Certain Dark Things

323 pages

English language

Published Sept. 10, 2016

ISBN:
978-1-250-09908-2
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
945072595

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4 stars (20 reviews)

Certain Dark Things combines elements of Latin American mythology with a literary voice that leads readers on an exhilarating and fast-paced journey. Welcome to Mexico City, an oasis in a sea of vampires. Here in the city, heavily policed to keep the creatures of the night at bay, Domingo is another trash-picking street kid, just hoping to make enough to survive. Then he meets Atl, the descendant of Aztec blood drinkers. Domingo is smitten. He clings to her like a barnacle until Atl relents and decides to let him stick around. But Atl's problems, Nick and Rodrigo, have come to find her. When they start to raise the body count in the city, it attracts the attention of police officers, local crime bosses, and the vampire community. Atl has to get out before Mexico City is upended, and her with it.

6 editions

Review of 'Certain Dark Things' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I’m surprised it took me this long to realize this book exists. I enjoyed Gods of Jade and Shadow, but this is a stronger book. There’s so many new ideas explored, any one of which would be enough for me to call this book a much needed injection of creativity in a genre that often feels weighed down by its own tropes. The different species of vampires, their needs, cultures, and stories, would be enough. The brilliant idea of turning them into Narcos with clannish loyalties and indifference to violence and human suffering, would be enough. The setting and use of Mexico as a country with its own history, culture, and pride would be enough. It’s also a quick paced, enjoyable read with plenty of characters with complex emotional backgrounds.

Review of 'Certain Dark Things' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Neon noir vampire fiction, where have you been all my life? At once grimy and sexy, mysterious, alluring, and very violent. I loved so many things about this book - the luridly vivid Mexico City setting, the ominously atmospheric yet wondrous world-building... This is a world in which a fascinating variety of species of vampires exist, with varying abilities, appetites, strengths, weaknesses, and life expectancy. Humans have been aware of the existence of vampires as very real and dangerous creatures since the late 1960s, reacting to this alarming news by doing things like banning them from entire nations and turning cities into fortified, ostensibly vampire-free zones. The characters, human and vampire alike, felt as rich and well-realized as the menacing world around them. If you’re looking for a book like Moreno-Garcia’s Mexican Gothic, this is not it. But I love how distinct they are from each other. Their wildly different …

Review of 'Certain Dark Things' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I love me a good vampire story, and I enjoyed [b:Gods of Jade and Shadow|36510722|Gods of Jade and Shadow|Silvia Moreno-Garcia|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1543268579l/36510722.SY75.jpg|58230232] by Moreno-Garcia, so preordering the audiobook of Certain Dark Things was a quick and easy decision. I was immediately taken in by the perspective of Domingo the teenage garbage collector. I learned a lot about the characteristics of people in Mexico City, and thoroughly enjoyed the unique take on vampirism. I wasn't sure about the different species of vampires at first, but as the story progressed it made a lot more sense. Loved the twists and turns through Mexico City, and the connections of character arcs. The dialogue was already strong, but narrator Aida Reluzco made it even stronger with her skillful performance. Excellent work all around, ¡me encanta mucho!

Review of 'Certain Dark Things' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Spoiler: the dog lives.

This book does some more original things with the idea of Vampires that I can remember seeing anywhere else: the idea that there are mutliple types of vampires, each quite different, from different parts of the world and adhering to the different myths of that place.

The story takes place a little in the future, and some time not too long ago, people figured out vampires were real, and steps were taken to expell them. Like all human endeavors, this one was undertaken piecemeal, enacted differently by different governements. In Mexico, there are no vampires in Mexico city, but they run drug cartels in the north. Then young Domingo, who makes a living picking garbage in Mexico city, runs into a vampire girl and is instantly smitten.

The vampire girl is Atl, an Aztec vampire, on the run from a competing vampire group who slaughtered her …

Review of 'Certain Dark Things' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Certain Dark Things takes place in a near future Earth where, in 1976 vampires were discovered to be real and not just creatures of folklore. Atl, last living daughter of a matriarchal vampire family, flees to Mexico City ahead of her family's killers. There she finds an unlikely ally in a down-and-out street kid, Domingo, who fundamentally changes the way Atl feels about humans. Though she's loath to trust him, and she knows she can't reveal the full details of her own past to him without alienating him, she needs all the allies she can get. Mexico City might be a vampire-free zone, but her family's murderers are still closing in on her and she can really use all the allies she can find...

A far more morally ambiguous, human story than you'd expect out of a book that also summarizes nicely as "battle between vampire druglords in Mexico City". …

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Subjects

  • Vampires
  • Fiction