The author of the popular Sonja Blue novels here presents all of her heroine's short stories, prefacing them with an interview in which she discusses the origins and popularity of the character, a vampire who hunts her own kind.
Nancy A. Collins (born 10 September 1959) is a United States horror fiction writer best known for her series of vampire novels featuring her character Sonja Blue. Collins has also written for comic books, including the Swamp Thing series, Jason Vs. Leatherface, Predator: Hell Come A Walkin and her own one-shot Dhampire: Stillborn.
Collins was born in McGehee, Arkansas, United States. She lived in New Orleans, Louisiana in the 1980s; after time in New York City and Atlanta, Georgia she settled in Wilmington, North Carolina in the late 2000s.
Collins has written twenty novels since 1989, many of which refer to and directly include races of creatures the author calls Pretenders, monsters from myth and legend passing as human to better hunt their prey.
Collins has also written a number of highly acclaimed Southern Gothic short stories and novellas, most of which are set in Seven Devils, Arkansas, a highly fictionalized version of her hometown.
Most recently, she has focused her attention onto the Golgotham urban fantasy series,published by Penguin. Golgotham is the 'supernatural' ghetto of New York City, where creatures from myth and folklore--including witches,shapeshifters,leprechauns and centaurs--live and work in uneasy alliance with mankind.
These titles remind me so much of my childhood. I remember finding the 1st Sonja Blue book and loving it. I am fortunate that I can still find more of her adventures.
This is an example of a great short-story. It bites exactly what it can chew and would work perfectly as a teaser for a full novel. Well written - though I'd go without the "gangsta" talk - nicely developed and paced with the exact amount of information necessary to make it interesting. Then why didn't I rate it as 5? Well, in the end it comes down to personal taste, I didn't like the main character or the attitude, though it was clear she understood the whole psychology of the issue in front of her, she was just cruel. Not my thing, but still a great short.