Product Details
Sunshine

Sunshine
By Robin McKinley

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Product Description

No human has ever allied with a vampire. But when Sunshine is kidnapped by vampires in a treacherous manoeuvre against one of their own, she knows she will not live to see another morning. But she does, and if a vampire saves her life, doesn't she owe him the same favour?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #651552 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 400 pages

Editorial Reviews

NEIL GAIMAN
'Astonishing...a perfect work of magical literature'

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
'Buffyesque baker Rae 'Sunshine' Seddon meets Count Dracula's hunky Byronic cousin in Newbery Award winner McKinley's first adult-and-then-some romp'

TIME OUT
'This is a book about growing up and making peace with the world around you, and it is excellent'


Customer Reviews

Very good!5
Rae Seddon, nicknamed 'Sunshine' is as normal a girl as you'll ever see. She works at her stepfather's coffee shop making cinnamon rolls; she has her own house, a nice old landlady, a boyfriend named Mel and a very annoying mother. Seems like your typical twenty-something woman, right? Wrong. After a particularly tiring day, Rae, wanting to escape from her life a bit, drives over to 'the lake'. There, she is captured by a band of vampires and offered as food to yet another one... the mysterious Constantine, who, as she soon discovers is also a prisoner. Fearing for her life, Sunshine discovers a whole new side of herself. With that she makes a strange friend, and attracts the wrath of the evil master vampire, `Bo', who sent his goons out to capture her. She has to fight him, with the uneasy help of Constantine, if she is ever to regain her old life back.

I have mixed feelings about this one. I know a good piece of literature when I see it. And "Sunshine" is superb, a truly well written book, a masterpiece of its genre. Ms McKinley idealized a world and described it with such vivid detail we can actually imagine ourselves living in it. Sunshine is a believable character. Even Constantine, as different as he might be from most of the vampires that appear in fiction today, is believable. This book also has an amazing character development, not to mention a story that while not original in its essence, is told in a very peculiar and interesting manner.

That said, I couldn't get into it as well as I would like. It took me almost a week to finish it. I'd say the first part (the book is divided in four) is not very appealing; this is probably the book's only weakness, as the first chapters are very important; if these chapters fail to capture the reader's attention, he or she might never pick up the book again. I thought the first part of this book, up until the scene of the lake very boring and too descriptive. Don't get me wrong; when the action takes place in a parallel world, you have to do some description... just try not to spend too much time on cinnamon rolls. Still, after those first few boring pages the book was fantastic. A little too descriptive at times, but fantastic nonetheless. I can agree wholeheartedly with the praise on the cover that says that "Sunshine" is 'Pretty much perfect'. A worthy read, fundamental for lovers of contemporary fantasy.

The first McKinley book I read5
...and it made me look for more of her books. (I was SO disappointed to find that most of them were in the children's section -- until I started reading them.) As I'm interested in vampire literature, I actually took a risk and bought Sunshine instead of trying the library first: no regrets on the uncharacteristic extravagance. It doesn't follow the usual traits of the genre in lacking the pseudo-Victorian melodrama, the almost overblown and harrowing sense of angst (one often feels that the authors were writing their works by candlelight dressed all in Gothic black) that the main characters undergo, and the (excessive) focus on the erotic thrill of involvement with The Undead, etc. Instead the book is redolent of baking and... well, sunshine. It is not without violence -- after all, it is a book which involves vampires and other creatures -- but it doesn't glory in the blood and guts. And it doesn't rely on them, which is an achievement in this sort of book. I don't even consider it an extravagance anymore because I will read it again and again, keep it in my collection of books, jealously guard it against dilatory borrowers, and buy a new copy when it falls apart. I'm half-hoping that McKinley will write more about Rae or Con, but I'm almost afraid that it might be too much of a good thing.

Brilliant Sunshine!!4
What a wonderful book, but if you think it's going to be like Buffy, you may be disappointed!

Robin McKinley creates a totally believable world where magic users and vampires exist along with cars and motorbikes. Her heroine (nicknamed Sunshine) strikes an unlikely alliance with an ostensibly evil vampire named Constantine, as together they must defeat the vampire enemy they have in common - he who is responsible for their alliance in the first place. As a result, her magical family heritage is brought to the fore and she must deal with this as well as her battle against the foe!

This book begs for a sequel. Why is Constantine not the evil being he should be - or is he? Are he and Sunshine falling in love? What is Sunshine's human lover, Mel? How does Constantine exist in way that is different from other vampires? Much as I loved the book (couldn't put it down) I was left totally unsatisfied, wanting the answers to these - and other - important questions. I hope that there will soon be a follow-up for me to devour!

Buffy and Angel have got nothing on these two, believe me!