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Blood Price (2004)

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Rating
3.73 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
1841493562 (ISBN13: 9781841493565)
Language
English
Publisher
little, brown young readers

Blood Price (2004) - Plot & Excerpts

‘Blood Price’ is the first book in Huff’s ‘Blood’ series about Toronto Private Investigator, Vicki Nelson, and her vampire associate, Henry Fitzroy. The series concluded in 1997; finishing with 5 books, 1 omnibus of short stories, a trilogy spin-off series for one of the main protagonists and a Canadian TV series adaptation.Tanya Huff paved the way for the Urban Fantasy genre by bringing vampires into modern day, and mixing them with crime fiction. Tanya Huff wrote ‘Blood Price’ back in 1991. Laurell K Hamilton’s first ‘Anita Blake’ book, ‘Guilty Pleasures’ didn’t come out until 1993 (guess that puts a stake in Ms. Hamilton’s blog rant earlier this year in which she called herself the founder of ‘Urban Fantasy’). Not even Jim Butcher’s ‘The Dresden Files’ came out until 2000. And Charlaine Harris’s first ‘Sookie Stackhouse: Southern Vampire’ book came out in 2001.I heard about Tanya Huff via Charlaine Harris herself. Harris wrote a blog a while back when she did a re-read of Huff’s ‘Blood’ series, and Harris lauded her as one of the premiere Urban Fantasy authors.At the height of my Urban Fantasy obsession, I bought Huff’s ‘Blood series’ dirt-cheap on ebay… and then promptly forget about them sitting on my shelf.I thought it was high time I gave this series a read. I’ve been in a vampire-genre-stagnation of late. So I thought "what the hell?" - I’ll read one of the Urban Fantasy ‘classics’ to try and pull me out of my reading slump. I figured I’d read the first chapter, and if the book didn’t tickle my fancy I’d only paid AUD$2 for it, so what?Surprisingly, one chapter had me addicted….The book starts with a death on a subway platform.What really grabbed my attention was female protagonist Vicki Nelson. Tanya Huff jam-packs the opening chapter with so much wonderful characterisation that it’s impossible not warm to Vicki from the get-go.When we meet her she is in the wrong place at the wrong time. Coming home from a bad blind date on the Toronto subway, Vicki hears a blood-curdling scream and runs to the source… where she finds a decapitated young man. Vicki jumps train tracks and completely disregards her police training when she hears the terrified throes of a dying man.First on the scene is Vicki’s ex-partner and ex bed-mate, detective Mike Celluci. Mike and Vicki had an eight-year police partnership, which included a four-year sexual relationship, which ended badly when Vicki retired from the police force.We learn that Vicki was a homicide detective, and has been off the force for eight months. Vicki resents her retirement, but we discover that it was self-imposed – Vicki’s eyesight is failing and she left before being asked to leave. Vicki is suffering from Retinitis Pigmentosa – a degenerative eye disease. Vicki is in the early stages, which means she has night blindness and tunnel vision.You couldn’t be a cop if you couldn’t see.She’d made her bed. She’d lie in it.All of this character history comes in quick succession, and Huff assuredly has readers rooting for Vicki. In just one scene Huff communicates that Vicki is brave, reckless where the safety of others are concerned… she puts others before herself, and will even sacrifice herself and the career she loves for the ‘greater good’. Her personal relationships take a backseat to her career, and even though she forced herself to give up the job she loved, she is a trooper and trying to carry on with her life the best she can.Henry Fitzroy is an equally fascinating protagonist. Henry and Vicki meet when the media dub Toronto’s serial killer a ‘vampire’, because of the drained blood of the victims. Henry, the only (to his knowledge) vampire living in Toronto becomes concerned and takes it upon himself to find the killer…. Whereupon he meets P.I. Vicki Nelson, who is also on the case. They decide to join forces – Vicki working the day, Henry the night shift.Henry is based on the real illegitimate son of King Henry VIII of England. Henry, 1st Duke of Richmond and Somerset, was a genuinely interesting historical figure. He died at the age of 17 after a becoming bed-ridden by a mystery illness. The circumstances surrounding Henry’s death were bizarre, but his funeral was even stranger. Thomas Howard, the Duke of Norfolk, ordered Henry’s body be wrapped in lead and taken for a secret interment.Henry is a wonderful undead leading man. Not only has Huff turned historical factoids into a fairly plausible and reasonable history for Henry, but she’s made him into a really fascinating modern-day vampire. Henry is a poet, deep down, and in his latest career manifestation he’s started writing historical romances (‘bodice-rippers’) under the pseudonym ‘Elizabeth Fitzroy’.I read some reviews of the ‘Blood’ series, written by Sookie and Twilight fans… and they all warned that while ‘Blood’ was an enjoyable series; it lacked the ‘heat’, the smut that has become trade-mark of the Urban Fantasy genre in recent years. I tend to disagree.I really loved the Henry/Vicki pairing. On one level, they make a great sleuthing team. I loved the contrast of their abilities – Henry who is imprisoned by daylight, and Vicki who is blind at night.More than that though, Vicki and Henry have real heat. I didn’t expect them to – I was all geared up to be disappointed in a lukewarm romance, judging from other people’s reviews – but I responded quite differently to the pairing.Vicki and Henry are opposites, and both are trying to deny their attraction. Vicki, because things are complicated enough with Mike Celluci and she’s still trying to wrap her head around the whole ‘vampire’ thing. And Henry wants to deny his feelings because he’s lived through 455-years worth of loss, and doesn’t particularly want to add Vicki to the long list of mortals he’s had to say goodbye to.Vicki and Henry are certainly no Cat & Bones, but they do have spark. Their relationship in this first book is more along the lines of Kate & Curran in Ilona Andrews’s series. Furthermore, Huff is very cluey about vampiric mythology, and through the Vicki/Henry partnership she is able to explore that popular metaphor of vampire and lust.Certainly if ‘Blood Price’ was being written for today’s market, Huff may have been encouraged to include a bit more smut…. But I don’t think its lack detracts from the book. And actually I think Huff beautifully sets up a Vicki/Henry/Mike love triangle for future novels. I definitely got the impression that Huff didn’t want to lay all her cards on the table in this first book, but that there was going to be a slow-burning romance for Henry and Vicki…“But you wouldn’t have lived as long as you have if you hadn’t figured out how to learn from your mistakes. When I find this person, I’m going to need you for backup.”“Well, thank you very much.” Just what he needed, being patronized by someone whose ancestors had no doubt been grubbing out a living on a peasant’s plot when he’d been riding beside a king. He pulled his hand out from under hers and tried not to wince when the motion twisted the wound in his arm.“Before you get snooty, Your Royal Highness, perhaps you should consider who the hell else I can use? Trust me on this one, suspicion of demon-calling is not likely to impress the police. I don’t even think it’s a crime.”I expected ‘Blood Price’ to be quite outdated, since it was written way back in 1991. But surprisingly, this book has aged very well. The only hints that this isn’t set in modern day are the lack of cell-phone and Internet usage. But those technical omissions are barely noticeable.I loved this book. The mystery is intriguing, the characters flawed and wonderful. There’s definitely heat between Vicki and Henry, more than I expected (judging from nay-saying reviews).If you are a fan of the old-school Anita Blake books, this series is for you.Tanya Huff is writing this series based on her own vampiric mythology – borrowing from the greats like Bram Stoker, Vlad the Impaler and European folklore. As opposed to more recent UF authors who are amalgamating their lexicons from more modern stories and pop-culture references. It’s refreshing, and just what I needed to pull me out of my vampire-genre slump.I’ll definitely be reading the next 4 books.

I have had this book on my shelves for several years and never got around to reading it. Part of me wished I had read it earlier, because I may have enjoyed it more then. To summarize the plot will sound very clichéd and 'recycled' because there are countless other books and movies with the exact same premise. Especially today. But the thing to remember here is that this book was written in 1991, before Buffy the Vampire Slayer and before vampires or urban fantasy really gathered the steam that those two genres/subgenres have today. So, in its time, this was probably much more unique of a story than it is in the present (2013)--former female police officer suddenly discovers that vampires are real and there are some good ones and bad ones...you get the picture, I'm sure.I got halfway through this book and I had to put it down for the moment, because I just couldn't muster the energy or excitement for finishing it. (Maybe I'll give it a try again at a later date.) There is plenty of action, and suspense, and it was very well-written, but there are two big things that I just couldn't get past.First, the fact that the story is extremely dated. Now...I know. That sounds like a pretty shallow thing to say. All stories eventually become dated. But I have read a lot of good books from the 1960s (or much, much earlier than that) which are several decades old but avoid being dated because they are still so relevant. A lot of this story revolved around missed phone calls, trying to reach people by 1991 landline phone connection and not being able to locate them, etc etc. When the technology (or lack thereof) furthers the plot element like that, you can't help but see it as dated in today's world of wifi and smartphones and all that. Now, does this mean it makes the story "bad" or unreadable? Of course not. But it does very heavily date the story, and I, for one, just weren't really interested in it because of that...and probably because reading contemporary urban fantasy has led me to expect certain things, and urban fantasy always seems to work best (again, for me) when it is very contemporary, right on the cutting edge.Even with that, I could have still read the entire story and have been satisfied with it, and overlooked the technology discrepancy. But I was very put off by the bedroom scenes in the book, and that is what really turned me off. I've read books that have much (much!) more sex in them than this, but it wasn't so much the content itself as the way it was described. I found it almost smutty, and that's not really the kind of book I enjoy to read. That's what finally decided to let me set this one aside and continue on to read books I really can't wait to read.This was probably great in 1991. Unfortunately, it didn't stand the test of time well for me.

What do You think about Blood Price (2004)?

OO I don't know why it's taken me so long to read this! I've had it around for like year, and was always distracted by something else. Shame on me.This was actually really good. Victoria is an ex-cop turned private eye. She is minding her own business when she hears someone screaming. As she goes to help she sees something running away, and that thing just disappears. The cops, including her ex lover Mike Celluci want her to stay out of it. But she just can't. She becomes involved in the case when the girlfriend of one of the victims asks her for help. The girlfriend insists it was a vampire that did it, and as the case continues, Vicki is beginning to agree. Enter Henry Fitzroy. He wants her help to catch the killer ravaging the city, and he also has his own secret to share with Vicki.I like that the heroine is human. Just plain human, with a bit of a disability. Vicki is likeable, and when she fights with Mike it's really entertaining. You can tell she's hurt that she's no longer on the police force, even though it was her own choice to leave. It's part of her identity to help people. So I'm really curious about what happens next with her life. Will her cases all turn out to be supernatural, or is the book going to also have her on regular cases.Side note - this series was actually made into a t.v program on lifetime called Blood Ties. I saw the first two episodes and the character playing Henry is attractive... :)
—Jess

Blood Price is pretty fun urban fantasy. Victoria Nelson is an ex-cop -- due to a disability, even, which makes her unable to see at night, and has reduced her peripheral vision severely -- who is working as a private investigator. She stumbles onto a fresh crime scene, which is bad enough, and then gets caught up in trying to catch the culprit, something which quickly proves to be beyond anything she'd imagined, because the killers are supernatural in nature. And in the course of her investigation, she stumbles upon Henry Fitzroy -- a bastard son of King Henry VIII, supposedly dead since he was seventeen years old. He turns out to be a vampire. And a good guy.It's not the most amazing prose in the world, but it is a good read if that's what you're interested in, and I promise Henry doesn't sparkle. It wasn't toe-curlingly tense or anything -- neither in terms of the mystery, nor in terms of the sexual tension -- but there were some reasonable dramatic scenes.The geek stereotype killer didn't do much for me, though.
—Nikki

Private investigator Vicki Nelson, like most everyone in Toronto, doesn't believe in the paranormal, but when it appears that the latest serial killer could be a vampire, she's out of her depth. Retinitis pigmentosa has already cost Vicki her former life as a homicide detective, and she needs specialised help with this case. Enter historical romance writer Elizabeth Fitzroy, or known about town as Henry Fitzroy, the bastard son of Henry VIII. He's also a vampire, and as he and Vicki investigate,
—Tez

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