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The History Connection - Incubus Dreams (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 12)

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List Price: $7.99
Our Price: $3.89
Your Save: $ 4.10 ( 51% )
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Manufacturer: Jove
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780515139754 ISBN: 0515139750 Label: Jove Manufacturer: Jove Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 752 Publication Date: 2005-09-27 Publisher: Jove Studio: Jove
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Related Items
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- Cerulean Sins (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 11)
- Micah (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 13)
- Danse Macabre (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 14)
- Narcissus in Chains (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 10)
- Obsidian Butterfly (An Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 9)
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: One More Nail in the Coffin Comment: All the die hard Anita fans know that her demise was after Cerulean Sins, so enough said on that. What makes this book incredibly bad is...that it is plain just not well written. There is no proofreading, and after a bit, a very little bit, the mistakes just keep nagging you and nagging you to the point where you look for them instead of paying attention to what there is of the story. The question here would be: how did the book get published with so many mistakes (grammar etc)? A greater mystery and perhaps more worth solving than the purported mystery in the story itself. Anyway if you want to insist and try to read this do it as a seven day mass event to honor the worthwhile, delicious first books in the series, and weep your heart out at what Ms Hamilton has turned our Anita into. There you go, I think I discovered a social use for this book, it is the perfect PMS read, so it deserves 1 star after all!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Spicy Comment: I have read a number of Anita Blake series. This is the only one I have ever REread. The sex scenes were off the wall, just what you would hope for with Werewolves & Vampires. What could be worse than tame vampire sex??? I loved that the relationship with Nathaniel finally took off. I look forward to more encounters between theme.
Customer Rating:      Summary: awful simly awful Comment: I'm sorry, this novel was just horrible. I ended up skipping PAGES because it was so boring, redundant, or just dumb...
I definitely would never recommend this book. The writing is bland, confusing and all over the place. The characters seem to have no personality or chemistry. All Anita thinks about it sex, sex, sex. An all around waste of time.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A little too much sex in this book Comment: This is the 12th book in the Anita Blake Vampire Hunter series. It is now October, so only a month or so has passed since the conclusion of the last book, Cerulean Sins.
Hamilton has received a lot of criticism from some fans for the direction her series takes (the ardeur/sex plotline) and away from the earlier books of crime-solving detective and vampire executioner (Anita is known as The Executioner, capital "E".LOL). I think it was inevitable the series would take a turn and change. For a character to remain static and unchanging, for the plot scenario to be the same for every book, that just gets boring (for instance, a series that I view in this light is Sue Grafton's Alphabet series where the heroine Kinsey has not changed in personality and she does the same thing over and over in each book). If Hamilton had kept to the old Anita and the earlier books, I'm sure there would have been complaints that there was no growth or development in Anita's character or the plot-line.
It just so happens that the direction Hamilton has taken was not up to the expectations some people may have had. I don't fault the author, us readers are only along for the ride and I for one am more than happy to read whatever Hamilton puts out!
Anyways, Anita in this book is a different Anita from the early books. Now she views vampires as more than a monster, where before she had no qualms about killing them and didn't really care about them as "people". As long as she had a warrant of execution, she had no remorse in executing them as that is her job. Everything about Anita has changed. She still struggles with the way her life has changed, but it's clear in this book that she's slowly accepting who she is. She has to as she can't go back to how life was before tying herself to Jean-Claude as his human servant.
While I still enjoy the series, I will admit that I think Hamilton went overboard on the sex in this book. There are at least 6 sex scenes in this book, and true to Hamilton's writing style, they are all graphic and descriptive.
The first 200 or so pages of this book was basically Anita emo-ing about having sex with one of her male friends, Nathaniel, and I thought it went on for a little too long. But, knowing the character of Anita, I knew that it was something that she would go over in her mind over and over again, stalling and coming back to the issue and work it over in her mind some more (hence, the 200 pages of emo-ing!). Anita has a hard time of giving in, she can't willingly "give" in without a fight. With Anita, there is always a fight whether mentally, emotionally, or physically. She's just one tough cookie, and not an easy person to get along with. Anita isn't unaware of her character flaws, in fact, she faces them and owns up to her flaws and I think that's one aspect of Anita I do like. She does given in eventually, and the flaws in Anita make the character more real and so despite any frustrations with the character I may have, I can still understand and relate because it's a human emotion she's feeling. She is only human (or partly human.heh).
However, despite how I felt there was a bit too much sex in this book, there were reasons behind every single one. Anita was either forced to feed the ardeur to help those she loves, or had to secure her power and those of her triumvirate Jean-Claude and Richard using the ardeur. Actually, all of the sex scenes depicted in Incubus Dreams are a result of something else happening, or a cause and initiator of another "something else" that happens. I won't go into more detail so not to spoil what happens.
There is a small scene of Anita using her necromancy powers, and I thought it was a good scene. Anita's necromancy has also increased in strength and the scene describing her raising a zombie from the grave was very cool. I always like seeing Anita use her necromancy powers in action, so it's always a plus in my book to have some page time devoted to it. Anita also is involved in a police investigation involving a group of vampire serial killers on the loose in St. Louis and again, she kicks butt being The Executioner, which is another aspect of Anita I like reading about. You, the reader, get inside Anita's head as she zeroes in on her kill and the detailed description Hamilton gives about Anita's thoughts and emotions during those times....you really see it all in your mind's eye as if you're right there with her.
As it's been repeated several times in the last few books since Anita gained the power of seduction/sex (the ardeur), Jean-Claude's vampire powers are based in physical touch as he has the power of an incubus and feeds off lust, sex, and seduction. So I can see why Hamilton went this direction in her series (as Jean-Claude has always had a mysterious, sensual power about him since the first book).
I can't presume to know where Hamilton is going with all of this, but I can get an idea and I think that's part of the fun of this series. Wondering where Hamilton will go next and what else will be in store for Anita and her gang of vampires and shapeshifters. So while this isn't her best book, IMO, I still enjoyed reading about Anita's world and all the characters that populate her world.
Customer Rating:      Summary: (3.5 stars) A bit much, but still deserves a tip of the hat Comment: This one was good, but not as good as the other books in the series so far. I liked the new development of the second triumvirate with Nathaniel and Damian (Though I admit I got annoyed that the publishers misspelled the word "triumvirate" throughout; you'd think that they'd put a little time and effort into editing a novel from an author as successful and prominent as Hamilton), and I like the new character Requiem, and I like the added complications of the London vampires losing their master and the arrival of Wicked and Truth and the flaws in Malcolm's Church of Eternal Life and the mysterious vampire villain, scarred worse than Asher, and the increase in power of the original triumvirate. All of those were interesting, and they all made me want to read the rest of the books immediately, right now, so I can find out what happens -- except I know Hamilton's still writing these books, so there's no way for me to learn everything that will happen. Both good and bad, that.
The sex was a bit much. Not that it was too dirty -- I liked the scenes, I liked the way Hamilton described it, I was very happy to see Anita coming to terms with her own preferences, and also to see Richard taking a step toward real reconciliation with Anita and his place in the triumvirate and so on -- but only because there was so much of it. It took up too much of the book. I saw the need for all of it, between the ardeur and the need for more power to fuel the new triumvirate, but I wish there could have been another way to handle the problem, so there could have been more of a focus on the non-bedroom action. But this has never been a series that has shied away from graphic description; Hamilton never does a fade at the climax of an important moment, ending a chapter and then skipping ahead a few hours. It's one of the things I like about this series; it gives it weight and drama, as the gritty, tough moments are all taken seriously. When Anita kills someone, we get to experience every second, every reaction, every thought and feeling she has about it, even the negative ones -- and the scene when she executes a vampire with her pistol is a prime example of that. When Anita has sex with someone, it's the same thing, and it keeps the sexual elements -- which are truly integral pieces of the story, rather than cheap thrills added to cover up weak parts of the plot -- from becoming boring or tawdry. These are important experiences for Anita, and so they should be equally important to the book and the reader, and I'm glad that Hamilton was able to face them squarely and write them as honestly as she writes everything else. Myself, I'd have been blushing and giggling way too much to pull this off, so I have to tip my hat to her for doing what I couldn't.
I'm just glad I get to read it.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Anita is pushed to her limits-both professionally and passionately-when she is called in on what appears to be a case involving a vampire serial killer preying on strippers.
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