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Hardcover The Society of S Book

ISBN: 1416534571

ISBN13: 9781416534570

The Society of S

(Book #1 in the Ethical Vampire Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

"If you ever want to hide from the world, live in a small city, where everyone seems anonymous." That's the advice of twelve-year-old Ariella Montero, who lives with her father in Saratoga Springs,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I loved this book! It sandblasts away Vampire cliches.

I love this book! Above all, this is the novel of a young person discovering the world for the first time, and I enjoyed discovering it with her. Don't go into this vampire novel expecting a lot of fangs. Hubbard comes at vampire themes from a different direction. Every teenage girl at some point must have felt like a monster, or that members of her family were. What if it were true? This novel is a contemporary search for personal identity. Ariella Montero is a post-modern teenager who comes to suspect that her father may be a vampire;-but if he is, what does that make her? Like any contemporary teenager, she turns to the internet for answers, which of course open up new questions. Ari's relationship with her father is at the heart of the first part of this novel, and it's a relationship that has been imagined fully and uniquely so we get the sense of sitting in someone else's living room. How would a reclusive, scientist single father homeschool his daughter? And explain the "facts of life" to her? For anyone who likes books, it is fun to listen in on Ariella and her father discussing the greats, as for instance Ariella goes from dismissing Poe to seeing depth in his writing, and then coming to believe that he himself may have been a Vampire. After that, Hubbard sends her young protagonist south in search of her mother, who seems to have been the free spirit her father is not. On the road, Ari encounters some tough lessons about the people one meets out there, but slowly approaches the truth about herself and her parents. Ari barely begins to glimpse the mostly hidden world of vampires before the novel ends, and the reader gets the sense that Hubbard has revealed only the tip of the iceburg. The title turns out to refer to one particular group of Vampires, but the narrative suggests that there are many others, each with their own proper moral and ethical codes for dealing with humans and other blood suckers. How well organized are these groups? What really do they do? These questions are only hinted at. There is a lot of territory available a follow up, and maybe two or three after that. The father-daughter relationship suggests comparison to Elizabeth Kostova's The Historian, and readers who enjoyed that novel will find plenty to enjoy in this one, but they are very different types of works. I came away from each chapter of Kostova's compelling novel thinking, "This writer had a really good liberal arts education!" whereas I came away from each chapter of S thinking about Ariella. The novels it reminded me of more were Octavia Butler's last novel, Fledgling, and Charlaine Harris's first Stookie Stackhouse novel, Dead until Dark. Readers who enjoyed either of those books should seek out Society of S, and vice versa. The book begins with a charming introduction which intrigued me the first time through, but which I appreciated even more when I reread it immediately after finishing the novel. As a whole, Susan Hu

An excellent coming of age with a vamp twist

Ariella Montero thinks she's just like any other 13 year old. She is home schooled, vegetarian, limited contact with outsiders, and her main learning about life comes from her father Raphael, and his assistant Dennis. They have a housekeeper who comes in to cook - she's not that great, but she sees that Ariella needs some contact with kids around her own age. She takes Ariella to her house and she finds there is another world out there - she makes friends and brings into her life questions about her own home life - she finds her father is a vampire - and her mother, who left just after giving birth to Ariella was a mortal. Ariella may well be a vampire or a mortal - that has not been determined. Ariella leaves home in search of her mother, to find out why she left and to find answers of what Ariella is part of. Hubbard shows us the lives of modern day vampires - while a good bite on the neck is good, the more civilized way of sustaining life is through breakthrough technology of supplements and tonics. They can eat, walk in the light (with sunscreen), and integrate themselves in the mainstream of life. There are radicals and there are folks like The Society of S, where vampires can, without conflict, be themselves and not be the subject of fear from humans. Very heady information for a 13 year old girl discovering herself and her identity. It is a well written book that weaves you through lives of primarily Ariella, but through her family, friends, and 'wannabe vampires' role playing not knowing what that reality really is. Will be interesting if a sequel is written where it takes Ariella and her family. A good read.

A captivating, well told novel

I found this book to have rich character development and enough mystery in it to keep me turning the pages. I couldn't put it down. The book puts a new spin on the usual vampire stories. The tale is delicately told about young Ari and how she comes of age realizing that she's not like other adolescents. She lives with her father. Her mother disappeared at Ari's birth. The answers to how this happened unfold in the book when Ari sets out on a quest to find her mother. Susan Hubbard has done a wonderful job in creating compelling characters. I look forward to the sequel and hopefully the movie!

A Delightful Read

Susan Hubbard's "Society of S" seamlessly combines the impeccable intellect of a free thinker with the passionate curiosity of a child and gives rise to Ariella Montero--a sheltered, but brilliant girl, home-schooled by her proper, reclusive scientist father, desperate to know about the mother who left after her birth. The voice of this 13-year-old captivated me immediately and I was soon shuddering at the sight of mutilated ghosts and laughing at the painfully old-fashioned aunt, while turning page after page to get to the bottom of her father's secret and her mother's disappearance. The freshness of Hubbard's language and the beauty of her descriptions lends Ariella's journey a poetic quality, yet the universal nature of her search for answers and for a balance between breaking out of your shell and breaking to pieces makes (even the supernatural aspects of) this novel tangibly real and believable. This is an enchanting, memorable read, filled with secrets and scents, troubles and tastes, that just might make you want to go eat honey or oysters, and just might make you raise your glass in the company of your loved ones and say "So let us rejoice/While we are young"--regardless of your age.

Wonderful. Do NOT miss this read!

Susan Hubbard is already an award-winning short story writer, but the Society of S is my first encounter with her work. It won't be my last, though. I absolutely love this book. Ariella Montero is an atypical 13 YO girl who desperately wants to find the secret behind her mother's disappearance immediately after her birth. Ariella is homeschooled by her impossibly handsome and equally mysterious father, who works as a scientist in the basement when he isn't schooling his daughter in literature, history, science and philosophy. When dad isn't teaching or experimenting, he sits quietly and peacefully in his conservatory reading Edgar Allan Poe and drinking Picardo. Susan Hubbard has created a completely believable and empathetic cast of characters, characters that I hope to see much more of in the future. For anyone who loves literary mystery, vampire tales, inventive writing and a great story, this book is an absolute must read. Hubbard's experience as a short story writer has taught her how to pace her novel. Having suffered through a few over-rated and long-winded reads this year only to finish them feeling cheated, I can say for certain that there is a great deal to be said for a writer who knows how to set up a story and actually deliver the goods throughout the book at certain points. You will not be disappointed in the time it takes to polish off this atmospheric 300-page wonder. A good story that is well told, well paced, exciting, interesting...I can't say enough good things about this book. Don't miss the Society of S.
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