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Okay, I've admitted in the past to my deep and possibly sick love for world that is Anita Blake Vampire Hunter. I just finished reading the latest in the series, Danse Macabre, and as a longtime fan I have to say it is some of Laurell K Hamilton's best writing. I know, I know, it's all sex (I mean a godawful ton of sex this time) but it's also all about the politics of this strange little group of vampires, lycanthropes, necromancers and hey - this time we've got merepeople!!! - who populate Hamilton's alternate universe. Anita kills vampires, except the ones she having some mind blowing sex with, and she also runs a wolf pack with a werewolf whose in therapy and she lives with a couple of guys who adore her and love her and just have issues once a month during the full moon (wereleopard and werewolf in case you're wondering).

But I digress.

While I was reading Danse I was still thinking about all of this Harry Potter business and will Rowling kill Harry or not - or will she kill Ron or Hermione or the Weasleys or Hagrid or someone else that is going to make fourth graders all over the world break into tears. I'm still on the side of the happily ever after and in response to everyone (and my cousin) who say you need the real world and the violence and death that we find in the real world against real evil to bring this whole saga home, well - I say take a lesson from Anita Blake!

Anita's life is all about life or death and she goes up against a big nasty practically every time she gets out of bed. Someone's always trying to kill her or someone close to her and she carries guns and knives for a reason - because she needs them. There is a lot of violence in this series, (we're talking tons of body ripping violence) and Hamilton goes out of her way to show that vampires might be sexy but a lot of them are just plain nasty and need to die. But - and this is a very big but - the core group soldiers on. They get banged up and bashed around and have a lot of bloody bruised moments but they still come back to fight again. In Danse Anita finally has a moment where she realizes just how nasty her world has become:

When I was younger, I'd wanted someone to promise me that things would work out and nothing bad would ever happen again. But I understood now that that was a child's wish. No one could promise that. No one. The grown-ups could try, but they couldn't promise, not and mean it. I stood there between the two of them, and knew that I would do whatever it took to keep them safe, to keep them happy. I'd been willing to kill for the people I loved for a very long time; now I had to start living for them.

The point is that she always fights for them - they always fight for each other and now they just have to learn to live in the middle of all that fighting. Hamilton sees that the living is crucial because she knows she has a good thing going with this crew and she always brings them back for more. Now, before everyone screams at me that the two series don't compare and that Hamilton is a hack (or something equally vicious), just consider that maybe I'm not totally insane. I read heavy stuff all the time (The Seven Pillars of Wisdom baby and it was harder than hell!) and I know that Israel is getting World War III going as we speak, while Iraq is going to hell and Afghanistan is becoming the war we should not have ignored. I know this. But Danse Macabre is great escapist fiction. Its got wonderful dialogue, grown-up sexy fun and plenty of satisfying humor and violence. It's candy in a world that needs candy. And Harry Potter is the same thing for a younger crowd. Anita dies and it ruins every book that came before because all you will be thinking about is that she is dead. Do that to Harry and you have the same problem - you can't go back because you know he is dead. I'm telling ya, it won't work and to avoid it, Harry needs to learn from the master just how he should fight the big bad and survive.

Harry Potter, I think it's time you got to know Anita Blake. One way or another, she will rock your world. I guarantee it.

comments

Yes, it really was a good one, wasn't it?!? Those Anita Blake books are SERIOUSLY addictive....

This is random, but did you read Robin McKinley's "Sunshine"? If not, please do, it is wonderfully good (not at all LKH-like, quite different tho also vampirish).

I second Sunshine. Loved it.

Yep - I read Sunshine when it first came out and was quite impressed. I wish McKinley would return to those characters but she has said that it was a one-shot deal.

I have no idea why we all have a vampire fascination.....of course in Hamilton's case it's all about the leather pants but still!

Interesting that you say this is some of her best writting; I haven't read it yet, but I feel like "Narcissus in Chains" was the beginning of her long slide down into sexsexsex writting (not that that stopped me from continuing to read the series.). I'll have to keep an open-er mind this time around.

Lol. Ok cuz. Since you brought me up, (and since I loooove to disagree) ;) I guess I am going to chime in once again on the HP death debate. First, I don't remember ever saying that I needed Harry Potter to come into reality. And who says death=reality? Maybe that's what other people think, but I'd disagree with them too! :) I think it's quite the contrary in this case. If Harry lives on, he has to grow up. He will probably find a job, a wife, buy a house, and pop out some little Potter brats. That sounds a little too much like reality to me.

See, the thing is, HP isn't the kind of series that can go on forever because it has a necessary time element attached to it. I suspect that your beloved AB doesn't have such a time element. HP doesn't exist in non-specific time, he's a teen, and each book is a year in his life, a stage in his development, and more specifically, a year in his schooling. At the end of this series he will be done with the equivalent of high school, and he will be an adult. What then? Wizard University?

Yeah, actually that does sounds like a really fun read, but to be true to the series, Rowling would have to include that stage in his development as well, which means what, binge drinking and frat parties, maybe some typical college experimentation with sex and drugs? Ok, college doesn't have to be portrayed that way, but he can't stay the naive HP we know and love. Because of the necessary time element, and his continued age development in the series, by necessity he'd have to grow up. So even if it won't be the literal death you're afraid of, I'd argue that it would be the death of his essence.

I also don't agree that it would ruin the series to know he's dead. I can go back. I can relive his life right along with him. I can revel in his victory and survival without the thought of his impending death even entering in my brain. I can re-enter that world of illusion just as I entered it the first time.

Were you unable to enjoy Star Wars's Annakin Skywalker as a little boy with all his hope and promise and celebrate his victories because you knew he'd eventually become Darth Vader by Episode 4 and die in Episode 6? Are you unable to revisit the original Star Trek series (TV & film) and cheer on Captain Kirk even though he bites it in Star Trek: Generations? Were you and are you unable to enjoy the blossoming love between Rose & Jack in Titanic because everyone knows they will die in the end?

I also think it makes sense for him to die because he's a sort of Jesus character, and it'd really make sense for him to sacrifice himself in one final, big victory that wipes out any chance of evil ruling over good ever again. It'd be sad, and poignant, but it would be exciting, big, and unexpected. Well, maybe not SO unexpected. ;)

Heather - don't get me wrong, it is sex, sex, sex for sure! But there is a ton of meaningful dialog in this book and it impressed me how she conveyed the story so well with that. It's not easy to write conversation and Hamilton has proven again and again and certainly with this book that she excels at that.

Dearest Elisabeth - I must admit right now that I could not watch any of the more recent Star Wars films because I had no interest in seeing a young Darth Vader. I also caught just enough of the horrific dialog between the young lovers to know that it would be too painful for me to watch.

The thing I get caught on in all of this HP stuff is that the books are for young adults - even though adults love them most of the readers are twelve or younger. And do they want a Jesus moment or do they just want Harry to win? I guess I need a bunch of ten year olds to answer that question. How does your niece feel about it? I hear she has read the whole series so far. Give your sister a call and let us know!

About the demise of Harry Potter:
I agree with you Colleen, I think that our children are exposed to so much violence that any time we can give them a happy ending we should do so! Our children need and want to know that there is a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow..many are living the difficult life and perhaps their reality needs a little magic to help them exist in today's world.
MauriKay

Kaylin

Okay, guys ang gals, Anita Blake novels are the best freakign series i ahve ever read, I love the view of vampiresa dn lycanthropes as not just the top of the food chain, that thye aren't just predators, but real underneath all those teeth and under enath teh blood, they are people, they have lives, they ahve families, even if it is almost impossible. But look at the chaos of Anita's life, it a mess, but even in all that mess, she ahs made somethign relativly close to a family, and she gets mind blowing sex with it, but the price for all of that is she has fight a big nasty every other dyaa nd deal witht eh arduer, thinking she's pregant, her necromancy, and vampire politics, which suck, and no matter what, will eventually screw you over, and one of the hottest characters in teh book, Richard, ahs been turned intoa sniveling baby becuase he can't stand himself or that Anita is more at home with the monsters than he is, and his problems could go on forever, becuase he's that..I don't want to call him idiotic but if the shoe fits, but eventually, Anita is going to be too slow on the draw, or there will eb no other way to save her and her death willd rag down Jean-Claude, Damian, Richard, and a few others, and then who knows how many people will off themselves becuase she's gone...but for r4eal, every story has a beginning and an end, becuase life has a beginning and an end, but the best things with stories is, you egt to read them over, and over and over, with all teh thrills of knowing some one is goign to die, being able to relive those expieriences over and over should be enough, like Elisabeth says, it didn't stop you from watching Star Trek, or Tirtanic, or Star Wars.

Great article! I also love the Anita Blake series and have a blog devoted to her. I would like permission to use your article on my blog. Would that be ok? I would include a link back to your article, of course.

Let me know.
Thanks,
Crystal Booth

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