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Bloodlands

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The New Badlands—a desolate area in the West forged by the terrible events that altered the entire country, where a few frightened citizens retreated underground to shelter from the brutal weather... and from a society gone deadly dangerous.

Then the vampire arrived—and they started calling it the Bloodlands.

Not because Gabriel, the so-called monster running from his true self, was searching for his lover’s murderer. Nor because Mariah, the woman who reluctantly took him in, was willing to do anything to survive in the changed world.

No, the Badlands officially became the Bloodlands the moment a gun-for-hire who’d decided to slay every monster left in the country came after Gabriel...

309 pages, ebook

First published July 26, 2011

14 people are currently reading
831 people want to read

About the author

Christine Cody

3 books26 followers
Christine Cody is also the author of the urban fantasy Vampire Babylon (w/a Chris Marie Green). Until about six years ago, she was an eighth-grade teacher, but she became a full-time author who has published over thirty-five books under this name as well as the pseudonym Crystal Green. You can follow her occasionally fanatical yen for pop culture on Twitter and Facebook.


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Displaying 1 - 30 of 73 reviews
Profile Image for Kelly.
616 reviews165 followers
August 8, 2011
This is a crow-eating review. Or, considering the kind of carrion eater that lives in Christine Cody’s post-apocalyptic world, a giant-gargoyle-bird-eating review. I had a terrible time getting into Bloodlands, it took me several weeks to read it, and I fully expected this to be a negative review. Instead, I’m pleasantly surprised. It’s been a while since a book pulled the rug out from under me so satisfyingly.

Bloodlands is set in the American West of the near future, after a number of disasters have devastated the climate and caused society to splinter. The heroine, Mariah, lives in an underground warren with a group of other misfits and her extremely bright Intel Dog, Chaplin. Her existence is shaken up by the arrival of Gabriel, a vampire on a quest that leads him to the enclave. Gabriel’s arrival coincides with an eruption of violence in the area; the henchmen of an intimidating neighbor, Stamp, are being picked off.

I had trouble getting into the world-building at first. Christine Cody, a.k.a. Chris Marie Green, has lots of interesting ideas, but employs a fair amount of infodumping to reveal them to the reader. And since technology is one of the things that’s gone badly wrong in this future, at times the book almost seems to lecture against technology. For example, only bad guys speak Text, a dialect whose speakers pronounce words the way they’d spell them in a text message.

I had trouble with the hero, Gabriel, who at first appeared to be a standard Vampire Stalker Guy. He comes to the New Badlands to search for an old girlfriend who has run from him, and then once he meets Mariah, his interest in her is a dangerous mixture of regular lust and bloodlust. I had trouble with Mariah, whose tragic past made her sympathetic but who was so prickly that she kept even the reader at arm’s length. Her fears were understandable but I wished she could push past them in certain situations, and she seemed to have a particular hangup that set my inner feminist’s teeth on edge. I had issues with the villain, too, who was more restrained in his villainy than I expected. It felt unrealistic that he wouldn’t aggress more decisively than he did.

For about the first half of Bloodlands, the focus is on the cautious development of a relationship between Mariah and Gabriel. Her chapters use first person narration, and his are in third person. The two characters slowly begin to let their guard down and reveal more layers of their character, to each other and to the reader. This connection is at first facilitated by the dog, Chaplin, who is a full character in his own right and has his own agendas and schemes. Meanwhile, the violence between the enclave settlers and Stamp’s posse is escalating, and becomes a more prominent plotline in the latter half of the book.

As the story unfolds, odd little moments and inconsistencies begin to appear. The reader begins to wonder whether all is as it seems, or if one of the protagonists is . Then we reach the big twist. It’s a doozy. It’s the kind of twist that casts new light on the entire book. Character traits that annoyed or confused me were explained and reinterpreted through this lens. Everything made utter and total sense. If you’re reading Bloodlands and finding it slow going — if things don’t quite add up or the characters are bugging you — don’t give up. I thought I was reading one book, and now I see that I was reading another book entirely, and I like this second book much better.

Bloodlands, in the final analysis, is a tale of forgiveness, acceptance, and redemption — of oneself and of others. It builds slowly, but the twist makes the journey well worth it. Bloodlands is the first in a trilogy, and the three books are being released in rapid succession, so readers won’t have to wait long to learn what happens next to these complex, damaged characters.
Profile Image for Catherine.
522 reviews576 followers
September 11, 2011
I finished this book last night and I’m still conflicted. I honestly don’t know whether I liked it or not. It’s one of those grey books that leaves you with murky feelings and makes you wonder if you should check out the next book before you make up your mind.

I found this book really hard to get into. The writing felt distancing, although it became apparent to me later that this was on purpose, and I didn’t warm up to the characters easily. The world itself was a little hard to figure out, but I eventually got a handle on all the particulars of it—I still struggled until the end, though. I really think this book spent way too much time trying to be mysterious and not enough time on development.

The new world is filled with Shredders and Intel dogs and Text speak (which was seriously like nails on a chalkboard for me) and it got a little confusing. I didn’t understand that why’s of it all. I got that old people—or at least old compared to the new desirable age group—were no longer acceptable and that the hubs had turned into a wastrel’s paradise, but why? I still don’t understand how society got to that point. And when exactly did the vampires and demons and werecreatures come into play? I got the impression it was around the time everything else went to hell, but this wasn’t explained at all. I eventually shrugged it off, but it still continues to nag at me. Maybe we could have just had a quick opening page/prologue offering a quick explanation to ease us in?

In the beginning I didn’t like Gabriel very much. I found his motives for following the mysterious Abby less than sympathetic and was a bit repelled by the way his vampirism was presented. I suppose I prefer my vampires more controlled and sexy and less easily swayed by bloodlust. It’s all right, though. I adjusted to how it was presented in the book. I eventually came to appreciate his struggle to be more than just a monster and was sympathetic to his search to find Abby as more symbolic than not. He ended up being the most well developed character in the book and I found that he was really the only one I found sympathetic, other than the oldster, when the book ended.

The book was slow and grim and felt a bit claustrophobic because of being stuck in such a small area with so few people. It didn’t help that those people were prickly and secretive and getting any information out of them was like pulling teeth. I’m honestly surprised that it didn’t bother Gabriel more than it did, because it drove me nuts. I had a really hard time adjusting to the narrative style changes the author employed. In Mariah’s pov it was first person but in everyone else’s it was third. I did not like this, but I know that’s not going to be the same for everyone.

Midway through the book I started to get tired of the lack of information and deliberate mysterious air the author was employing. It became tedious and irritating. I knew exactly where it was going and I was tired of character development being circumvented by the distance necessary to achieve that air. After all was finally revealed toward the end, we ended up getting a huge infodump to bring us up to speed on all the information that had been kept from us. It made a lot of behaviors and situations make more sense, but it didn’t really change the fact that I spent most of the book bored with the way it was written.

There is a romantic arc in the book, but it doesn’t end with a HEA or even a HFN. Gabriel ends the book fulfilled in one sense but absolutely destroyed in another. He’s going to have to work through a lot of things before he can even like Mariah without feeling conflicted. I think it’ll be the same with me. I didn’t like her much when the book ended, and not much before that if I’m being honest. I found the romantic development we saw to be sad and not really romantic at all. It felt more like a creation of close quarters, desperation and loneliness, and a difficulty controlling the monster, than anything actually tender or soft. It was interesting to watch develop, but I can’t say I’m invested in any way.

I’m not sure if I will continue with this series or not. It’s not one that I can out and out recommend, but it’s not one that I can not recommend either.

Favorite Quote:
"Don't ask me to explain, but I've had my time with evil. Every one of us out here has, and that's why I'm glad Stamp's men are dying. Bad guys deserve their comeuppance, and they sure don't get it back in society. There, unchecked greed is rewarded. Out here, it's punished, and that's why you don't go outside if you've got something to answer for. That's the way of the world here."

Review originally posted on Fiction Vixen.
Profile Image for Gary.
167 reviews70 followers
June 29, 2016
Won't be reading the next one
Profile Image for April .
485 reviews14 followers
July 18, 2011
(Originally posted @ CSI:Librarian.)

This weekend I actually started and abandoned a lot of books, but I did so in such rapid succession that I saw no point in even mentioning them. But after countless horrible Conan graphic novels and several lack-lustre Science Fiction books, I was hoping to move on to something that was more my sort of thing. Bloodlands was infinitely superior to my previous reading attempts, of course, but it still ended up being yet another book that I picked up only to put it down again fairly quickly.

Ultimately, a vampire cowboy, an Intel Dog whose barks meant words or full sentences, a post-apocalyptic setting, and switching from first to third person point of views in various chapters, did nothing to distract me from the fact that the first 100 or so pages of this book were primarily about two people in a shelter having feelings for one another for no apparent reason so that they can be a couple a few books down the road. Had this book been just about the vampire and his canine sidekick, I would have continued, but I was not loving the female main character and I am not a fan of romantic tensions and lust based solely on proximity.

Truth be told, the odds were probably not in Bloodlands' favor anyway. I have a sizably large To Be Read pile with books about other supernatural cowboys, circuses, goblins, guys with guns, dysfunctional detectives, and precog soldiers to attend to. And an allergic reaction to women and girls behaving irrationally because a vampire, faery, demon or angel showed up. Matters were then made infinitely worse when a copy of A Dance with Dragons showed up on my doorstep this morning, but I digress. After making one last ditch effort this morning, skimming ahead, and also reading other reviews... Well, as a Magic 8 Ball would say, the outlook was not good so I gave up.

In conclusion, no mas. If you are a fan of paranormal romance or vampires in general, you might appreciate this book more than I did... However, I would strongly suggest reading some other reviews first.
Profile Image for Angela James.
Author 1 book61.1k followers
Read
July 4, 2011
This is one of those books that I read the first three chapter of, and then skipped to the last. I love a good majority of the urban fantasy books that come from the Ace imprint, but this one was not for me. The motivations of the male character were...weak for me. Basically, he developed an obsession for a woman who disappeared, and he's been searching for her in a dangerous, post-apocalyptic world for around over a year. His memories of her show her to have had seemingly little interest in or care of him, but he's obsessed with finding her, holding her up as...some sort of ideal, or symbol. He has no hesitations in using the heroine and her dog to further his quest.

Meanwhile, the heroine is presented as a somewhat cold, suspicious person, yet she lets this man into her home and then lets him stay. And semi-masturbates at a time when she thinks he might be watching. Yeah, that was pretty random in this clearly non-romance book. Her actions are inconsistent with what we're told about her.

So, both of these characters hit no empathy or connection for me, and after flipping to the end and seeing how it ended (on a kind of cliffhanger, really, and definitely no kind of hopeful tone) it was only too easy to set it aside. I was never able to get into this author's books when she wrote as Chris Marie Green and, unfortunately, the pseudonym change hasn't changed that for me.

However, fans of darker urban fantasy featuring vampires and shifters might favor this.
Profile Image for Shelley.
5,598 reviews489 followers
August 17, 2011
*Rating* 3.5
*Genre* Science Fiction/Dystopia

*Review*

Bloodlands is told in a post-apocalyptic landscape where a mosquito epidemic wiped out and separated much of the population. Terrorism, both outside and within the US, tore the rest of the country apart with bombs placed in key locations along earthquake faults. This in turn, left the survivors fighting for their lives.

People actually started to believe that their own government was worse than the bad guys themselves after they set up segregated areas like Southblock which includes parts of Florida, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi. Shocking right that you can’t trust your own government? Who knew?

The story follows the paths of two main characters: Mariah Lysander and Gabriel who is a vampire. It is told in alternating chapters one in the POV of Mariah, while the other tells Gabriel’s from a third party prospective.

Mariah and her father were forced to flee Dallas for the new badlands after their family was attacked, and the mother and younger brother were left for dead. Mariah was also attacked, but we don’t learn the extent of what actually happened to her until much later in the story. And, once the secret does come out, you start to understand why this small community lives the way they do and why then don’t much care for any strangers.

Mariah’s constant companion, best friend, and body guard is Chaplin. He is a genetically engineered intelligent dog. He is smarter than a human, and is able to communicate with Mariah without much of a problem. Later, it will be explained how that is possible and how this little dog played such a key role in the events that lead to Mariah and the rest of the community revealing themselves.

Things change for the small underground community where Mariah and others like Sammy Ramos, Zel Hopkins, the Oldster, Hana and Pucci dwell when Gabriel appears outside of their abode and asks for help after being beaten to a bloody pulp.

Mariah, being a person who distrusts all strangers, is hesitant at first to allow him inside. Chaplin makes her see the errors of her thinking, and soon Gabriel becomes a part of a plan to protect the community from another outsider who is getting too close to finding out that they have access to water.

Gabriel has come to the new badlands in search of a woman who he fell in love with. The girl, Abby, ran away from Gabriel after discovering that he was a vampire and she allowed him to feed off her. She figured that the two of them were incompatible since she too was carrying a dark secret and wasn’t ready to let out to anyone.

Gabriel was turned into a vampire by a random female who thought it would be fun to turn him, and then left him behind to figure things out for himself. Gabriel’s own family was lost during the epidemic so he has been wandering ever since. Gabriel actually felt the pull off the Badlands like the rest of the characters introduced in this book.

The story takes a while to get going, and I’ve read where people have actually abandoned this book without giving it a chance. If you give up on the book after the first half or before, you will miss out on the most important points to what really happened to Mariah, and how she is constantly fighting her inner demons in order to not lash out or attack anyone else.

Gabriel becomes a pawn in a dangerous game after he is discovered to be a vampire by Chaplin. Chaplin plans the whole thing out on how Gabriel is going to save the community from an outsider named Johnson Sharp who was once a government trained Shredder, or hunter of vampires and were-creatures. He does so in order to hide Mariah and keep her from losing further control of her already out of control emotions.

There is enough sexual tension between Gabriel and Mariah that will most likely satisfy those who crave it and can’t get enough. It is obvious that they both feel a pull towards the other after sharing blood and sex.

The one thing that absolutely drove me nuts was the so called Text speak that certain sub-characters use along the way. (All bad guys) It pretty much means exactly what it says. People were so hung up on using instant messaging, and texting to communicate with each other, that they no longer know how to speak complete sentences. The rest of the characters use what they are calling Old American.

I’m more than willing to give this series a fair shake since I previously read the entire Vampire Bablyon series under the authors Chris Marie Green name.

It is an interesting world, with interesting characters (once you get to know them all) who all are hiding what they truly are from the world. Mariah is probably the most damaged of all the characters, while Gabriel is one of those that you wouldn’t mind taking home and introducing to your mother.

Bloodlands Trilogy
1. Bloodlands (July 26, 2011)
2. Blood Rules (August 30th 2011)
3. In Blood We Trust (September 27th 2011)

Profile Image for All Things Urban Fantasy.
1,921 reviews620 followers
July 19, 2011
Review courtesy of All Things Urban Fantasy

Is BLOODLANDS, the first book in the Bloodlands Trilogy by Christine Cody (aka Chris Marie Green aka Crystal Green) a paranormal western? Post-apocalyptic fantasy? Dystopian romance? I don’t know what to call it except good. Very, very good.

The narrating voice of Mariah is immediately the kind that pulls you—even drags you when necessary—into her bleak but fascinating world. Set in a not too distant future, BLOODLANDS portrays a world that has been brought to it’s knees and then kicked for good measure by environmental changes, corrupt governments, and power hungry ne'er-do-wells. Water is more valuable than gold, gangs rove the scorched earth, and monsters are real. Mariah, a deeply suspicious and independent woman, lives underground with a small community of others. Her only companion is a brilliant (literally) dog and a stockpile of weapons. Gabriel is the other protagonist, a broken man without hope, who falls on Mariah’s doorstep half dead.

The story moves swiftly, especially in the beginning when these two characters, both with secrets, circle each other and gradually learn to trust (perhaps not as gradually as I would have liked in Mariah’s case). There are so many nuggets of flat out cool world building that I’m already disappointing that there are only three books in this series. I also loved the succession of surprises that crept up towards the end that I never saw coming. They impacted the story enough that I already want to read it again to experience it in a totally new light.

Overall, BLOODLANDS is a surprisingly romantic story of survival set in a ruined world full of monsters, both human and otherwise, that will leave dust on your skin and a smile on your face after finishing. In an act of supreme kindness to fans who will soon be panting after more books, Ace is publishing all three books in the Bloodlands Trilogy back to back. BLOODLANDS on July 26th, BLOOD RULES on August 30th, and IN BLOOD WE TRUST on September 27th.

Sexual Content:
A scene of masturbation. A scene of graphic sensuality. A graphic sex scene.
Profile Image for Torzilla.
278 reviews134 followers
September 26, 2011
I was waffling between rating this book a 2.5 or a 3, primarily because I wasn't too thrilled about the treatment of one of the characters at the end of the book. Now, whether that treatment is deserved is for another discussion, which is why I bumped it up half a star.

BLOODLANDS has both its good and bad moments. The good, and what instantly drew me in, was the attraction between Gabriel and Mariah. Those two had some sizzling scenes early on--particularly the one where Mariah is administering some self loving--and the passion between them had me excited about this book. In that regard, this duo effortlessly outshines a lot of other hero/heroines.

There was an interesting twist by the end that I only semi-suspected about halfway to 3/4ths of the way in. Reflecting on prior scenes, a lot more makes sense after this big reveal, and I give kudos to the author for keeping me in the dark for so long. It was exciting not knowing what would happen next, and for the mystery aspect alone, BLOODLANDS is definitely a refreshing read. No love triangles, and certainly no pnrs where it's love at first sight in this book, folks.

Alas, the not-so-good in this novel seemed to stick with me more than the good, and is what ultimately has made me wary of future books in this series (coupled with a few less-than-stellar reviews by bloggers I trust). Instead of being a novel where there is at least some movement, we are generally restricted to Mariah's quaint home. After a while, it does get wearisome realizing that almost every single scene occurs here, and I wished that we could have at least heard about some descriptions of the outside surroundings in more detail. This is such a unique world that I feel it's almost like a crime not to focus on the worldbuilding more.

Interesting secondary characters don't get much attention for a good chunk of the book. While this is unfortunate, it is also a blessing since my interest in Gabriel/Mariah began to lessen as the novel continued, so the secondary characters were like a saving grace that kept me reading.

Mariah is... well, I want to say that she's infuriating, because she is, but there's just something about her character that rubbed off on me the wrong way. She is easily forgettable, and I think her fears are what made me tired of her. While Gabriel was easier to relate with, Mariah was not because readers are essentially told what happened to her in the past, instead of being shown. That, in my eyes, is the biggest downfall of this book because, while her situation sucks, I couldn't really make myself care. Had the author shown us the events from Mariah's past, like we're shown with Gabriel's past, I think I would have felt for our heroine a lot more.

BLOODLANDS has both its strengths and weaknesses, so I really can't recommend whether to read or avoid this novel due to my ambivalence even a month after reading it. The premise is interesting, and I admit that I was excited to read this series prior to reading any reviews about it. If you tend to have similar tastes in books, then I think that this is one of those novels that you'll have to read without knowing much about it.
Profile Image for Tynga.
560 reviews122 followers
August 12, 2011
Set in a future where technology and white-collar villains destroyed the planet as we know it now, Mariah and a bunch of secluded folks are hiding in tunnels underneath the New Badlands, trying to escape the madness… That is, until Stamp came along, wanting to claim their territory for his own. Gabriel, as vampire looking for his runaway girlfriend, will also interfere in his quest to find her… and redemption along the way.

Try and imagine a dystopian set-up with bad guys, mutant creatures and talking dogs and add to it a healthy dose of Western atmosphere and you’ll get a good idea of what to expect in Christine Cody’s Bloodlands. I really enjoyed this dry and hostile territory where water is the most valuable resource. Monsters are roaming the earth, and Vampires aren’t the only ones out for blood. Mystery is also a thick veil over this inhospitable land and the author really keeps us in the dark until the end.

Even though the whole set-up was the star for me in this first novel of the Bloodlands series, the characters were also quite amazing. Mariah is hiding in the tunnels, afraid to go out and trying to run from a terrible, yet very mysterious, past. She was convinced by her Intel Dog (a talking mutant dog) to help Gabriel, a man who showed up at her door, bloody and dying. She has no idea of the trouble she's letting in… Her attraction to him will prove hazardous and I enjoyed their struggle in this very unlikely relationship. Both are figuratively haunted and their personal bogeyman might just catch up to them.

The bad guys are bad, yet when you compare them to the good guys… the lines gets blurry. Not everyone are what they seem in this terrible landscape and your allegiance may deceive you.

The tempo is rather slow even though it’s spiked with bursts of violence and the end is the apogee of this marathon. It will surprise you and completely challenge the perspective you had of the whole plot. Christine tied-up the story very well, no deadly cliff-hanger to speak of, yet I’m very excited for the second installment, Blood Rules, to be released on August 30th.

I would definitely recommend this book to Dystopian and Urban Fantasy fans. It’s a very original tale, not to be missed!

Oh and that cover? Down right amazing.. just sayin’.
Profile Image for Kristin  (MyBookishWays Reviews).
601 reviews213 followers
July 21, 2011
You may also read my review here: http://www.mybookishways.com/2011/07/...

Mariah Lyander, who’s family slaughtered in cold blood, has come to live in the New Badlands with her Intel Dog (smarter than the average bear, er, dog), Chaplin, in an underground bunker. When a stranger, a man named Gabriel, is wounded and begs for her help, she lets him in, against her own better judgement. Gabriel is searching for Abby, the woman he loves, who left suddenly, and without explanation. Mariah has been alone for a while, and Gabriel awakens feelings in her that she thought were gone for good. Water is a precious commodity, and Mariah has done her best to make this underground dwelling safe for her and the rest of its inhabitants. When they are threatened by a man named Stamp and his vicious crew, Mariah may have to look to Gabriel for help, even though she suspects him of being a monster just like the one that’s been roaming the night aboveground, slaughtering humans.
With the New Badlands, Christine Cody creates a world that’s a cross between Mad Max, Firefly, and the Wild West. Gabriel is a vampire searching for redemption, and determined to hide his true nature. Mariah is tough and damaged, but her feelings for Gabriel are undeniable. There’s sufficient sexual tension throughout the story, and Gabriel has a White Knight streak a mile long. Stamp is a former Shredder, tasked with eliminating preternaturals and is determined to wipe them from this world, with impunity, and without mercy. I enjoyed the tense relationship between Gabriel and Mariah, but I wanted to read more about the New Badlands and the events that led up to such cataclysmic changes for humanity, so I’m hopeful we’ll get more in the next couple of books. Lots of character set up is done in this one, but be patient, it's worth the payoff! There’s also a really nice twist that I’ll admit I didn’t see coming, and the promise of an awesome (trust me on this one) final showdown will keep you turning the pages. Bloodlands is a fun start to a promising new series!
Profile Image for Kristin  (MyBookishWays Reviews).
601 reviews213 followers
July 14, 2011
You may also read my review here: http://www.mybookishways.com/2011/07/...

Mariah Lyander, who’s family was slaughtered ,has come to live in the New Badlands with her Intel Dog (smarter than the average bear, er, dog), Chaplin, in an underground bunker. When a stranger, a man named Gabriel, is wounded and begs for her help, she lets him in, against her own better judgement. Gabriel is searching for Abby, the woman he loves, who left suddenly, and without explanation. Mariah has been alone for a while, and Gabriel awakens feelings in her that she thought were gone for good. Water is a precious commodity, and Mariah has done her best to make this underground dwelling safe for her and the rest of its inhabitants. When they are threatened by a man named Stamp and his vicious crew, Mariah may have to look to Gabriel for help, even though she suspects him of being a monster just like the one that’s been roaming the night aboveground, slaughtering humans.
With the New Badlands, Christine Cody creates a world that’s a cross between Mad Max, Firefly, and the Wild West. Gabriel is a vampire searching for redemption, and determined to hide his true nature. Mariah is tough and damaged, but her feelings for Gabriel are undeniable. There’s sufficient sexual tension throughout the story, and Gabriel has a White Knight streak a mile long. Stamp is a former Shredder, tasked with eliminating preternaturals and is determined to wipe them from this world, with impunity, and without mercy. I enjoyed the tense relationship between Gabriel and Mariah, but I wanted to read more about the New Badlands and the events that led up to such cataclysmic changes for humanity, so I’m hopeful we’ll get more in the next couple of books. Lots of character set up is done in this one, but be patient, it's worth the payoff! There’s also a really nice twist that I’ll admit I didn’t see coming, and the promise of an awesome (trust me on this one) final showdown will keep you turning the pages. Bloodlands is a fun start to a promising new series!
Profile Image for Amy.
619 reviews26 followers
August 17, 2011
PB/Fantasy, but really Paranormal Romance. The book is written in different points of view, 3rd person: someone being attacked, 3rd person of Gabriel's story, and 1st person in Mariah's voice. The problem is there is a mystery that Mariah is hiding; so at the end of the book when the mystery is revealed there is too, too much explanation. Basically, everything Mariah is narrating is denial veiled in lies that she is telling the reader. So when the mystery is revealed, it is way out there. Gabriel is a vampire who, of course, falls for Mariah. Halfway through the book he has an "Edward Moment" and cannot decide if he needs to kiss her or bite her. It becomes very R-rated Twilightly. Most of the book takes place underground and is claustrophobic, dark, and dull. There is a mind-reading dog and vampire hunter. This is the first book of a trilogy, but can be read by itself since there is no dreaded cliffhanger. It is okay, but I am not going to continue with the other two.
47 reviews
August 4, 2011
Wonderfull read, great world building and loved watching the characters learn and live with bigotry, hatred, forgivness and redemption in a future post-apocalyptic world. Bloodlands is the first in the trilogy of which the second comes out next month and the third in Sept. Christine Cody (aka) Chris Marie Green is a seasoned writer of the Vampire Babylon Paranormal Romance series.
Profile Image for Zori Simone.
Author 1 book3 followers
August 5, 2011
The unfolding of the paranormal “rules” was well-paced. It just enough to keep me turning the pages for more. I thoroughly enjoyed the descriptions of setting and characters, all of which I could see clearly. Looking forward to more of Mariah and Gabriel in book 2!
Profile Image for Maria.
130 reviews21 followers
August 18, 2011
The premise for Bloodlands is that a variety of events have undermined human existence in the United States. Expansive internet use has driven people into their homes, and so community cohesion has been destroyed. The government has intruded so deeply into everyday life that the country has become a dystopian place, with individual interaction heavily monitored and controlled by government forces. Then a series of catastrophic natural disasters devastates the population, damage that is compounded by terrorist attacks in which bombs are planted along fault lines to change the landscape of the country. This upheaval and drastic natural and societal change has driven the outcasts of society, those who can’t conform for one reason or another, to the frontier of what remains of the country. For these survivors the frontier may be harsh and unforgiving, but it is the only place where they have any control over their destinies.

Almost every chapter in the book is named after the main character that is the focus of the story, save the first chapter: This chapter details how an unnamed character stalks and murders a man in the wasteland. The character is depicted as not human and in the grips of an uncontrollable blood lust, but offers few clues that might shed light on who the character might be. In the next chapter the reader is introduced to Mariah Lysander, a young woman who has seen terrible tragedy, and she lives below ground in a home her father made before committing suicide. Mariah lives with her dog Chaplin, who was been bred and altered in a lab prior to the catastrophes. Chaplin is intelligent and capable of speech, and his obligation is to protect an extremely fragile Mariah. This is why Mariah is surprised when Chaplin brings home a badly injured stranger, Gabriel. Although she is desperately afraid of Gabriel, or the impact his presence will have the tiny community nearby that she depends on for survival, she is drawn to him and offers what help she can.

Shortly thereafter, Gabriel appears as the focus of a chapter for the first time, and the narrative voice reveals that he is a vampire who has come to the wastelands to seek his lost love. Like Mariah, his life has been shaped by tragedy, and his connection to the woman he’s looking for is his reason for a miserable existence. His search leads him into the wastelands where he is beaten by the employees of the local boss, Johnson Stamp. He remembers having been beaten, but he doesn’t know how he escaped or what type of damage he did to the human who hurt him. Despite this, he knows he has brought danger to the small human community in the desert, and his innate nobility won’t allow him to leave them without doing his best to protect them, especially because he is hiding his true nature and fears he is responsible for the death of the man who attacked him.

As the story progresses Gabriel learns that Chaplin is more than just an “intel dog,” and the canine had ulterior motives for bringing him to the group that involve Johnson Stamp and his strong-arm tactics. Although Stamp is a young man, he worked for the government as a “shredder,” a monster hunter responsible for destroying vampires, demons, and were-animals created by accelerated evolution brought on by natural disaster. The government has decided that there is no longer any need for shredders, and this is what has prompted Stamp to move to the frontier, where he can express his violent tendencies more freely. He will not allow the murder of his employee to go unpunished, and it seems that Gabriel is the only individual between Mariah’s group and Stamp’s wrath. But is Chaplin’s plan to use Gabriel to defend Mariah in her friends, or to provide a sacrifice to appease Stamp’s anger and aggressive tendencies?

I found this book a somewhat difficult read, and it took me a while to figure out why it felt like the story was dragging. The first major issue I struggled with is genre. This story is a post-apocalyptic western paranormal romance, and all of these elements seem to be competing for primacy, rather than blending seamlessly. I’ve seen all these used together, and this novel lacks the grace and thematic harmony I’ve seen in other texts. There is the frontier, and the survival of the fittest in this space under the threat of Johnson Stamp, whose attempts to enforce peace is simply a thinly veiled excuse to be violent. Then there is the discussion of the dystopian world the characters have fled, a world complete with dialects, political structures, and a history which the reader is told in glimpses throughout the story. This interrupts the flow of the narrative and made me have to go back and reread passages to be sure I remembered details correctly. Finally, there is the romance, which feels predicated on Gabriel’s hero-complex and proximity to Mariah rather than their mutual attraction to appealing qualities or admiration. Since this book is part of a trilogy, and the remaining books will be released within months, there wasn’t such a great need to cover so much material. One of these elements could have been deferred until a later book in order to reduce confusion.

Likewise, the narrative structure of the book plays a large part in slowing down the way the story is told and how the reader interacts with the novel. Each chapter, with a couple of exceptions, is named after either Mariah or Gabriel, and the narrative styles are different, and it is this irregular fluctuation between first and third person narration that causes discomfort. Mariah’s chapters are all written in the first person, a style that is mean to remove the distance between the reader and the character and to encourage intimacy between the two. I can understand this choice; Mariah is not a very sympathetic character for most of the book, and this may have been a deliberate move by the author to encourage the reader to sympathize with her enough to figure out why she is borderline agoraphobic and emotionally fragile. By contrast, Gabriel’s chapters are all in third person, which has the effect of creating distance between the reader and the character by putting the narrative voice between them. This pull to Mariah and push from Gabriel is uncomfortable, and this may be a deliberate choice by the author to include the reader in the feelings of stress and disorientation the characters are experiencing.

Despite these issues, I found the story an interesting read, and I plan to buy the remaining books in the trilogy. It takes nearly the length of the book for the narrative to address Mariah’s nature and demeanor, but once these revelations take place her character is a little more sympathetic and the rest of the story falls into place. Gabriel remains the most compelling character in the novel for me, but the story is driven by Mariah’s internal conflict and need to overcome tragedy. I suspect the next novel will focus on Gabriel more, and this gives me additional incentive to keep reading. I am also looking forward to getting more details about the paranormal aspects of the vampires, demons, and were-creatures. There’s a magical aspect to how these beings are made and unmade (i.e., vampires revert to human if their makers are killed) that I don’t quite understand, especially since the supernatural beings are the product of evolution and not a magic-based source. There are some mysteries here, and I’m interested in seeing where the author takes these elements.
Profile Image for Jen.
553 reviews43 followers
February 2, 2018
My mum borrowed this from our friend who got a couple copies of this from the library they were giving away. She gave it to me to read.

It was pretty boring, tbh. It shouldn't be classified as fantasy, it was more adult paranormal.
Profile Image for Kara.
827 reviews
February 15, 2019
Set in the post-apocalyptic southwest we have the story of Mariah and Gabriel. Each is just trying to survive after losing nearly everything. Each is hiding big secrets that they have to hide. I like the community and the struggle for everyone to trust.
Profile Image for Janet.
3,326 reviews24 followers
June 30, 2019
I enjoyed this nice spin on vampires. However, I'm on the fence about whether I would continue with this series. There were some parts I really liked, and others, not so much. Overall, it was entertaining, and I did like Mariah.
Profile Image for Valerie Andruss.
23 reviews1 follower
May 17, 2018
Excellent piece of crime writing. Took me a bit to get the characters and their relationships straight
106 reviews6 followers
August 17, 2012
Publisher Description: It was called the New Badlands, home to the survivors of a cataclysm that altered the entire nation. Then the vampires arrived, and it was rechristened the Bloodlands. Not because of the vampire, but because of the gun-for- hire who'd decided to slay every monster in the country by any and every means necessary.

There are all kinds of mash-ups happening right now. Old West meets Steampunk. Zombies meet Corporate Thriller and now BLOODLANDS, a post apocalyptic Western with a dash of Vampire and Were thrown in.

It is sometime in the future and something very bad happened to our world. We're never really told what it is, but we can guess. Bombs, killer viruses, nanotechnology run amuck, use your imagination. Whatever caused the cataclysm that changed the landscape and the culture and turned it into a survivalist's nightmare, in this book we're living in the aftermath.

The new Badlands are a desolate and wretched area in the West, where people who don't want to live in the violent city hubs have moved and built communities in the outer edges and tunneled underground, trying to get shelter from the brutal weather and the vicious violence that the landscape and society have turned to.

Mariah is living in near total isolation, even from her compatriots who share her underground area, her only companion Chaplin, a technology enhanced dog that speaks mentally and is her friend and advisor.

Until Gabrielle shows up, a handsome stranger who is in dire need of help. Mariah sees him on her Viz and realizes if she doesn't let him down into her living area, out of the tempest, he'll probably die. She isn't happy about his fate but she can live with it, which gives you alittle bit of an insight into how rough her life has been and how paranoid of strangers she has become.

However Chaplin talks her into bringing Gabrielle down into their area to save him, and Gabrielle repays them almost immediately by making a bad guy leave them alone, before tumbling back down into her area and nearly dying. He just needs his medicine from his canteen which she gives him, not before she notices the medicine is a bright red color and he heals up a little too fast for her comfort.

Mariah has her own reasons for hating monsters, a werewolf destroyed her family, leaving her to go it alone out in the wilderness. So knowing he is a Vampire isn't helping his case any, but he seems a decent guy, respects her privacy and helps her draw the water up from the cave below. She knows the others she shares her subterranean village with won't go for it if they learn the truth, so she decides to keep him to herself for awhile, especially when she learns why he's there. Unfortunately, Gabrielle doesn't know that and he goes to the common room to introduce himself and explain he's looking for the woman he loved who disappeared on him a while back, a woman he believes may have lived with them under a different name. Gabrielle doesn't know Mariah has her own reasons for keepin' to herself, even from her friends. So now Mariah is watching Gabrielle on the video intercom, spilling his history to her friends and she is sweating it out, hoping they don’t figure out what he is before she can get him back into her home and convince him to stay away from them.

Then Johnson Stamp shows up. Stamp is that bad guy from the westerns who cows all the citizens into giving him their property or he kills them and runs them off. And Stamp wants what they've got. Water, a valuable resource indeed.

In order to survive Stamp, and keep the world they've built, everybody is going to need to band together despite their pasts, despite their differences. But while they might survive Stamp, they may not survive the secrets Mariah has been keeping, or Gabrielle’s reaction once he learns them.

I really liked this book. It's dark, but it’s well written, it has a couple great twists at the end and I loved the take on a post apocalyptic with monsters Western.
778 reviews57 followers
July 16, 2011
Bloodlands (A Novel of the Bloodlands) by Christine Cody
Urban Fantasy-July 26th, 2011
4 stars

Mariah and her genetically engineered intel dog, Chaplin watch out for each other in the Badlands. It is the future and the world is just trying to exist. Water is scarce and so is humanity. Terrible mutations have occurred and monsters, such as shifters and vampires are taking over. People are just tying to stay alive and survive. Mariah and her father moved to this deserted land to find peace and get away from the terror of the urban areas. But her father committed suicide and now it is only Mariah, Chaplin and the small underground community which keeps to itself. But Mariah’s life will be turned upside down when a mysterious stranger with a hero complex arrives. Mariah foolishly aids him and discovers he is actually a vampire…

Gabriel is on the hunt for the woman of his dreams. Her name is Abby and he suspects that she is hiding in this small desolate western community. A community that is in danger of being overrun by a powerful and ruthless man who wants their water resources. It is also a community that keeps its secrets and doesn’t like to share their lands. Can he ingratiate himself so that they will trust him and reveal Abby’s location? Or will his growing attraction to the prickly Mariah change his plans?

This novel has a fantastic atmosphere of a deserted wasteland filled with those desperate enough to carve out a space of their own. It did remind me of a futuristic western complete with the arrival of the mysterious stranger who comes to save the community. Bloodlands grows on the reader as the author delves into the tightly-knit and secretive underground community. While the people are being attacked much of the story is actually spent on the wary relationship between Gabriel and Mariah and the suspicious residents who want Gabriel to leave. I was surprised at how few characters the author included in the community and hope that there will be more in future books since I found them very interesting. I also found the story more slow moving than I expected since I thought it would be more of an urban-action fantasy. The novel alternates between Gabriel and Mariah’s point of views which really got this reader invested in both the characters. The ending was an unexpected and thrilling surprise that readers will definitely enjoy. They will certainly want to see how it ties in with the authors upcoming books in this series.

A slow moving but involving, realistic and imaginative fantasy. Bloodlands has deep characterization and focuses on the relationship of a secretive community and an unusual stranger who comes to aid them.

Reviewed by Steph from the Bookaholics Romance Book Club
Profile Image for Jessica (a GREAT read).
1,852 reviews105 followers
August 25, 2011
Christine Cody's Bloodlands, kicks off a new series set in a desolate landscape that used to be the United States. Now things are different, and not necessarily for the better, far from it actually. This is definitely a dystopian novel and it wasn't all that bad given how I don't read too many.

It definitely has a unique style to it as well. The chapters are sporadically divided between Mariah and Gabriel, with a chapter here or there from a bad guy's p.o.v., while only Mariah's p.o.v. is in first person, everyone else is in third. A little disorienting maybe, but the only times I got thrown off really was when we were in the mind of a bad guy, for the chapters are labeled Mariah or Gabriel, while the other limited chapters have no identifier. So hence the disorientation.

What was also a little off was that some of the bad guys spoke the language Text, which is exactly what you think it is. The "texting" language. Although I was warned of this ahead of time, and my worries weren't really necessary. There are only a small few amount of times the bad guys spoke this language and it wasn't at all hard. Nothing made up like that one commercial from a few years back with the kids and grandma saying stuff like "TGHM" The girl hates me, or whatever. That really annoyed me! No the text here is pretty simple and easy to follow since I am one of the people that practically texts in the English language with only a few abbreviations.

The story itself was pretty interesting as well. I won't lie, a few times my mind did wander because I wasn't sure where it was going. Gabriel is obviously looking for the woman he loves who disappeared on him some time back, while Mariah and her group of people hiding out are doing just that, hiding out from the bad guys.

Since this is a dystopian novel, there is a whole new world to grow accustomed to and new terms and events to learn as well. It wasn't too hard to follow along, but describing it in detail would take too long. But basically it comes down to survival. The bad guys are after Mariah and her friends because they have something precious that they want, a valuable resource.

It was definitely an interesting read, there's a bit of a spark between Mariah and Gabriel that was nice. It wasn't super intense and lustful, but still they seemed to connect on a deeper level. But Mariah is harboring more than one secret from him. And both could threaten the fragile relationship budding between them.

The ending led to several shocking surprises that definitely changed my opinion of the book overall. I will definitely be needing to get the next book, Blood Rules, this coming week.

Overall rating 3.5/5 stars
Profile Image for Kale.
137 reviews21 followers
September 23, 2011
Imagine a world ravished by the dark side of humanity, creating the dystopian marriage between sci-fi technology and the wild west. A post apocalyptic landscape scorched by the sun making night the new day. Where creatures of lore are thought to be hunted to extinction. A future where the masses live in technology driven cities and speak the shorthanded speech of text messaging. And people on the fringes of society seek solace in the desolate wastelands outside of the metropolis hubs looking for a fresh start, or to live under the radar.

Mariah is one of the drifters who came to the New Badlands to create a new life, live beyond the watchful eyes of the city, and find safety. After an attack on her family she knows all too well the horrors of letting a stranger into your home. So she's quite reluctant to help the beaten man who is seeking sanctuary within her walls.

Gabriel is looking for his lost love, Abby. The woman who carries with her his humanity. When he stumbles upon a small community in the badlands he knows he must protect his vampire nature from his new found friends not only for his sake but theirs as well.

But they have some secrets of their own, and Gabriel finds they need his help as much as he needs theirs. A bad man named Stamp is looking to take over their resources and eradicate the community. Making matters worse someone or something has been picking off Stamp's men, and with his blackouts Gabe pretty sure he's the cause for the fallen. It's up to him to rile up the locals find out what happened to Abby and maybe find someplace where he belongs as well. But don't count Stamp out, he like everyone who comes to the badlands has a sordid past and it could be the true death for them all.

Bloodlands was an interesting read. The mix of themes and world building made for an intriguing setting. The characters were well written and the storyline wasn't as straight forward as I thought it was going to be. The twist in the end was a nice surprise. Sometimes the story dragged, and the text message dialogue was strange as actual prose. Most of the evil element was referred to as "bad men" and I thought this was uncreative and because it was the only name used, it became redundant. I also didn't like how some parts of the relationship got a bit corny or campy especially the ending when the hero supposedly goes riding off into the sunset.

Other than a little corn and camp and maybe some excess filler here and there Bloodlands turn out to be a pretty good read.
Profile Image for Jackie.
3,955 reviews128 followers
August 8, 2011
I have long awaited getting each and every one of the Vampire Babylon series books by author Chris Marie Green in Mass Market Paperback to read back to back. Now however she has come out with her new AKA of Christine Cody and her new Bloodlands trilogy had me even more excited so when my copy of the first book made it in the mail I sat down and read it ASAP!


With the beginning of this 3 book look at a world that is both bleak and bitterly harsh we are immediately drawn in to the story as told by Mariah. The arrival of Gabriel on her view screen outside her underground habitat is so realistically drawn you can feel his faltering steps, feel Mariah's indecision as to whether he is friend or foe, taste her fear of the one and her hope for the other and most of all cannot help but wait with bated breath to see how things turn out once he is brought inside her abode.

This is a strong story, it unfolds sometimes at a breakneck pace and at other's very slowly. The ending chapters have some of the best twists in store for the reader that you do not see coming, the whole book from beginning to end is a treat and a pleasure to any fans of books that cannot be easily categorized with just one genre. This story encapsulates horror, fantasy, sci-fi, dystopian, paranormal and more and blends them together beautifully!

Order to read:

Bloodlands , Blood Rules , and In Blood We Trust which all release in 2011.
Profile Image for Natasja.
286 reviews9 followers
November 1, 2011
Gabriel is a vampire and has been looking for his lost love Abby. The trail leads him to a small community in the Badlands. He knows that he has to keep his vampire nature hidden from them in order to keep himself save. He is hunted by a group, who hunts everything supernatural and he cannot endanger his newfound friends.

Mariah is the woman who takes him in after he’s attacked by Stamp, the local bad guy. She knows it will be bad to let this stranger into her home and their small community. Especially after what happened to her family, but her dog seems to trust him completely. Now let’s hope that this stranger will be on this way before he discovers her secret.

Bloodlands by Christine Cody is the first novel in her Bloodlands Trilogy and I have to say that the storyline was interesting. The world building was fabulous and the characters intriguing. I never expected the twist in this book.

Badlands is an area where dark creatures and human who are different find their hiding place and where everyone is accepted. The heat is unbearable during the day, so you can only come out at night or with a special uniform.

Gabriel and Mariah are both strong characters and both has something to hide. Mariah seems to discover Gabriel being a vampire soon enough, but holds this a secret from the rest of the group. She needs him around, because his ability to calm her is very good to smooth the best growing inside her. But will Gabriel be able to forgive her when he learns the truth about Mariah heritage and what happened to Abby.

To make matters worse someone or something has been killing some of the hunters, Stamp’s men and he is determined to get the killer. All eyes are on Gabriel, but the outcome is more surprising.

This novel is really surprise me, it’s well written and has some darkness in it. I was really surprise to discover some of the outcome and now I’m curious to see what will happen next. The end was good and a little sad, but it could go any way.
Profile Image for Michelle Greathouse.
306 reviews41 followers
July 31, 2011
Bloodlands is the first book in the Mariah Lyander/Bloodlands series by Christine Cody and an ACE Fantasy.

Book Blurb:

The New Badlands - a desolate area in the West forged by the terrible events that altered the entire country, where a few frightened citizens retreated underground to shelter from the brutal weather...and from a society gone deadly dangerous.

Then the vampire arrived - and they started calling it the Bloodlands.

Not because Gabriel, the so-called monster running from his true self, was searching for his lover’s murderer. Nor because Mariah, the woman who reluctantly took him in, was willing to do anything to survive in the changed world.

No, the Badlands officially became the Bloodlands the moment a gun-for-hire who’d decided to slay every monster left in the country came after Gabriel.

My thoughts:

Mariah Lyander is terrified. Of the world around here, the people in it, her past..and the secret she harbors.

Her father, a scientist, brought them to the Badlands years ago in the hopes of a better life. Deep underground, he taught Mariah how to mine water, grow her own food and keep herself safe - then he left her own her own.

Now a young woman, Mariah has little interaction with the few underground neighbors she has - preferring the company of her genetically altered dog instead.

When her video equipment picks up an injured man outside her cleverly concealed home, Mariah suspects he is an agent of Mr. Stamp - trying to get inside to steal her water.

But what she finds is potentially more dangerous - Gabriel - and he has a secret of his own, a secret that could get him killed if the wrong people find out.

Bloodlands was a little slow going for me - but enjoyable all the same.

I give Bloodlands 3 out of 5 stars.

Product Details

Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Ace (July 26, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0441020623
ISBN-13: 978-0441020621
Profile Image for Bec McMaster.
Author 64 books3,463 followers
April 18, 2012
This is a very difficult review to write. I started this book over four months ago (yes, really). I picked it up, I put it down, I picked it up again, went and did some housework... I loved the idea of the world but I found it really hard to get into.
How do I rate this? Worldbuilding and idea - five stars. Without a doubt the world was a fascinating one. Its the only reason I pushed my way to halfway through the book. What's not to love? Intel dogs, a broken world with the author obviously taking her time to flesh it out, a mysterious monster and dark skies...
Unfortunately, the characterisation and writing style worked against all that beautiful worldbuilding. I put the book down for two months and nearly forgot it, except I am determined to get through my TBR shelf this year and somehow I picked it up and did something I rarely do just to see if it might interest me - I read the last few chapters.
Okay, wow. Good twist. Didn't see that one coming and honestly, if I hadn't looked I might not have bothered to read on.
Then something happened. The last half sped up. Things started actually happening. The world grew more interesting. The protags got more layers. I finished the book in a single sitting and right now I'm tossing up whether to keep reading. I'm really hoping things pick up a little, because I stil think I might just read one more - and I hope they pick up, because the author has a fantastic imagination.
Profile Image for ILoveBooks.
977 reviews10 followers
August 13, 2011
This novel is a dystopian mixed with wild west mixed with vampire. The main characters, Mariah and Gabriel, meet under very unusual circumstances. Mariah is a drifter who comes to the New Badlands in an attempt to start over and live her life. Gabriel shows up at her door, wounded and dying; thanks to Mariah's mutant dog, who informs her she should let him in, he survives. Gabriel is one of those characters that the reader will have a hard time classifying-good or evil? humane or cold? He is desperately searching for his lost love, Abby, who appears to have taken his humanity with her when she left.



Stamp, another interesting character, is looking to annihilate the small community in the Badlands. He wants their resources for his own. When his men begin to disappear, Gabriel suspects himself-he is, after all, a vampire with bloodlust who hides his true nature. The novel takes off from this point, growing more and more complicated, but interesting.



The lines between good and bad characters and situations blur, the reader shouldn't make snap judgement. The events are evenly paced...some parts are faster than others. There will be a second in this series to look forward to as well. This book is recommended to those who reader dystopian novels, adults.
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