Seeking revenge on the vampires who killed her mother, martial arts master Rashel Jordan rescues Daphne Childs from near death and is swept into the Night World Slave Trade, where she is evaluated by the irresistible Quinn. Original.
Smith was born in Villa Park, Orange County, California. In interviews, she has said she realized she wanted to be a writer sometime between kindergarten and first grade, “when a teacher praised a horrible poem I’d written”, and began writing in earnest in elementary school. Smith received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Experimental Psychology from the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1987, followed by teaching credentials in Elementary education and Special education from San Francisco State University.
She taught kindergarten and special education for several years before becoming a full-time writer. Her first book, The Night of the Solstice, was published by MacMillan in 1987, followed by, Heart of Valor in 1990, and the 4-volume Vampire Diaries series in 1991-2. Three trilogies followed: The Secret Circle (1992), The Forbidden Game (1994), and Dark Visions (1995). The first installment of her popular Night World series was published in 1996, followed by eight more over the next two years. In 1998, Smith began a decade-long hiatus from writing, returning in 2008 with a new Web site and a series of new short stories. The Vampire Diaries series was reissued in 2007, followed by re-printings of The Secret Circle trilogy and Night World series in 2008/2009. The Night of the Solstice and Heart of Valor was also reissued in 2008. Three new Vampire Diaries installments were published in 2009 and 2010.
Smith lived in the San Francisco Bay area “with one dog, three cats, and about ten thousand books.”
She passed away on March 8th, 2025, after a lengthy illness.
For this story in particular, I actually really loved the protagonist and concept. The plot twist was very foreseeable which kind of sucked since the last book had a better one. The romance completely ruined the plot line in my eyes, and the sudden change in character personalities in both Rashel and Quinn was just weird and much too rushed. I enjoyed this more than the last, and would've given a solid three star rating or more if not for all the "changes" that were sort of thrust into the book with no explanation.
i read the night world books when i was really young and i remembered being completely obsessed with this one in particular. i was feeling a bit nostalgic so i picked this up. it wasn’t great, but i had fun with it
Štai ir penktoji knyga. Šioje dalyje veiksmas vyksta tarp vampyrų ir vampyrų medžiotojų. „Tamsos dukterys“ trumpai pasirodęs vampyras Džonas Kvinas grįžta šitoje dalyje skirtoje išskirtinai jam. Nuo pirmo karto kai jis atsidaro knygose jo nekenčiau taip pat kaip Ešo, bet kaip ir pastarąjį taip ir šį pamėgau kai priėjau prie jų istorijos ir geriau susipažinau. Rašelė man patiko nuo pradžių- jos nepriklausomybė lyg katės neveltui jai davusios tokią pravardę. Na, o galų gale knygos visiškai ją pamėgau, nes ta laukinė katytė pavirto švelnia mylinčia ir atsidavusia kate. Atsirado keli vilkolakiai, bet iki šiol jie vis dar negauna pilnos knygos. xD Po kol kas apie juos turiu tik neigiamą įspūdį: netikšos, pasiutę, kvaili šunyčiai. Tikiuosi gal kitose knygose mano nuomonę pakeis...
Prie vertėjos šį kartą nesikabinėsiu- niekas neužkliuvo. xD
APIBENDRINIMAS: trumpa ir lengvai skaitoma knyga-neatsibos, veiksmas ir plot twists gale knygos sukelia patį įdomumą, pats veiksmas vystosi labai greitai tad irgi neteks sėdėti mėnesių mėnesius su šia knyga.
The fifth installment of L.J. Smith's Night World series, which features a secret world of vampires, witches and shape-shifters, The Chosen follows the story of teen vampire-hunter Rashel Jordan. Traumatized in her childhood by the death of her mother at the hands of a vampire, Rashel had dedicated her life to hunting the undead. But when she faces off against the Night World's ultimate bad-boy, the vampire Quinn, something wholly unexpected occurs. Is it possible that an ice-cold, human-hating vampire, and a lethal vampire-slayer could be soulmates? With the revival of the Night World slave-trade, and the disappearance of young girls from Boston, Rashel knows she has to act. But will she be able to defeat this unusual enemy?
I will confess that the Night World series is something of a guilty pleasure for me. It debuted in the mid 1990s, while I was working in the children's section of a large bookstore, and I picked up the first title (Secret Vampire) largely out of curiosity. I had never read any vampire fiction before, and wanted to know what all the fuss was about. I discovered an engaging collection of stories, compulsively readable, and highly entertaining. There's plenty of teen cliche here, but Smith also creates some wonderful characters, and her girls are always smart and strong. These books are infinitely preferable, in this respect, to the more recent (and much more well-known) Twilight saga, which also features the story of supernatural love.
liked it only because it gives off Buffy/Angel vibes, the one valid and true OTP. wish there have been more scenes of Quinn and Rashel tho. didn’t really care much for the plot 🤫
I got completely won over when a reference was made to the Buffy The Vampire Slayer movie and this came out in February of 1997...one month before the phenomenal TV show.
I wasn't sure if I would enjoy The Chosen as much as the first four books yet as it went on...it got very good when you add a sort of uncomfortable element to the romance.
A normal revenge against vampires story...we have read or seen them before. This one starts in such a horrific fashion and is just as heartbreaking but necessary to make our main character just a little hard to crack.
Rashel Jordan is five years old and on that fateful birthday, she lost everything. Her little brother Timmy disappeared and she found him being fed on and killed by a vampire. When her mother heard her screams, she met her own death at the vampire's hand by a broken neck.
Rashel was sent to live with her older aunt, Corrine, but in the dark of the night...the vampire came again. This time, he set fire to the house and only Rashel escaped to become an orphan. For twelve years, she has gone from foster home to foster home with nightmares of the vampire's face and his voice.
Rashel is too filled with the desire of revenge to be afraid and her homes are just places to live but a few of her foster parents prove successful on her journey. Martial artists...and vampire hunters to teach her all the ways to defend herself. Rashel keeps herself at arms length...she can't love and lose anyone else again.
Now seventeen, Rashel is known to those of the Night World as "The Cat" for the claw marks with a cat's paw she leaves on the staked, mummified husks of her victims. Now living in Boston, Rashel receives tips from fellow hunters, The Lancers, that four girls have disappeared.
Rashel has few friends if you want to call them that but they are all the same age as her and they know about vampires...they want the same thing. Death to all the vampires that have left some of them orphans and frankly, they need Rashel's help.
One night, Rashel protects two of them by knocking out a very strong vampire from behind. They plan to torture him slowly to get information but Rashel sends them away to get more hunters to scout for any other vampires helping their captive.
Alone, face covered by a scarf with only her green eyes showing in her ninja attire, Rashel is ready to deal a fatal blow with her wooden sword. The vampire is looking up at her and they exchange words and information in what is to be an honorable scene of mutual respect...warriors and hunters both of them.
Rashel learns that the vampire is named John Quinn. This is the same Quinn who has a brief appearance in Daughters of Darkness, an honorary member of the powerful Redfern family. He has a hatred for humans but also a complicated relationship with the vampire who turned him, Hunter Redfern.
"I hate you, vampire dad, and yet I am loyal to you"...that kind of complex for the past four hundred years.
Rashel knows that Quinn is deadly and Hunter's heir since members of the Redfern clan have been falling in love with humans as of late yet she can't strike out at him. Quinn knows this woman is The Cat but he can't help but share with her his tragic past and be intrigued by her emerald eyes.
They spar and touch hands and yep...sparks that are unwanted and confusing happen again.
The others come back to the scene of Quinn escaping and Rashel...letting him go. Her credibility is now tarnished to being a vampire sympathizer and Rashel is all but abandoned to be on her own once again yet Rashel is use to it.
The only thing that troubles her now is having her resolve down against a vampire after killing so many. Rashel doesn't have long to simmer in self-loathing when she spots a young woman jumping out of the back of a truck coming from a warehouse where Rashel has tracked down a nest of vampires.
She is able to rescue the teenage girl and they get away. Rashel finds out that her name is Daphne Childs and she was taken by vampires along with almost two dozen other girls. Rashel has heard of vampires taking humans and selling them off as slaves or food and she believes she has found the biggest ring abducting girls from a club in Boston.
Daphne tells Rashel it is a club where teenagers go because these are the emo kids, the goth kids, the kids who feel alone and wish to embrace the darkness. Daphne has a big family full of stepsiblings and feels invisible so she has been wearing black and writing poetry to attract a kindred soul.
Rashel isn't too impressed or thrilled to learn that Quinn was the one to answer Daphne's misguided prayers. Daphne, despite being a blonde ditz, is actually sort of a subversion in that she agrees to go back to the club with Rashel and get captured again. Rashel argues with this but it is pointed out by Daphne that Rashel is not use to flirting with guys...only pummeling vampires.
In order to be chosen so that she can go and take care of all the vampires in charge of this human trafficking ring, Rashel relents and the girls go back to the club. Rashel knows that she has to earn the trust of the vampires by acting the ditzy damsel but she also knows that if Quinn so much as touches her, the ruse will not work because of the attraction before...and her cover will be blown.
Too bad that Quinn has been shaken by the previous experience and even his fellow vampires can tell that he is slipping and not acting like himself. One of them just happens to be Lily, the daughter of Hunter Redfern and the powerful patriarch of the Night World vampires.
Falling in love with a human is a crime punishable by death and Quinn, unfortunately, is the next chosen victim of a fate and a desire he can't fight...
Some very heavy stuff and the reveals are gloriously twisted. It all leads up to a heart-stopping climax with an ending that isn't exactly clear-cut yet satisfying enough to make The Chosen a solid entry in the Night World series worth reading.
It happened at Rashel’s birthday party, the day she turned five years old.
Plot. When Rashels fifth birthday party her younger brother Timmy, her mother, and her aunt were killed by a vampire. Rashel managed to escape, but the vampire swore he’d see her again.
Since that fateful day Rashel has been out for revenge, learning everything she can about the Night World and how to kill vampires; she becomes one of the Night Worlds most feared vampire hunters. Her goal to find the vampire that killed her family and get revenge.
On a hunting mission he comes across a vampire named Quinn, and for some reason she can’t bring herself to kill him.
To make up for it she heard about vampires taking women and vows to to take them down.
What I Liked. This has to be my favourite of the Night World books.
Rashel is a strong, fearless, independent, and fantastic at what she does. She gets the job done.
The storyline was strong, more detailed.
And we’re getting more of an underlying story which runs throughout the series, which is good despite properly not getting the final book anytime soon.
What I Didn’t Like. Rashel and Quinn insta love. Well it wasn’t really, they actually spent hardly any time together, and suddenly in the last 50(?) pages it’s suddenly ‘we’re soulmates, I love you.’ Cute, but it felt too sudden. More slow burn needed.
Overall. Enjoyable. Favourite so far.
5/5*
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I thought this one would my favorite in the series, but it was kind of a bad Buffy rip off. Rashel is inexplicably strong and somehow manages to live through all of her terrible decisions, but I did like the concept of women being collected from clubs for a feast party. The end was very satisfying.
Well this one was the best yet. I liked the fact that she was a vampire hunter but fell for a vampire. I liked how he was dead against humans but fell for one. i liked the ideas used in this one and how they came together. I have a feeling I know where the series is going and I look forward to finding out if I'm right.
Secret Vampire ★★★ Daughters of Darkness ★★★★.5 Spellbinder★★★.5 Dark Angel ★★.5 The Chosen ★★★★.5
Con este libro has redimido la decepción del pasado, Lisa Jane. Esta historia fue increíbleeeeeee. No tengo mucho para expresar salvo que me ha encantado muchísimo, que los protagonistas fueron increíbles y que el 'enemies to lovers'??? de los protagonistas estuvo increíble.
I liked the background story mom is murdered child turns vigilante. The romance was a bit mushy for me this time. Not my favorite but I still enjoyed it
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
First off, the character. I felt that most of the character were very real and believable. There was quite a bit of character development, especially compared to L.J.Smith's other Night World books and considering its size. I loved how Rashel actually tried to do something about her bad situation. I also loved Daphne. She was a real breath of fresh air in this series of hunters and fighters. She's not a fighter. She's not a hunter. She's just a regular teenage girl. And the relationship that blooms between them is great. It really goes to show that you don't have to live the same style of life to be friends. I had a bit of a problem with Rashel and Quinn's relationship. It felt rushed and wasn't very fleshed out. I do understand the soulmate principle, but unlike most of the relationships before, Rashel and Quinn had only talked to each other for less than 2 hours. The plotline was also really interesting. There was quite a bit of action, compared to most of the Night World novels. There was never really a dull moment and all of the scenes were absolute necessary to get to the end. The love story didn't overpower the real plot line of the kidnappings, but I think it was pushed back a little too much to the point where it wasn't really there anymore. The plot twist at the end with Hunter was very different. After thinking about it, I can see where it comes from, but had you not finished the book, you probably wouldn't have guessed it at all as there was no foreshadowing. The world was very interesting. I definitely liked the fact that L.J.Smith took the idea of vampires, werewolves and other things and really took it to a different level with the Night World. I also found it a very good surprise that there were the lamia. I have always wondered by vampires had to be bitten and it's obvious that L.J.Smith had also thought about that. It's also very interesting how they just live beside humans, but they don't suspect anything. It's like an entire community inside of another. There are laws of its own and even a hierarchy, which can be seen in this novel. The pacing was pretty fast, maybe a little too fast, but the swiftness of the pacing covers up other flaws of the novel. But I do love that time keeps going on in this novel. Unlike the other Night World novels were time sort of stops while explaining things, this installment keeps time feeling realistic. However, this may be because of the amount of action there is in this novel compared to the other ones. The writing style of L.J.Smith is great. It really flows with me and is quite a quick read. The dialogue between characters felt believable. There were some errors in grammar, but nothing that really hinders the story. Overall, this book was awesome. There were really strong characters that mostly had great relationships, the plot was great, and you really wanted to keep reading.
When she's 5 years old, Rashel sees her mother and her friend killed by a vampire. The vampire tries to get her as well, but even at 5 she's strong enough to resist his mind control. Fast forward twelve years and Rashel is a vampire hunter, existing on the fringes of the Day and the Night worlds, keeping humans safe.
Rashel is a very strong character, comfortable in her body and determined because of her past. She's a great fighter and has a sense of honor. When she and a group of vampire hunters capture a vampire, the others want to torture him, but Rashel can't stomach torturing a defenseless being, even if he is a vampire. So she decides to let him go...and then discovers he's her soulmate. To add to the mix, the vampire is Quinn, known throughout the Night World as one of the most soulless, human-hating vampires around.
While Rashel is one of my favorite Night World characters, I find the plot of this book a little weak. Rashel stumbles into a Night World slave trade of humans when she rescues a blonde bunny, but then Daphne, the girl she helps, is willing to risk her life to help Rashel take down the operation. The ending is very abrupt as well, without taking care of some loose ends that I would've liked to see resolved. But overall "The Chosen" fits very nicely into the Night World series, and uses the soulmate principle that ties all the books together very nicely. Rashel and Quinn are iconic of the opposites attract cliche, but it works for them and they grow over the short time period of the book. I really want to see more of them.
Another great installment in this series! For the 90's these books are pretty ground breaking and L.J. Smith pushed past the limits! In this story their is a vampire slave trade going on. Something I never expected a book like this to get into. It immediately intrigued me and I wanted to know more. We're also given two amazing characters who are soulmates. Rashel and Quinn are left with the same kind of scars. Rashel's mother was killed by a vampire and Quinn's first love Dove was killed by a human. As a result Rashel trained herself to be the greatest vampire hunter and Quinn lures humans to their deaths. When these two meet it's like Earth (Rashel) meets water (Quinn). Quinn is calm, but when pushed he is a tidal wave. Rashel is as quiet as a forest, but if you mess with her she is a force to reckoned with and becomes a natural disaster. At first their start is rocky because they hate each other's kind, but when they learn that they are soulmates they are confused and yet at peace. In this book Rashel and Quinn are given great character development and storylines to overcome the things that make them bleed hate. They have made each other better and stronger. I usually don't like an enemies to lovers romance, but in this sense it worked out so well and beautifully. It made these two into better people. They eventually had the same goal in mind and were willing to defy the rules of the Night World to see it through. Rashel and Quinn were bad for each other at first because they didn't want to love what they hated the most. But once they came together their love just blossomed. I loved everything about this book and I really love the world building of this series!
REREAD as of July 2019 I realize that I have to deduct a star for this one. It wasn't as amazing as I thought when I first read this short book. To start, while this book had the "enemies to romance" trope, the characters didn't even spend a lot of time together. I think that you'll need good character development when it comes to writing an effective story including the enemies to romance trope, which was unfortunately lacking in this story.
Additionally, the story was super slow and it felt like nothing was happening especially nearing the 50% (I think). The only interactions between the mc and the love interest were in the beginning, a few minutes after, then the ending. There wasn't much of a development, in my opinion. They didn't even get to know each other really well except when they were sharing blood. I just wished there was more interaction between them or even a back story. Basically, I wished this was longer and more detailed. What's new?
xx THIS IS MY FAVORITE BOOK IN THE SERIES SO FAR FOLLOWED BY Secret Vampire.
RASHEL WAS SO FREAKING BAD-ASS!!! even if the beginning was disturbing. THIS BOOK WAS SO GOOD! I HAD TO PUT IT DOWN BECAUSE I CAN'T TAKE ALL THE EXCITEMENT AND ANXIETY BUILDING UP INSIDE. I CAN'T EVEN BELIEVE IT!!! WE ALSO GET REFERENCES FROM CIRCLE DAYBREAK!
Rashel is a vampire hunter. She started training ever since her mother and brother died when she was 5, and so she had been killing vampires at the age of 12 and getting a reputation making her be known as the cat, because she would leave a mark on the vampire she killed that looked like a cat had scratched it. She was one of the most feared vampire hunters in the night world. Well since she is the most feared vampire hunter there was also the most feared vampire and his name was Quinn and he killed a lot. But what happens when these to deadly opposites meet when Rashel is on mission to find out what's happening to missing teenage girls? The reaction they will have will surprise both.
This book reminds me of the hunger games a little even though both stories didn't end the same. These books relate together because to me it’s the relationship of the characters.
I give this book 5 stars because even though the authors endings are always the same with everything always being a happy ending and someone falling in love I like the fact that she told it a little different this time.
Debo admitir que ya me había rendido con esta escritora.
Había leído sus anteriores trabajos y los odie.
Pero entonces conseguí este libro y lo pensé muchas veces antes de leerlo y debo decir que no me arrepiento.
El mundo que creo la escritora me encanto, todo oscuro y misterioso. Te hace pensar que estar criaturas sobrenaturales pueden vivir cerca y no te darías cuenta, me pareció fantástico. La protagonista me pareció muy bien estructurada y profundizada. Me encanto que era todo una BAD ASS caza vampiros. Lo que si no me gustó y con gusto hubiese arracado esas páginas del libro, fue el intento de romance que hubo. Fue patético, he leído acerca de almas gemelas, y me han encantado pero esto fue extremadamente absurdo, no diré nada porque sería spoiler, pero la verdad. Lo odie.
No sé si seguiré la saga, pero al menos sé que esta escritora si tiene algo que decir.
Is it me or are these just getting better?! This was cheesy, but less so than the other books. Like I always say, I just wish these could be longer..
*Minor Spoilers*
I'm hesitant to give this book a 5 stars because of the "shortness". I really love the soulmate theory, but sometimes I just feel like it's an excuse to not write more conversations and interactions between characters. I mean the two characters barely spoke casually, they always argued about death.. They really didn't know each other, but they were deeply in love at the end. It's cute, making my eyes roll slowly. I just wish there was more for us, as readers, to also fall in love with their love. Make sense?
Don't get me wrong, I love these books and will continued reading. This was another great addition to the series!
One star may be considered a bit harsh... but it's really because the book had so much PROMISE. I absorbed the first half of this book, excited for how it was going to unfold, how it was going to be less predictable than the other books in the series. I felt... well, I suppose I felt that the book had a sense of maturity that the others lacked due to the YA audience focus.
*Sigh* But the ending just had me so terribly disappointed by shattering my expectations that I just couldn't give it two stars. I just _couldn't_.
man, rashel and quinn are SO CUTE. i like that their story is about more than them finding their soulmates- it's about them learning how to be people again, instead of just hunters. i also love the thought that quinn has known about ash's human soulmate for MONTHS and just keeps giving him shit about it instead of turning him in or whatever. oh boys, never change.
I love Rashel! She is strong and brave and courageous and does the right thing. Exactly the type of hero for me! On top of that, she finds her soulmate and finally accepts him (at the end, duh. Just like all the other books). Rashel makes this book come to life!
This is the second time reading the book, but I needed a way to have it on my reading challenge, since the first time I read it was sometime last year.