Review: The vampire series by Lorie Herter is notable for Phantom fans for its inclusion of one of the most blatant Michael Crawford characters in Phantom lit. "Matthew" appears in POSSESSION and is involved in the story up to the final chapter in ETERNITY. All four books work from the same plot, begun in OBSESSION: David, a vampire and a modern-day playwright, meets sweet and pure Veronica. He initiates her (a blood bond, for those of you not up on your vampire vocabularly), but they soon discover that the intense nocturnal relationship is causing problems with Veronica's daylight life. So, David sends Veronica away for 10 years, to grow up and rethink her immediate decision for him to make her a vampire, too. In POSSESSION, David attempts to deal with his self-imposed misery, while his vampire friend, the dazzling Darienne, grows interested in the lead actor of David's very Phantomy musical, one Matthew McDowall. While David's relationship with Veronica moves closer to happiness in CONFESSION and ETERNITY, Darienne's relationship with Matthew in these books rides storm after storm.
I found myself liking these books against my will. The vampires, David and Darienne, grow on you, although the sickeningly sweet Veronica and all the hordes of women falling over themselves to be David's love slaves irritated me. The Michael character was undeniable and Herter mercifully does not hide him from the reader for long. But my enjoyment of these elements of the books did not keep me from being severely bothered with other aspects of the quartet. To begin with, the sex was just annoying. Every other page, the characters fell on each other in detail so graphic that I was simply bored. Herter also falls into the trap of equating great sex with great love; ultimately, she even argues that great sex is something to give up a hope of heaven for. Somehow, even though these books were admittedly not written for deep reading, that idea did not find a sympathetic note in me. The ease with which the mortals decided to engage in vampiric relations disturbed me; I would think it would take me more than a few minutes to decide that drinking blood for eternity is my thing! But most of all, the piggishness Herter unfortunately attributes to her Michael Crawford character made me burn. "Matthew" and Darienne engage in a "just sex, no strings" relationship for several years, and after that time, Matthew still doesn't *get* that maybe the girl is hanging around for something other than the sex! He then gets mad when, after years of being his mistress, this woman dares to express another kind of affection to him. Since my interest in these books was mainly the Matthew character, Herter's mistreatment of Matthew did the most severe injury to my enjoyment of the books.