I saw Nenia Campbell read this and her review sent me down memory lane.
Back in the day, years before Twilight rocketed through the teen landscape like Elvis' hip thrusts, there existed books that were proto-YA books. Usually with a hard page or word limit that was dreadfully low. Generally with a message. Some of them, particularly those that dealt with the supernatural, were humming off the torrid success of the mass market paperback horror scene.
These teen vampire books were edgy. They were kinda sexy. They had...dare I say it, bite.
What they generally lacked was a whole lot else, and that's not to knock them. Teen vampire books were often overshadowed by adult horror-lite authors like Ann Rice, because there really was no true YA section back in the day. Once you read through the children's section, you went straight to adult books.
Anywho, we have Vivian Vande Velde. Who was a known name among the kids who read and looked for teen vampire books—along with Annette Curtis Klause and Amelia Atwater-Rhodes (the latter being famous because she published a lot of her work when she was in her teens).
For me, VVV is mostly miss. There's a level of craft and plot and resolution that's missing.
Companions of the Night is like taking a bite of mystery food and realizing that you've gotten a 1970s Powerbar. It'll fill you up, kinda, but it won't taste good and it'll stick in your mouth.
The book starts right away with Kerry Nowicki having to go do the laundromat to grab her four-year-old brother's stuffed koala. She doesn't tell their dad, who is asleep. And she feels bad because her mom left the family to run away with a dude to live in Florida and get her private investigator's license. Oh, and mom took the washer and dryer, which are totally also at the top of my list to grab whenever I bail on my family.
At the laundromat, Kerry finds a razor blade and also the koala. Just as she's about to leave, three men enter dragging and injured fourth they claim is a vampire. They're kicking him and beating him and Kerry is like "no stop!" So she's a prisoner now too, and then she helps Ethan escape and he brings her to his house and kisses this much older sexy lady in front of her (but they're not together, absolutely not), and he drives her home and doesn't kiss Kerry because she's sixteen. But Kerry believes him that he's a vampire.
Kerry is like, whew thank goodness that's all over now I can focus on my English test.
Except the next night after she closes at the supermarket she runs into Ethan again, and he's like "Come with me if you want to live" except not really—her dad was supposed to pick her up at 8 and it's 8:30 and when they go home her house is ransacked and there's red writing (in paint not blood) that says, "We have your family, vampire." And a Bible verse.
So Kerry and Ethan run to his "uncle's" house and find the sexy vampire lady has been murdered—burnt to a crisp. So they bundle up the body, burn the house down, go to a sex shop to get handcuffs, go to the New York swamp to bury the body in quicksand (ever the popular boogeyman of the 90s), and then sleep in an abandoned subway tunnel in Rochester. Btw, to prevent her from escaping, Ethan handcuffs her to a pipe. But he leaves her flashlights, batteries, coca cola and chips, so he's a keeper.
And I'd love to say that the plot resolves from there, except there's this random professor who was after the sexy vampire lady and became convinced that Kerry was a vampire too, so he somehow knows what schoolbus she takes home and sideswipes it with her dad's car in broad daylight and then vanishes.
Kerry and Ethan are like, we have to find him. Ethan lies to her about her family, and Kerry finds the professor and talks to him.
What follows is just ridiculous, and after the big showdown Ethan is like "I can change you into a vampire if you want" and Kerry is like "I love you," and he's like "so uh, wanna be a vampire?" and she's like "oh well I have to get...back home now." And then she leaves on foot to her house because her family is back at home safe and sound with no need for her to rescue them, and that is literally the book and apparently Ethan is French.
Like I said, ridiculous.
Anywho, like most VVV books, there's a romance (?) that forms with zero chemistry due to proximity, and like all VVV books, it ends with no resolution. Like, the scene is over, end the book, donesies.
But, I cannot with the attempt at edgy vibes.
What I like about Companions of the Night is that it builds upon and obliquely critiques the issue books of teen-lit yesteryear. This is not an issue book, thankyouverymuch, this book says. This book has bad people and grey morals and vampires don't lead a kid to do marijuana and booze and dropping their grades—that's literally college and trying new things. The vampires were just there, man.
And instead of dying because she's bad and done bad things (gone into a sex shop, stolen a car, drove on a learner's permit, went out after curfew, didn't study for an English test), she gets to go home to her family like none of this happened. Even Ethan, the baddie and love interest/manipulator gets to go on doing his bloodsucking thing, because he didn't take advantage of a sixteen year old girl. The five people he murdered? Whatever. They were trying to kill him.
I'm happy I revisited this one. It reminded me of Holly Black's early books from around the same period. Cigarettes. Underages girls in places they really shouldn't be but had to for ~plot purposes~ and because they're not like other girls. They have edge. They find older men and bowl them over with their...personality.* And you, sweet preteen reading up past bedtime, most certainly do not.
It wasn't good, but it was entertaining.
*When I think of all the book banning currently happening because parents of today are heated about YA and MG books featuring very tame age-appropriate LGBTQ+ characters, I look back at the teen books of the 90s and early 00s and I just laugh. And laugh. And laugh. Because these parents might have forgotten the books of their youth, but Pepperidge Farms hasn't. And neither have I.