”; every character, missing or not, has shades and reasons and lives.
What I particularly think stands out about Balthazar, in comparison to other YA PNRs, is that the romance never strayed untrue. Rare were the cheesy “we can’t be together but I love you forever” lines in this book; instead, Gray gave us two strong characters passionate for one another, but never changing their personalities to make them dependant or unrealistic to their reality. Unfortunately, what was amiss in this story was a truly fresh plot. Vampires are after a human girl with special blood: check, I’ve seen it before. While scenes of Balthazar’s past were interesting enough for me to generally pass over the lacking of a new idea, I wish there could have been a storyline more specific to the world of Evernight.
Although I’m disappointed that this is the only (currently-planned) story for Balthazar and Skye, the open ending has let my imagination go wild regarding the futures of the two characters. This story has renewed my faith in Gray’s writing, and I am so excited to find out what she has in store for readers next!
BALTHAZAR by Claudia Gray
Audience: 13+ (questionable content, questionable language, hot scenes)
Rating: 4.5/5 stars