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Eternal (Clare's Point) | 
enlarge | Author: V.k. Forrest Publisher: Kensington Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $4.55 You Save: $10.45 (70%)
New (29) Used (19) from $3.44
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 134113
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0758217161 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780758217165 ASIN: 0758217161
Publication Date: December 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Centuries ago, the shipwrecked vampire clan known as the Kahills came ashore on the sleepy Delaware peninsula of Clare's Point. In Eternal, V.K. Forrest introduces readers to the ravishing, undead Fia Kahill, an FBI agent, who's in danger from a vampire slayer--and the one man she must resist but can't... Eternal FBI agent Fia Kahill has just learned her cousin Bobby McCathal is dead. His body is found burned, and his head and hands are missing--the unmistakable calling card of a vampire slayer. When more vampires' corpses surface, Fia knows it's only a matter of time before the killer catches up to her. But that's not her only worry. She's been assigned to work with FBI agent Glen Duncan who is the spitting image of Ian, the man she once loved--and the man who betrayed her... Four hundred years ago, Ian used his relationship with Fia to infiltrate the clan and kill as many of them as he could. Fia promised herself she would never make the mistake of loving a human again. With the murders in Clare Point escalating, Fia has no choice but to trust Glen even as her promise is becoming more difficult to keep. Fia wants Glen like no other man she's ever desired--and before she knows what's happening, she is deeply immersed in a forbidden love affair. But this time the consequences could be far graver than Fia ever could have imagined. For a killer has her in his sights as his next deadly victim...
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| Customer Reviews:
nice to twist to vampires September 15, 2008 I really liked this book. It offers a different view of the vampire world. I do have some unanswered questions and hope they will be addressed in the books to come. The other reveiws were pretty dead on so I won't go into what they have already covered. I have read a lot of vampire story lines and I found this one refreshing. I was able to connect better to the characters rather than the same ole' vampires only come out at night and are vicious killers underneath it all. All in all I will say it was well worth the 50 cents I paid for it at a yard sale!
Good Read-Different Take on Vampires September 12, 2008 I liked this book and will get the next ones. The other reviews were correct in that some of the others in the book, like Joseph seemed to have large importance to Fia, but we never could figure out why. So maybe in the next book the questions will be answered. I really liked the way that the relationship between Fia and Glen progressed instead of the normal - wow over night and we are in love and having mad monkey sex.
I enjoyed this book, a Different take on Vampires April 20, 2008 I liked this book and will read the next one in the series. Fia is a FBI agent and also a Vampire, she's been assigned to work with FBI agent Glen Duncan, who happens to look like the man Fia once loved, and the man who betrayed her. Fia returns to her hometown when she learns that her cousin Bobby has been killed, by what appears to be the calling card of a vampire slayer, but of course Glen doesn't believe in Vampires.
The Vampires in this book all eat food, and Fia's Mother, bakes Muffins and owns a Bed and Breakfast, they also drink ale, Fia gets together with some girlfriends, at the beach and they have Martini's.
At the end of the book we find out who the killer is, but questions still remain, to be answered, so I will be on the look out for the next book.
Nice Start to a New Series January 26, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I liked this book. It had a slightly different slant to vampires and how they lived and died. I liked how the romance between the two FBI agents progressed and am hoping to hear more of them in the following books. I felt that Fia was able to come to a resolution about the past relationships in her life and move forward. The ending was a surprise, I hadn't expected the killer to be who it was so that was a nice twist.
Vampire FBI Agent nearly loses her head December 7, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is the first in a series based on a community of vampires who live at Clare Point, Delaware, trying to keep their existence secret from humans having fled vampire hunters in Europe four hundred years before. The Kahill clan, the inhabitants of the village, carry out their own kind of justice on various criminals but we don't learn very much about that. The main hook of the story is FBI agent Fia Kahill who is investigating one murder in Philadelphia when she's called to investigate a beheading in her home town of Clare Point.
When Fia arrives at Clare Point she discovers another FBI Agent from the Baltimore office is also assigned to the case. Initially suspicious of Agent Glen Duncan as he resembles her former evil lover, Ian Duncan, she soon finds that Glen is rather different. However, with another old lover, Joseph, causing her problems and more of the Clare Point vampires being separated from their heads Fia doesn't know what to do and how to solve the crime in her village.
The pacing was a little off with the story dragging through quite a large proportion of this book. The explanation of the vampire world was drip-fed to the reader which made it more interesting but also left me with quite a few questions as to how their lifecycles actually worked. The heroine, Fia, wasn't a particularly sympathetic character whose interactions with other people were usually cold and uninformative. I wasn't entirely sure how she had got her job with the FBI as she didn't seem particularly skilled or diligent in the work.
There were several plot threads in the story that weren't completed or were otherwise unsatisfactory. The past relationship with Joseph seemed to be looming large but then all that suddenly subsided; the relationship with Glen was never fully realised and the final scene where the vampire killer is confronted all seemed rather quick and easy. There were several side characters, such as Arlen, about whom there is presumably more to learn - I imagine these characters will be explored more in future books but it left this book feeling rather unfinished and disappointing.
The writing style was good, apart from the pacing issues, and the description of the strange town of Clare Point with its unusual inhabitants, and how they seemed to Glen, was well realised. However the overall story was rather a disappointment because the murder plot didn't feel central enough, nor did the romance, and the reader was left with rather a lot of filler text.
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