“The only way to stop them is to kill them.
And the only way to kill them is to starve them.
So, stop feeding them.”
👏 This 👏 was 👏 so 👏 cool 👏
Holy cow, this is the most original book I’ve read in many years. A dystopian book following a grandmother who is also a reaper - in a world that has been divided into blood types and different catastrophes have raised the need for blood, citizens must give blood during the Harvest and, for extra money, they can sell it off at the Trade. Highbloods (O- and O+) get extra money for being universal-ish donors, while ABs live in poverty. Willa, the grandmother, is the phlebotomist taking the blood from the people and sending it off to Patriot. But one day, she’s approached by one of the Locksmith’s guys. The Locksmith’s a blood hacker who switches things up so ABs can sell their blood as if it’s O-, which of course is bad for transfusions. Willa would never, unless… things stop making sense.
And guys, this is so cool because 1) there are so many facts about blood and the heart in this book, I learnt a lot. 2) Sugar makes anticoagulant and that’s so cool to know? 3) VAMPIRESSSSSSSSS.
Now, onto the book. I’m obsessed with the setting, the concept, and the world. Below are my bittersweet notes about it and why this isn’t a five star read (as much as it weirdly feels like it).
Some of the characters were great and fun - Lock, Kathy, and Everard. But I found issue with the bad guys, who were flat and just bad. And then… Willa and Isaiah. Willa is the main character and she’s a grandma, but she doesn’t really struggle with anything age-related. And most importantly, this book needs you to care about Isaiah - everything Willa-wise is concerning taking care of him, but Isaiah is just…. There. We know little about him besides his blood type and that he takes a while waking up. So caring about Willa’s plight and objectives was tough. Like, you get her, but you don’t care about Isaiah at all.
The writing was good but it was weird. The book is very fast-paced, yet the writing feels heavy and dragging, like you’re pulling teeth at the story so it can advance. And you’d think this is because of world-building or character-building, and I guess you’re right, but both areas are lacking. You get just enough from the world to understand it and just enough about the characters to root for them generally, but you end up with questions, gaps, and just not knowing anything or anyone deeply. I think if the book had had little chapters or intermissions including what some other citizens or ‘bad guys’ were going through, it would have enriched it all. And maybe more background information about the characters. Even by the end of it, I just didn’t know shit about Kathy or Lock other than what they have said - which I’d get if we were only following Willa or if this was a first person narration, but it isn’t. We’re following all of them, yet we barely know them. And if it wasn’t because Kathy, Lock, and Everard are funny and cool as fuck, I wouldn’t give a damn.
The ending was… weird. This is an issue concerning worldbuilding. We don’t really know where we are. Let’s assume we’re in Washington DC, we know the city is divided into the Crest, and then the blood zones. Beyond Washington DC, we have other cities with similar divisions. Yeah? Okay. So then we are told this is also the case in India. So let’s assume this is worldwide. Something happens at the end of the book in their location and even if we assume this isn’t contained 100% where they are… how do we think it would impact New Delhi? I don’t know. The book needed 100 more pages to flesh out things because I didn’t get the ending (I got it for the characters and their location, but not for the ‘beyond’). And… wtf are the Gray Zones? We hear about them every three pages, what are they? Who lives there? Why do they need blood? Lol
Regardless of the average rating, this was such a trip. I will definitely check the author again because this was FUN. I just had so many questions and I so wish things had been better developed. I would love to read more books set in this world, it was so so so so cool. Highly recommend it!
To wrap up, I'll add a bit that made me laugh here:
“This just seems like a story.”
“Dang Willa, you’re like the worst counterintelligence agent I’ve ever known. Of course it’s told as a story. Then it’s fiction, right? What’d you think they’d do, just spell out who they are and what they’re all about? Attention, here’s our vampire manual for being vampires cause we’re vampires. Read only if you’re a vampire. Geezwilla.”