Black Dawn is the 8th book in the Night World series by L. J. Smith. The story starts when protagonist Maggie Neely is awakened at 2.11 am by her mother’s hysterics and finds out that her brother Miles was presumed dead in a hiking trip. Maggie finds Sylvia’s (Mile’s girlfriend) story suspicious and decides to follow her, still in her pajamas and mismatched red and blue socks. Of course, her investigation into her brother’s whereabouts lands her in trouble and she ends up in a slave wagon courtesy of Sylvia’s witchy incenses. The slave wagon, with a whole load of kidnapped girls, is en route to a hidden kingdom in the Night World, where the young vampire prince Delos Redfern just so happens to be her soulmate and a Wild Power. Maggie has to deal with cold Delos who seems so different from the kind version in her dreams, help out her fellow slaves, where among her companions is the most valuable Aradia, the Maiden of the Witches, and look for her brother in the meantime. Not to mention baddie Hunter Redfern’s evil plans for his great grandson’s Wild Power.
Slave trade, shapeshifter, witch and vampire trouble, as well as a most cracktastic savior prophecy based on Maggie’s mismatched socks make this a most entertaining read. This one isn’t exactly urban fantasy, since besides the first chapter, everything else that happens once Maggie has been kidnapped by the slave traders is pretty much medieval. I mean, riding horses and falconing? Chamberpots! Most of the action happens in the hidden kingdom, hence the medievalness. Delos is the typcial vampire prince character, cold on outside and soft on the inside (he kind of sounds like ice cream). While the slave abuse and torture is a little clichéd, Maggie’s spunk and compassion comes clearly through and has readers rooting for her throughout the journey. The ending is L. J. Smith’s usual fluff and Maggie does find her brother eventually, with a nice twist at the end. Black Dawn is one of the better books in the Night World series and definitely recommended reading.
See also: Secret Vampire, Daughters of Darkness, Enchantress/Spellbinder, Dark Angel, Soulmate, The Chosen, Huntress, Witchlight
Plot/originality: 4/5
Characters: 4/5
Writing style: 3.5/5
Total score: 11.5/15








