jeannamichel
Written on Sep 30, 2015
Lindsay Francis Brambles is a genius, piecing this together with layers upon layers of story and generations which collide and connect. Hitler and Nazi Vampires: the base story—if not introduced properly—would flop miserably because people do not want just another vampire story. Well, my friends, this is not your ordinary vampire story. The backstory works magnificently and Sophie, the protagonist, is not a helpless lady but a strong female character who gives Katniss Everdeen a run for her money. Becoming Darkness is a work of genius!
Sophie has to be the most unluckiest girl in the entire world. This poor girl has been through so much and endured it to the very end. Without giving too much away: Brambles is the type of author who kills characters. Don’t get too attached to any one character because they may not be there in the morning. Killing characters off is both advantageous and disadvantageous. It makes the flow of the novel extremely fast with non-stop action which doesn’t let you catch your breath. However, it also doesn’t let you mourn these characters that you may have spent pages with. Why is life so unfair?
Despite the deaths (because you know what you’re getting into reading a vampire book), the use of German on the cover and how the designer was able to incorporate the whole phrase on the front—it gives me chills just thinking about it. “Nun bin ich ewige becoming darkness.” Those exact words, “For now I am eternal, becoming darkness” can work as the theme of the whole novel. Brambles weaves this phrase into almost every aspect of his writing, showing that even between generations, people have some of the same thoughts.
This book is meant to have five stars. The vampires Brambles created are brilliant; there is so much about them that I love. Plus, if there was a Brambles’ Apocalypse, fueled by Hitler and his Vampire Nazis, I would be alive (I’d like to think that but the virus may have gotten to me) because New York (New Yorkers unite!) still stands. The writing, the action, the characters, the story: all five stars. But it’s about this vampire boyfriend of Sophie’s. He is very cryptic and mysterious—he wouldn’t be if he told Sophie anything about anything. Despite several scenes with Valentine and Sophie, the communication between them grates on my nerves because if he had only told her what she wanted to know… well, then there would be no book to write, I suppose. Reading about those two, fighting out their problems or not fighting out their problems (because there still are many problems yet to solve): like no. What kind of relationship do they have? It’s enormously complicated and unbalanced. I wanted to like Val but how can you like someone who doesn’t trust you with any significant information?
Overall, Becoming Darkness is certainly a book to put on your bucket list. This is the perfect time to read it: October. Despite the strange it’s complicated status Sophie has with her boyfriend, this book is superb. Lindsay Brambles is a true genius, creating a layered dystopian with vampires, Nazis, and non-stop action. It will be sure to keep readers guessing to the very last page.