Thursday, July 5, 2018

A Nighttime of Forever

A Nighttime of Forever (Vampire Innocent #1)
by Matthew S. Cox


I am not sure which would be worse, finding you are dead or you are alive but a vampire. Sarah is about to find out. This story is full of wit and humor you have to chuckle and even laugh a time or two. No romance but that is fine with me it is more of a coming to life of a young teen finding out the dos and things she can’t do. It is a family trying to stay together and learning how to deal with issues they never thought they would have to. There is sex but as a lot of teens find in real life it isn’t all it is cracked up to be. The author being a story that is more realistic and what the outcome might be if you don’t make the right choices. It is so easy to go out have a good time but wake up not knowing what happened and why you find yourself without any clothes. I don’t think anyone has to worry about becoming a vampire but it goes give a great message. It is on the dark side so beware this isn’t fluff piece but a very enjoyable read that does hold your attention. Being a mother it is a story I can relate to when my daughter was a teen she drove me nuts. No matter how much you support your child at some time they will make the wrong choice and have to pay for the deed they did. I enjoyed it and think I might read it again, I feel I didn’t let it all sink in like I should have.
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Summary
Sarah Wright woke up a few times after parties in strange places―but the morgue’s a first.

At eighteen, she’s eager for a taste of independence, moving out of state to attend college. A change of scenery is extra-needed due to a bad breakup with her boyfriend, Scott. However, soon after escaping the body cooler, she makes two startling realizations: vampires are real, and she is one.

There’s nothing quite like an untimely death to ruin plans. California’s sunny beaches aren’t the best place for vampires to chill, and worse, not only does she wind up stuck in Seattle, she’s still living (figuratively) with her parents.

They take the news surprisingly well―after all, it’s better than burying her―even helping move her bedroom to the basement. A disinterested sire, distraught friends, nosy Men in Black, and awestruck younger siblings complicate her adjustment to the new normal of being an immortal still subject to her parents’ rules.

Undeath has its perks, but it also brings enemies. Without a copy of ‘Fangs for Dummies,’ Sarah’s left scrambling for answers when one such new enemy attacks her siblings and friends. If she can’t figure out how to vampire, her attempt to spare her family the grief of losing her may wind up killing them.

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