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John Marks (1)

Author of Fangland

For other authors named John Marks, see the disambiguation page.

5 Works 515 Members 21 Reviews 1 Favorited

Works by John Marks

Fangland (2007) 371 copies, 20 reviews
The Wall (1998) 45 copies
War Torn (2003) 24 copies
Purple State of Mind, A {film} — Director — 1 copy

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

23 reviews
The first half of the book was entirely useless to me. It was filled with characters whose names I couldn't remember and the inner workings, politics, and paranoia of the news show "The Hour". If I wanted to read about 60 Minutes, I'd have picked up a documentary.

This book was recommended to me as a retelling of Dracula. And in that, it was moderately successful. In fact, if you only take the parts that are the actual retelling, you have a pretty decent and interesting story. The twist on show more vampires was even crazy enough to work.

Although, Mr. Cover Artist, if you're going to have fang marks on the cover, the vampires in the book should probably have fangs. Maybe wait to fire up the old Photoshop until you've read an ARC or something.

The second half of the book picked up enough of a pace to keep me interested. The characters started sticking in my brain, and I started caring about them. Some of them even developed beyond two dimensions. Maybe. But I was getting into it. And then the ending came.

I finished the book three minutes ago, and so help me if I don't want to punch a kitten in the face. I'm returning this one to the library and hoping that someone who can actually enjoy this will read it next.
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I understand why this book has gotten rather poor reviews. If I weren't listening to it on CD, I would have quit reading over a week ago and returned it to the library. The most interesting character in the book is Austin Tratta, one of the journalists of The Hour (a news show in the book which resembles our real-world 60 Minutes) who writes his account in a therapy journal, though he never quite accepts the evidence of his eyes or what he is told.

Evangeline Harker, with whom the book opens show more and closes, on the other hand, is not that interesting nor really that compelling a character and I don't think that her part of the account is really all that clear in the end.

I will give Marks kudos for writing an unusual vampire story. His vampire is both amazing and despicable and amazingly despicable. Jan Torgu, the vampire, uses an unusual method to infect his victims - a constant recital of the names of places which have seen the worst atrocities (places like Treblinka, Gomorrah, Sarajevo, etc.), of the human race follows in Torgu's wake, it slips into thoughts and memories of the people he comes into contact with and begins to undermine their ability to function. Some how he manages to infect the technology used by the show long before he ever arrives at the office. Now there's a hostile takeover if ever there was one ...
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What a strange little book Fangland is. I was initially intrigued because Audrey Niffenegger had a blurb on the back, but quickly got caught up in the actual story once I started reading it.

Don't get me wrong, it does get off to a slow start, and is confusing at points in the beginning. As the story winds on, though, it's easy enough to figure out that you're supposed to be a bit confused, as it adds to the atmosphere.

The first half of Fangland reminds me of Dracula, as far as suspense goes. show more I was actually a little frightened in that good horror way as I got closer to the second half of the book, while the story mostly remains in Transylvania.

When the focus switches back to the US and the offices of a 60 Minutes clone known as The Hour, the suspense lightens up a little and the story isn't as... believable, I guess, as it was in the first half. I'm not sure why. It might be the diffusion of focus, from one person (Evangeline, the reporter stuck in Transylvania) to a multitude (a greedy handful of people who work in the offices of The Hour). It's still an enjoyable read in the second half, just not as gripping and creepy.

One minor complaint: calling the offices of The Hour "Fangland" seems like a shoehorned-in explanation of the title. It doesn't feel organic at all, and I wish it was just mentioned in passing, once, instead of clumsily "explained" twice (that I counted).

All in all, a good read if you're a fan of vampire novels. If you're just a suspense fan, you'll probably still enjoy it, but I think it's made more enjoyable by the allusions to standard vampire lore sprinkled throughout the novel, especially in the first half.
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Fangland re-tells the classic Dracula story with a modern day twist. Evangeline Harker is an assistant producer for The Hours, a 60 minutes type new show based in New York. Evangeline travels to Romania to research a possible news story for the program. However, instead of meeting an Eastern European crime lord, she finds Ion Torgu, a modern day vampire. The story simultaneously deals Evangeline’s disappearance and Ion Torgu’s creeping influence on the workers of The Hours. As Torgu’s show more presence infiltrates The Hours, one by one the news workers grow sick and deranged.
The overall concept of Fangland is interesting and the novel starts out well. However as the story wears on the plot begins to plod along. There is no real sense of menace or emotional investment in the characters and soon their predicament becomes somewhat boring.
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Works
5
Members
515
Popularity
#48,204
Rating
2.9
Reviews
21
ISBNs
74
Languages
3
Favorited
1

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