Ocean of Blood by Darren Shan

Ocean of Blood (The Saga of Larten Crepsley, #2)

by Darren Shan

The epic tale of the vampire Larten Crepsley continues. The question is – how far can Larten go… alone?

Free from their mentor Seba Nile, Larten Crepsley and Wester Flack join the Cubs – wild young vampires with little respect for human life, and a taste for mindless enjoyment.

For the Cubs, everything is easy. But nothing has ever been easy for Larten, and soon fate throws his life into another spin. With dark paths to travel, Larten finds himself far from the Vampire Mountain and its rules. A long way from home, sick and alone, he must decide what kind of vampire he will be. Whether he will stand firm, be true to his master and his princples – or whether he will lose himself in blood…

Reviewed by celinenyx on

3 of 5 stars

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I've been an almost life-long fan of Darren Shan's books. The first time I read The Vampire's Assistant I was around eight. After that first encounter with the wonderful world of vampires that would live for centuries but were more like warriors than the aristocrats most books make them out to be, I was smitten with his writing.

But it seems like Ocean of Blood was a bit of a miss for me. Usually when I write a review the second paragraph is filled with the basic plot premises. This time, I'm having trouble thinking anything up besides: Larten is sad. Because that's pretty much what this book is about, Larten being sad and mopy and restless. He runs around doing stuff, but almost everything is told, not shown.

That's where it all went wrong with this story. There is no connection made with Larten. Firstly because in opposition to the Cirque Du Freak books, The Saga of Larten Crepsley is written in third person. I miss the intimacy of actually feeling like him, being in his head. There is an omniscient narrator here, that just floats in and out of people's heads, but never sticks around long enough to actually make us connect with the characters. Secondly there is no action. There are no happenings that grip you or keep you engaged. Most of the exciting stuff is told as an afterthought, like Larten's trials he must conquer to being a real vampire. The vampire party goes by in a blur. About seventy percent of the book is told, not shown.

That leaves the last quarter of the book being a place where actually something happens - and this is the part that got Ocean of Blood a three-star rating instead of a lower one. When the action finally kicks in, it really kicks in. All of a sudden the horror master I came to love is back in full force. The ending of Ocean of Blood makes me very curious to the third book in The Saga of Larten Crepsley, because that one does seem like a lovely action-packed book.

I would only recommend this to people who have read all of the Cirque Du Freak books. Especially this instalment will make near to no sense to you if you're not already familiar with the world. Unless you're a hardcore Larten fan, I'd just skip this part (or just read the ending) and continue with the third one, as nothing of note happens in Ocean of Blood.

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  • Started reading
  • 30 March, 2013: Finished reading
  • 30 March, 2013: Reviewed