Sunday, February 22, 2015

The Coldest Girl in Coldtown


The Coldest Girl in Coldtown
by Holly Black
New York: Hachette Audio
2013
Read by Christine Lakin
10 sound discs (12 hours)


For the last few weeks, I have been listening to this book in the car. By popular author, Holly Black, this is one of the best vampire stories I have heard in a long time. No wonder it was voted one of the best fiction books for young adults by the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), and an amazing audiobook for young adults (also by YALSA) in 2014. It is on several lists of best horror fiction for teens, too.

This story starts out with a horrific bang. Tana, a 17-year-old, wakes up following a party only to discover that all of the other teens have been brutally murdered. As she wanders through the house, she looks for other survivors but only finds blood and guts everywhere. Yes, it is rather graphic. Then she opens a door to a bedroom. There she sees Aidan, a young man (and former boyfriend, it turns out) chained to a bed. In the other bed is another boy, but this guy is different. Tana can tell immediately that he is a vampire.

This is how we find out what sort of story this is. The victims of the house party were mutilated by thirsty, very savage vampires, who purposely left Aiden and Gavriel, the "boy" vampire in the bedroom.

Tana has moments to figure out what she should do. How can she get away? She doesn't know where the vampires are in the house, but she knows they are there, probably sleeping off their glutonous feast since it is still the remains of the day. That doesn't leave her much time. And what she she do about the vampire who is tied up?

Springfield is the Coldtown of our story.
Through the masterful telling of this story, we learn that events such as the party massacre are not unusual. Vampires are real and out there, but society has mostly dealt with them by locking them into various "coldtowns", called such because of the sickness and feeling that takes over one's body as it changes. Coldtowns are all over the United States, and people on the outside can see in through the active use of social media.

There seems to be the impression that Coldtowns are fun, party towns where vampires live forever, dancing and feasting. This lifestyle is appealing to some young people who escape into the Coldtowns hoping to be changed and party forever, only to die tragic deaths as food for the vampires who eat too quickly. Not all victims will be turned, however, but only those who are bled slowly and then have a chance to feed themselves.

I was particularly pleased with Holly Black's more traditional portrayal yet updated of vampires. They are seen as mesmerizing and erotic to their victims, once bitten. They also sleep in the day, can't survive in the daylight, and also have an uncontrollable need to feed. Her descriptions of their ability to sense the blood around them, in living victims, is very vivid and helps us to understand the immediate change in the brain, once the person becomes infected. These are very much ancient vampires who have adapted well to the clubbing activities of many teens, using this as the means to entice new meals into Coldtowns.

The story as to who Gavriel is, and the conflicts between him and the ancient and powerful Coldtown vampire, Lucien, is well described and exciting. Tana and Gavriel are attracted to each other, something no other vampire in the story expected since Gavriel has been known during his long life as being maniacally cruel, a history Tana did not know before she rescued him from the farmhouse party. This leads to some interesting plot twists.

I hate to think of Tana, who was infected during her time in Coldtown and must wait to see if she changes, as being a vampire forever. She has a humanity that most of the characters, human and vampire alike, lack. But we know that she will "survive" any way that she can, and maybe make Coldtown a better place.

Here is a book trailer for you about the story:



I recommend this book for older teens, maybe high school and up, who love traditional vampire stories. Some of the gore in the story, as well as the intensity of the violence, might be too much for younger readers.