Glen Engel-Cox reviewed The Palace by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Interestingly written
4 stars
I’m re-reading these books about the vampire Saint Germain by Yarbro that I originally read when I was in high school and enjoying them once again. Unlike other vampire books, these are more about history than horror, although Yarbro is keen on showing how bloody humans could be to each other, which I suppose also distinguishes her vampires from others, because the villains here are the humans, not the vampires.
The time period here is a time in Italy before it was a coherent country but a republic of aligned states precariously dependent on the merchant prince families for their continued existence. During the course of the novel, the Medici’s who protect the city fall from favor while a Domenican monk becomes a dangerous demagogue to the detriment of the city and its people.
What’s interesting to me reading these at this point in my own writing career is how …
I’m re-reading these books about the vampire Saint Germain by Yarbro that I originally read when I was in high school and enjoying them once again. Unlike other vampire books, these are more about history than horror, although Yarbro is keen on showing how bloody humans could be to each other, which I suppose also distinguishes her vampires from others, because the villains here are the humans, not the vampires.
The time period here is a time in Italy before it was a coherent country but a republic of aligned states precariously dependent on the merchant prince families for their continued existence. During the course of the novel, the Medici’s who protect the city fall from favor while a Domenican monk becomes a dangerous demagogue to the detriment of the city and its people.
What’s interesting to me reading these at this point in my own writing career is how quickly Yarbro moves her plot from time to time, sometimes skipping months or a half year between chapters. I also admire her ability to recreate the letters from particular characters to another, which, while not as opaque as A.S. Byatt’s, still challenge the reader to read between the lines.