- Joined
- Apr 28, 2022
Last time, our merry little book-club sat down and read two shitty trans superhero novels. So, the law of balance dictates that now have to read a shitty feminist book series--but don't worry my loyal TERFettes, we're talking about that special brand of radlib feminism that's about as friendly to most women as Jack the Ripper. However, don't expect much "transgender representation" either, because this thread is also a trip back in time, all the way to that distant, forgotten Year of Our Lord 2007. Put it this way, today's fodder was originally published by St. Martin's Press, an imprint of Macmillan. What have they put more recently? Oh, just a little book called Manhunt.
If I asked you Good Readers what the worst vampire story of all time was, a lot of you would probably say Twilight. To which I say, cowards! Cowards and fools! Obviously, defending Twilight isn't nearly as contrarian today (at least out there in the fields beyond the Farms) as it was in 2007, but I'm not trying to convince you Twilight was some great work of art. I'm just saying, there are much, much worse vampire books out there.
House of Night is an interesting little cultural artifact. In terms of how it was packaged and marketed, it seems to me like it was kind of halfway between something like Twilight or Harry Potter--young adult and children's books that were sold as author-driven art--and like, those series you see at Scholastic book fairs that are made up of a million and one thin little volumes, half of which are the work of ghostwriters. Sometimes they come shrink-wrapped with, like, plastic jewelry or something. Think Animorphs or the original Vampire Diaries.
House of Night, though, as far as I can tell, involved no ghostwriters, instead being the work of mother-daughter duo PC Cast and Kristen Cast. Well, PC Cast wrote the books and Kristen apparently "edited" them, so I'm sensing a bit of a Christopher Paloni marketing gimmick. Although, Kristen did later release some solo books, so maybe she was more involved than I'm giving her credit for. Credit, blame, same thing, really.
That's enough preamble. Let's begin. This is the first book, Marked. Yeah, one word verb titles were big at the time.
Did she pronounce it "vampyre?" Casts? Did she really? Also, good to know this series isn't the fruit of any kind of original idea on the part of the authors. Not surprising, really. House of Night started in 2007, just two years after Twilight burst onto the scene. Unlike a lot of the Twilight bandwagon hoppers, House of Night never got any kind of movie, which should tell you something.
If I was in a creative writing class, and I found out my teacher wrote House of Night, I'd ask for a refund.
I really hope teenagers in 2007 didn't sound like the cast of House of Night.
That's right, we're going to try to "scientifically" explain vampires. In a story where they're blessed by an actual, literal goddess. Peter Watts is spinning in his grave, and he's not even dead yet!
I have the terrible suspicion this book won't be as fun as Hades.
It must be hard being the only sighted kid at a school for the blind, I guess. This is Zoey, our... I guess calling her a "heroine" is more accurate than it was for Danny Tozer, but only by so much. The series is going to try very hard to convince us she's a deep, misunderstood outcast, despite her generally coming off as the very image of a vapid, teenage millenial pulled from the darkest depths of a boomer's mind. Kayla, meanwhile, is Zoey's best friend, which naturally means they regard each other with only the deepest contempt. Very David from Dreadnought, actually.
Like Danny, Zoey seems to have gone her entire life without forming any genuine human connection. On the one hand, this will make it easier for her to leave everything behind when she's summoned to Vampire Hogwarts. On the other, it closely resembles something we call "bad writing."
...Why? Why is he "more-than-slightly-insane"? Why does he call what sounds like the fucking flu "the teenage plague"? Does he think he's a characters in The Darkest Minds? This is way too long winded and specific to work as a throwaway joke or whatever.
#relatable, amirite, fellow kids?
Who wants to bet that the Casts completely fail at making the "Step-Loser" look like a bastard? I don't know why so many YA authors struggle with that, when they're so clearly capable of making their main characters look like arseholes by accident.
I'm guessing "almost-boyfriend" is code for "I don't feel I owe you any kind of emotional availability or commitment, but will freak the fuck out if you go out with other girls or don't prioritize my bullshit at all times."
Because as we all know, when someone says "like a million years" they're always being literal. God forbid someone not remember the last time the school football team beat another team off the top of their head.
Ah yes, the worst side-effect of teenage alcoholism: getting a beer-gut. Good to know Zoey has her priorities straight.
I'll tell you this now, it's really hard not to quote every line of this book. Whereas Dreadnought's prose was generally workmanlike and boring, House of Night's writing is hilariously shit on a sentence-by-sentence basis.
Yeah, all vampires in this world have shitty glowing face tattoos. I feel like the whole point of this series was to spawn a dress-up flash game.
So, a trick-or-treater who fell and skinned their knee, got it.
Trackers are basically special vampires whose job is to find nascent vampires and tell them to get their ass to the House of Night, which despite having a name like an afrocentric cult that initiates members by sending them out to kill white people, is basically Vampire Hogwarts. You see, vampirism here isn't a curse, or something transmitted virally. A vampire can't turn a human into another of their kind. Instead, it's more like a kind of genetic potential that manifests in adolescence. Like X-Men. I'm not sure why any scientist in-universe would describe them as "undead" when they're clearly just mutated humans.
Now, one of the actual bullshit critiques of Twilight back in the day was that Meyer "changed the rules" of vampirism. That's nonsense. "Vampire" is just an umbrella term for literally thousands of blood drinking folkloric monsters from around the world. There is no "vampire bible." Hell, a lot of "canonical" vampire traits are very recent inventions. Dracula didn't burn in sunlight, that was invented for the film Nosferatu only a little over a hundred years ago. I'd argue that one of the great things about vampires as a literary device is how variable they can be while still being recognizable as vampires.
So, the problem with House of Night isn't that its vampires are different from Stoker or Rice, it's that their rules are stupid as shit. Seriously, I'd defend Meyer's take on vampires way before I would the Casts.
Also, if they don't get there in like, three days, they die. Despite this, and the fact that "fledglings" experience extreme physical and mental weakness during their transition, Trackers seem to make no effort to actually help them get to their nearest House of Night. It's a bit like if Hagrid busted into the Hut on the Rock, told Harry he was a wizard, then immediately fucked off again.
When Zoey comes too, Kayla is freaking out because she has a mark on her forehead now.
I didn't know "ridiculous" was a synonym for "bitchy and tepid."
Why the fuck is Kayla so upset by Zoey being a vampire? As we'll see, pretty everyone's she's grown up watching on TV or in movies is one. I'd get her being worried that Zoey might die during the change, but as written, this is like a teenage girl being horrified their friend is turning into... I don't know, a TikTok star?
Now that's a Danny Tozer line.
You know Zoey's deep because she... rides the bus to school. True working-class hero.
As you'll come to see, Zoey has a neverending well of sour loathing for nearly every living thing that crosses her path.
Again, vampires are celebrities in this world.
Because this is 2007 and not 2017, this is a gay metaphor, not a trans one. This is one of the reasons I wanted to do these books, it's interesting seeing how the priorities of woke (not that that term was very popular back then) have changed over the years. Kayla excuses herself to take a call from her boyfriend:
As opposed to all those temporary deaths that go around this time of year. Again, vampires aren't undead here, at least not the ones everyone knows about.
These "bizarre and unnameable" physical changes will mostly consist of becoming stronger and sexier.
I might sympathise more if most of this first chapter hadn't been spent shit-talking your "best friend."
Ironic, shitty and cowardly, either works.
Expositing about your protagonist's appearance while they look in a mirror is one of those hack-devices any decent writer will you warn you away from, up there with beginning a book with an alarm-clock going off, or a film with the main character going "Yep, that's me" in voice over. In fact, I'm pretty sure that the more detailed such a description is inversely proportional to the quality of the book it's in.
Zoey's dark skin being a sign of her supposedly superior virtue is very Current Year.
Fun fact, the Cherokees were considered one of the Five Civilized Tribes during colonial times, due to their widespread and eager adoption of European customs, like dress or chattel slavery. Also, calling your own people "barbaric" is weird.
I wasn't aware the Cherokee were so down on vampires.
If I asked you Good Readers what the worst vampire story of all time was, a lot of you would probably say Twilight. To which I say, cowards! Cowards and fools! Obviously, defending Twilight isn't nearly as contrarian today (at least out there in the fields beyond the Farms) as it was in 2007, but I'm not trying to convince you Twilight was some great work of art. I'm just saying, there are much, much worse vampire books out there.
House of Night is an interesting little cultural artifact. In terms of how it was packaged and marketed, it seems to me like it was kind of halfway between something like Twilight or Harry Potter--young adult and children's books that were sold as author-driven art--and like, those series you see at Scholastic book fairs that are made up of a million and one thin little volumes, half of which are the work of ghostwriters. Sometimes they come shrink-wrapped with, like, plastic jewelry or something. Think Animorphs or the original Vampire Diaries.
House of Night, though, as far as I can tell, involved no ghostwriters, instead being the work of mother-daughter duo PC Cast and Kristen Cast. Well, PC Cast wrote the books and Kristen apparently "edited" them, so I'm sensing a bit of a Christopher Paloni marketing gimmick. Although, Kristen did later release some solo books, so maybe she was more involved than I'm giving her credit for. Credit, blame, same thing, really.
That's enough preamble. Let's begin. This is the first book, Marked. Yeah, one word verb titles were big at the time.
For our wonderful agent, Meredith Bernstein, who said the three magic words: vampyre finishing school. We heart you!
Did she pronounce it "vampyre?" Casts? Did she really? Also, good to know this series isn't the fruit of any kind of original idea on the part of the authors. Not surprising, really. House of Night started in 2007, just two years after Twilight burst onto the scene. Unlike a lot of the Twilight bandwagon hoppers, House of Night never got any kind of movie, which should tell you something.
I would like to thank a wonderful student of mine, John Maslin, for research help and for reading and giving feedback on many early versions of the book. His input was invaluable.
A big THANKS GUYS goes out to my Creative Writing classes in the school year 2005-2006. Your brainstorming was lots of help (and quite amusing).
If I was in a creative writing class, and I found out my teacher wrote House of Night, I'd ask for a refund.
I also want to thank my fabulous daughter, Kristin, for making sure we sound like teenagers. I couldn’t have done it without you. (She made me write that.)—PC
I really hope teenagers in 2007 didn't sound like the cast of House of Night.
PC and Kristin would both like to thank their dad/grandpa, Dick Cast, for the biological hypothesis he helped create as the basis for the House of Night’s vampyres. We love you Dad/G-pa!
That's right, we're going to try to "scientifically" explain vampires. In a story where they're blessed by an actual, literal goddess. Peter Watts is spinning in his grave, and he's not even dead yet!
From Hesiod’s poem to Nyx
“There also stands the gloomy house of Night;
ghastly clouds shroud it in darkness.
Before it Atlas stands erect and on his head
and unwearying arms firmly supports the broad sky,
where Night and Day cross a bronze threshold
and then come close and greet each other.”
(Hesiod, Theogony, 744 ff.)
I have the terrible suspicion this book won't be as fun as Hades.
Just when I thought my day couldn’t get any worse I saw the dead guy standing next to my locker. Kayla was talking nonstop in her usual K-babble, and she didn’t even notice him. At first. Actually, now that I think about it, no one else noticed him until he spoke, which is, tragically, more evidence of my freakish inability to fit in.
It must be hard being the only sighted kid at a school for the blind, I guess. This is Zoey, our... I guess calling her a "heroine" is more accurate than it was for Danny Tozer, but only by so much. The series is going to try very hard to convince us she's a deep, misunderstood outcast, despite her generally coming off as the very image of a vapid, teenage millenial pulled from the darkest depths of a boomer's mind. Kayla, meanwhile, is Zoey's best friend, which naturally means they regard each other with only the deepest contempt. Very David from Dreadnought, actually.
Like Danny, Zoey seems to have gone her entire life without forming any genuine human connection. On the one hand, this will make it easier for her to leave everything behind when she's summoned to Vampire Hogwarts. On the other, it closely resembles something we call "bad writing."
“No, but Zoey, I swear to God Heath didn’t get that drunk after the game. You really shouldn’t be so hard on him.”
“Yeah,” I said absently. “Sure.” Then I coughed. Again. I felt like crap. I must be coming down with what Mr. Wise, my more-than-slightly-insane AP biology teacher, called the Teenage Plague.
...Why? Why is he "more-than-slightly-insane"? Why does he call what sounds like the fucking flu "the teenage plague"? Does he think he's a characters in The Darkest Minds? This is way too long winded and specific to work as a throwaway joke or whatever.
If I died, would it get me out of my geometry test tomorrow? One could only hope.
#relatable, amirite, fellow kids?
“Zoey, please. Are you even listening? I think he only had like four—I dunno—maybe six beers, and maybe like three shots. But that’s totally beside the point. He probably wouldn’t even have had hardly any if your stupid parents hadn’t made you go home right after the game.”
We shared a long-suffering look, in total agreement about the latest injustice committed against me by my mom and the Step-Loser she’d married three really long years ago. Then, after barely half a breath break, K was back with the babbling.
Who wants to bet that the Casts completely fail at making the "Step-Loser" look like a bastard? I don't know why so many YA authors struggle with that, when they're so clearly capable of making their main characters look like arseholes by accident.
“Plus, he was celebrating. I mean we beat Union!” K shook my shoulder and put her face close to mine. “Hello! Your boyfriend—”
“My almost-boyfriend,” I corrected her, trying my best not to cough on her.
I'm guessing "almost-boyfriend" is code for "I don't feel I owe you any kind of emotional availability or commitment, but will freak the fuck out if you go out with other girls or don't prioritize my bullshit at all times."
“Whatever. Heath is our quarterback so of course he’s going to celebrate. It’s been like a million years since Broken Arrow beat Union.”
“Sixteen.” I’m crappy at math, but K’s math impairment makes me look like a genius.
Because as we all know, when someone says "like a million years" they're always being literal. God forbid someone not remember the last time the school football team beat another team off the top of their head.
“Again, whatever. The point is, he was happy. You should give the boy a break.”
“The point is that he was wasted for like the fifth time this week. I’m sorry, but I don’t want to go out with a guy whose main focus in life has changed from trying to play college football to trying to chug a six-pack without puking. Not to mention the fact that he’s going to get fat from all that beer.” I had to pause to cough. I was feeling a little dizzy and forced myself to take slow, deep breaths when the coughing fit was over. Not that K-babble noticed.
“Eww! Heath, fat! Not a visual I want.”
Ah yes, the worst side-effect of teenage alcoholism: getting a beer-gut. Good to know Zoey has her priorities straight.
I'll tell you this now, it's really hard not to quote every line of this book. Whereas Dreadnought's prose was generally workmanlike and boring, House of Night's writing is hilariously shit on a sentence-by-sentence basis.
Something relatively unique about House of Night, at least compared to most modern fantasy: there is no "masquerade." "Vampyres" (we are not going to be making a habit of using that spelling) are a publicly acknowledged fact of life, and unlike, say, True Blood, this isn't a recent state of affairs. People have known about vampires since the dawn of recorded history, and pretty much every real-life celebrity the Casts like is a vampire in this world. Naturally, besides the cast of Glee all being vampires (seriously) nothing else seems to be that different. Politics, culture, history, religion, all exactly the same, but everyone you might recognise from the cover of Entertainment Weekly is a vampire. It's staggeringly lazy.Then I saw him. The dead guy. Okay, I realized pretty quick that he wasn’t technically “dead.” He was undead. Or un-human. Whatever. Scientists said one thing, people said another, but the end result was the same.
There was no mistaking what he was and even if I hadn’t felt the power and darkness that radiated from him, there was no frickin’ way I could miss his Mark, the sapphire-blue crescent moon on his forehead and the additional tattooing of entwining knot work that framed his equally blue eyes.
Yeah, all vampires in this world have shitty glowing face tattoos. I feel like the whole point of this series was to spawn a dress-up flash game.
He was a vampyre, and worse. He was a Tracker.
Well, crap! He was standing by my locker.
“Zoey, you’re so not listening to me!”
Then the vampyre spoke and his ceremonial words slicked across the space between us, dangerous and seductive, like blood mixed with melted chocolate.
So, a trick-or-treater who fell and skinned their knee, got it.
“Zoey Montgomery! Night has chosen thee; thy death will be thy birth. Night calls to thee; hearken to Her sweet voice. Your destiny awaits you at the House of Night!”
He lifted one long, white finger and pointed at me. As my forehead exploded in pain Kayla opened her mouth and screamed.
Trackers are basically special vampires whose job is to find nascent vampires and tell them to get their ass to the House of Night, which despite having a name like an afrocentric cult that initiates members by sending them out to kill white people, is basically Vampire Hogwarts. You see, vampirism here isn't a curse, or something transmitted virally. A vampire can't turn a human into another of their kind. Instead, it's more like a kind of genetic potential that manifests in adolescence. Like X-Men. I'm not sure why any scientist in-universe would describe them as "undead" when they're clearly just mutated humans.
Now, one of the actual bullshit critiques of Twilight back in the day was that Meyer "changed the rules" of vampirism. That's nonsense. "Vampire" is just an umbrella term for literally thousands of blood drinking folkloric monsters from around the world. There is no "vampire bible." Hell, a lot of "canonical" vampire traits are very recent inventions. Dracula didn't burn in sunlight, that was invented for the film Nosferatu only a little over a hundred years ago. I'd argue that one of the great things about vampires as a literary device is how variable they can be while still being recognizable as vampires.
So, the problem with House of Night isn't that its vampires are different from Stoker or Rice, it's that their rules are stupid as shit. Seriously, I'd defend Meyer's take on vampires way before I would the Casts.
Zoey Montgomery! Night has chosen thee; thy death will be thy birth. Night calls to thee; hearken to Her sweet voice. Your destiny awaits you at the House of Night!”
He lifted one long, white finger and pointed at me. As my forehead exploded in pain Kayla opened her mouth and screamed.
Also, if they don't get there in like, three days, they die. Despite this, and the fact that "fledglings" experience extreme physical and mental weakness during their transition, Trackers seem to make no effort to actually help them get to their nearest House of Night. It's a bit like if Hagrid busted into the Hut on the Rock, told Harry he was a wizard, then immediately fucked off again.
When Zoey comes too, Kayla is freaking out because she has a mark on her forehead now.
As usual, I said the first ridiculous thing that came to mind. “K, your eyes are popping out of your head like a fish.”
I didn't know "ridiculous" was a synonym for "bitchy and tepid."
Oh, God, Zoey! What are you going to do? You can’t go to that place. You can’t be one of those things. This can’t be happening! Who am I supposed to go to all of our football games with?”
Why the fuck is Kayla so upset by Zoey being a vampire? As we'll see, pretty everyone's she's grown up watching on TV or in movies is one. I'd get her being worried that Zoey might die during the change, but as written, this is like a teenage girl being horrified their friend is turning into... I don't know, a TikTok star?
I noticed that all during her tirade she didn’t once move any closer to me. I clamped down on the sick, hurt feeling inside that threatened to make me burst into tears. My eyes dried instantly. I was good at hiding tears. I should be; I’d had three years to get good at it.
Now that's a Danny Tozer line.
I wasn’t really talking; I was just making words come out of my mouth. Still grimacing at the pain in my head, I stood up. Looking around I felt a small measure of relief that K and I were the only ones in the math hall, and then I had to choke back what I knew was hysterical laughter. Had I not been totally psycho about the geometry test from hell scheduled for tomorrow, and had run back to my locker to get my book so I could attempt to obsessively (and pointlessly) study tonight, the Tracker would have found me standing outside in front of the school with the majority of the 1,300 kids who went to Broken Arrow’s South Intermediate High School waiting for what my stupid Barbie-clone sister liked to smugly call “the big yellow limos.” I have a car, but standing around with the less fortunate who have to ride the buses is a time-honored tradition, not to mention an excellent way to check out who’s hitting on who.
You know Zoey's deep because she... rides the bus to school. True working-class hero.
As it was, there was only one other kid in the math hall—a tall thin dork with messed-up teeth, which I could, unfortunately, see too much of because he was standing there with his mouth flapping open staring at me like I’d just given birth to a litter of flying pigs.
I coughed again, this time a really wet, disgusting cough. The dork made a squeaky little sound and scuttled down the hall to Mrs. Day’s room clutching a flat board to his bony chest. Guess the chess club had changed its meeting time to Mondays after school.
As you'll come to see, Zoey has a neverending well of sour loathing for nearly every living thing that crosses her path.
Do vampyres play chess? Were there vampyre dorks? How about Barbie-like vampyre cheerleaders? Did any vampyres play in the band? Were there vampyre Emos with their guy-wearing-girl’s-pants weirdness and those awful bangs that cover half their faces? Or were they all those freaky Goth kids who didn’t like to bathe much? Was I going to turn into a Goth kid? Or worse, an Emo? I didn’t particularly like wearing black, at least not exclusively, and I wasn’t feeling a sudden and unfortunate aversion to soap and water, nor did I have an obsessive desire to change my hairstyle and wear too much eyeliner.
Again, vampires are celebrities in this world.
“Zoey? Are you okay?” Kayla’s voice sounded too high, like someone was pinching her, and she’d taken another step away from me.
I sighed and felt my first sliver of anger. It wasn’t like I’d asked for this. K and I had been best friends since third grade, and now she was looking at me like I had turned into a monster.
“Kayla, it’s just me. The same me I was two seconds ago and two hours ago and two days ago.” I made a frustrated gesture toward my throbbing head. “This doesn’t change who I am!”
Because this is 2007 and not 2017, this is a gay metaphor, not a trans one. This is one of the reasons I wanted to do these books, it's interesting seeing how the priorities of woke (not that that term was very popular back then) have changed over the years. Kayla excuses herself to take a call from her boyfriend:
I watched her rush across the east lawn to the parking lot. I could see that she had her cell phone smashed to her ear and was talking in animated little bursts to Jared. I’m sure she was already telling him I was turning into a monster.
The problem, of course, was that turning into a monster was the brighter of my two choices. Choice Number 1: I turn into a vampyre, which equals a monster in just about any human’s mind. Choice Number 2: My body rejects the Change and I die. Forever.
As opposed to all those temporary deaths that go around this time of year. Again, vampires aren't undead here, at least not the ones everyone knows about.
The bad news was that I’d have to move into the House of Night, a private boarding school in Tulsa’s Midtown, known by all my friends as the Vampyre Finishing School, where I would spend the next four years going through bizarre and unnameable physical changes, as well as a total and permanent life shake-up.
These "bizarre and unnameable" physical changes will mostly consist of becoming stronger and sexier.
Great. I didn’t want to do either. I just wanted to attempt to be normal, despite the burden of my mega-conservative parents, my troll-like younger brother, and my oh-so-perfect older sister. I wanted to pass geometry. I wanted to keep my grades up so that I could get accepted into the veterinary college at OSU and get out of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. But most of all, I wanted to fit in—at least at school. Home had become hopeless, so all I was left with were my friends and my life away from my family.
Now that was being taken away from me, too.
I might sympathise more if most of this first chapter hadn't been spent shit-talking your "best friend."
High-pitched girl giggles flitted to me from the parking lot. Great. Kathy Richter, the biggest ho in school, was pretending to smack Heath. Even from where I was standing it was obvious she thought hitting him was some kind of mating ritual. As usual, clueless Heath was just standing there grinning. Well, hell, my day just wasn’t going to get any better. And there sat my robin’s egg-blue 1966 VW Bug right in the middle of them. No. I couldn’t go out there. I couldn’t walk into the middle of all of them with this thing on my forehead. I’d never be able to be part of them again. I already knew too well what they’d do. I remembered the last kid a Tracker had Chosen at SIHS.
It happened at the beginning of the school year last year. The Tracker had come before school started and had targeted the kid as he was walking to his first hour. I didn’t see the Tracker, but I did see the kid afterward, for just a second, after he dropped his books and ran out of the building, his new Mark glowing on his pale forehead and tears washing down his too white cheeks. I never forgot how crowded the halls had been that morning, and how everyone had backed away from him like he had the plague as he rushed to escape out the front doors of the school. I had been one of those kids who had backed out of his way and stared, even though I’d felt really sorry for him. I just hadn’t wanted to be labeled as that-one-girl-who’s-friends-with-those-freaks. Sort of ironic now, isn’t it?
Ironic, shitty and cowardly, either works.
Instead of going to my car I headed for the nearest restroom, which was, thankfully, empty. There were three stalls—yes, I double-checked each for feet. On one wall were two sinks, over which hung two medium-sized mirrors. Across from the sinks the opposite wall was covered with a huge mirror that had a ledge below it for holding brushes and makeup and whatnot. I put my purse and my geometry book on the ledge, took a deep breath, and in one motion lifted my head and brushed back my hair.
It was like staring into the face of a familiar stranger. You know, that person you see in a crowd and swear you know, but you really don’t? Now she was me—the familiar stranger.
She had my eyes. They were the same hazel color that could never decide whether it wanted to be green or brown, but my eyes had never been that big and round. Or had they? She had my hair—long and straight and almost as dark as my grandma’s had been before hers had begun to turn silver. The stranger had my high cheekbones, long, strong nose, and wide mouth—more features from my grandma and her Cherokee ancestors.
Expositing about your protagonist's appearance while they look in a mirror is one of those hack-devices any decent writer will you warn you away from, up there with beginning a book with an alarm-clock going off, or a film with the main character going "Yep, that's me" in voice over. In fact, I'm pretty sure that the more detailed such a description is inversely proportional to the quality of the book it's in.
I’d always been olive-ish, much darker skinned than anyone else in my family. But maybe it wasn’t that my skin was suddenly so white . . . maybe it just looked pale in comparison to the dark blue outline of the crescent moon that was perfectly positioned in the middle of my forehead. Or maybe it was the horrid fluorescent lighting. I hoped it was the lighting.
Zoey's dark skin being a sign of her supposedly superior virtue is very Current Year.
I stared at the exotic-looking tattoo. Mixed with my strong Cherokee features it seemed to brand me with a mark of wildness . . . as if I belonged to ancient times when the world was bigger . . . more barbaric.
Fun fact, the Cherokees were considered one of the Five Civilized Tribes during colonial times, due to their widespread and eager adoption of European customs, like dress or chattel slavery. Also, calling your own people "barbaric" is weird.
From this day on my life would never be the same. And for a moment—just an instant—I forgot about the horror of not belonging and felt a shocking burst of pleasure, while deep inside of me the blood of my grandmother’s people rejoiced.
I wasn't aware the Cherokee were so down on vampires.
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