Product Details
Slave Ring (Vampire: The Masquerade -- Clan Brujah Trilogy, Book 1)

Slave Ring (Vampire: The Masquerade -- Clan Brujah Trilogy, Book 1)
By Tim Dedopulos

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


14 new or used available from $2.98

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1324373 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-04-28
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 285 pages

Customer Reviews

Great if you like the game5
If you like "Vampire: The Masquerade" then you may like this first in a series about the Brujah clan. We meet Theo, a Brujah archon who was once a slave in the antibellum south, whose method of operations appears to be very traditional until his mortal life memories get triggered by his latest assignment. Some Kindred and some mortals are working together to run a slave ring of mortals for high profit to markets around the world. This ring seems to cut across all lines that exist in the world of Kindred politics or perhaps its just a cover for something more serious. Burdened with a neonate Brujah who is a survivor of this modern slave ring, Theo must balance his duty, his clan, the politics of the Midwest, and his own memories as he searches for other survivors and the leaders of the slavers. The writing is excellent, showing depth to Kindred characters that is often lacking in many RPG groups and in the books themselves on occassion. There is plenty of violence for those just interested in the mechanics of combat but primarily this is a story of lies and coverups discovered by someone with a century and a half chip on his shoulder.

When Did Theo Become a Chatterbox?1
Theo Bell's character in the 13-book clan series was taciturn and action-oriented. In this weak three-book series, he never seems to shut his mouth and takes a whole lot of guff he would never have accepted as originally written.

Worse, the author invokes the same, tired description of his vision becoming covered with a red haze when he got angry. Yeah, we get it, angry Brujah. Flat, two-dimensional portrayal. Most characters added just to be quickly killed off.

Tremendous disappointment, poor writing.

Eh...3
This series was okay. I didn't like how it seemed everyone had dealings with the supernatural, and that there was more than one or two vampires in Aurora. I prefered the more realistic account of the seige of New York, where the punches were thrown by characters you knew, not some ancient evil.

I'd first recomend The Brujha Clan Novel if you want fiction on Theo Bell.