REVIEW : Novella -The Family Martell – Edward Kendrick

Novella- The Family Martell Book Cover Novella- The Family Martell
Edward Kendrick
Paranormal, Fantasy, Gay Romance, LGBT Fiction
JMS Books
Dec 31, 2022
Kindle
105
Amazon

Dorian and Cecily had been alive for several centuries, and married for well over one-hundred years. When they decided they wanted a family, they did what any sensible vampires would and adopted three human children. They waited until each was old enough to understand before revealing what they were, and then gave them the choice to be turned once they were twenty-one.

Of course, being sensible children, they each agreed they wanted to become vampires as well. Griff, the oldest, is unrepentantly gay. Margie, the middle child, is straight and involved with Wayne, a human. Brad is the youngest and definitely bi.

All three joined the family business, art thievery, which is how Griff met Nolan, his parents' human partner, and quickly fell in lust with him.

Soon after his turning, Brad meets another Fledgling vampire, Ewan, and Ewan's very possessive Sire, Alexia. This causes problems on more than one front. Problems it will take the entire Martell family to solve ... or so they hope.

Review By Ulysses Dietz

Member of The Paranormal Romance Guild Review Team

Dorian and Cecily Martell are a modern suburban couple, living in New Orleans with their three adopted children, Griffin, Margie, and Brad.

It all feels perfectly normal until you realize that what Brad is whining about at the age of thirteen isn’t remotely about a cell phone.

It struck me at some point that this book is, by design, a sort of “Father Knows Best” of our times, in which Robert Young and Jane Wyatt are both vampires, as are the three children. It’s a weird, slightly wry, normalization of the vampire into the world we mere mortals all know. It’s also a kind of grandchild of Anne Rice’s New Orleans-based novels. And there’s a wee bit of the Munsters thrown in.

The plot is surprisingly low key, in spite of some trouble that Dorian and Margie face when out on a job for their “employer.” I won’t go into that detail because it’s fun and odd, like much of the book.

There are some darker moments – dealing with a young vampire who’s slipped his ties with his creator; and as part of that, dealing with a difficult older vampire whose moral compass seems to have gotten broken. If you know what I mean.

But, all in all, the Martells are dealing with their youngest son (who is bisexual) having his first serious crush; and their perky college-aged daughter falling for a mortal human. It’s a sometimes-odd mixture of mundane life and the machinations of vampire culture going on just below the surface.

I wish the author had written more and gone deeper into everything in the book. There’s a lot unsaid and many stories untold here. Maybe it’s a set-up for a series! I hope so.

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