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Horror. Young Adult Fiction. HTML: A mesmerizing blend of Gothic thriller and modern coming-of-age novel, The Night Wanderer is unlike any other vampire story. Nothing ever happens on the Otter Lake reservation. But when 16-year-old Tiffany discovers her father is renting out her room, she's deeply upset. Sure, their guest is polite and keeps to himself, but he's also a little creepy. Little do Tiffany, her father, or even her astute Granny Ruth suspect the truth. The mysterious Pierre L'Errant is actually a vampire, returning to his tribal home after centuries spent in Europe. But Tiffany has other things on her mind: her new boyfriend is acting weird, disputes with her father are escalating, and her estranged mother is starting a new life with somebody else. Fed up and heartsick, Tiffany threatens drastic measures and flees into the bush. There, in the midnight woods, a chilling encounter with L'Errant changes everything . . . for both of them..… (more)
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Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Night Wanderer is billed as a native Gothic novel and as such held great intrigue for me. I could not wait to get my hands on it when it finally showed its face on the library shelf. Although it was a fast read, it was not an altogether satisfactory one. For one, the characters are never fully developed. I would have liked Pierre to take up more of the story. As a young Ashinabe man who ended up in Europe in the 1600s, his story has the potential to be way more interesting than the self centered musings of a melodramatic sixteen year old girl. Yet Taylor decides to focus most of the story on Tiffany, who, I am sad to say, does not stand up too well to the scrutiny. While Pierre remains in the background, with only scraps of his story thrown occasionally to the reader, Tiffany’s mundane life is given front stage.
Now I am a little conflicted about this, because Tiffany is a typical teenager and Taylor portrays her accurately. She thinks the world revolves around her but is not satisfied with the way it does it. The problem is, she’s boring. She just keeps on whining about everything and not doing anything to help herself. Even in the last scene when Pierre pretty much reveals himself to her, she’s too slow on the uptake to know what is happening. Instead of focussing on the interesting life of a 400 year old Ashinabe vampire, we end up hearing about Tiffany who hasn’t gone anywhere, is reluctant to learn anything and stuffs all her hopes for the future in a boy. It’s like the ‘gothic’ part of the novel was just an afterthought.
Still, there’s some interesting bits to it, although I dearly wish Taylor would have fleshed them out a little. The character of Granny Ruth, Tiffany’s grandmother, could have had more airtime, and the conclusion is begging for a better understanding and knowledge of Pierre’s life. To put it in a nutshell : more Pierre and less Tiffany, please.
I thought this was an interesting read and it's not something I usually pick up. This was the first book I've read where the paranormal guy in the book was actually creepy (I suppose The Historian may count too but since I basically just skimmed most of that book, including the
I really liked reading about the Native mythology. I wish the author had included more of that. He only described a couple of myths very briefly. It was the first time I ever read about the legend of the wendigo. I had heard about it before on an episode of Supernatural (awesome show!) but I hadn't come across anything about wendigos since. It's really not that common of a myth, which is a shame because I think the story's really interesting.
One problem that I had with the book, though, is the fact that Drew Hayden Taylor does not know how to write about teenage girls. Tiffany came across as so cliche that she never seemed real to me. Also, Taylor would have a character think something and then say the exact same thing out loud, which was unnecessarily repetitive. This happened a few times and it got a little annoying.
During the days we
(spoilers)
I was frustrated by Tiffany - not by her behaviour, which I thought was pretty realistic, but that she didn't clue in much earlier that Tony was using her. And then she didn't realise that Pierre was telling her the truth about his life, not just a story. Argh!
I was disappointed in Pierre, his need to fast for the ritual made him entirely toothless, and created this weird contrast - in Europe he was a remorseless vampire, regretting only the first girl he killed, and in Canada he seemed a gummy elder playing jokes to teach kids a lesson. While much was made of his need to exert tremendous control to not bite any human near him, it just didn't ring true.
But there were a few moments that were genuinely creepy, especially the scene with Trish in the park, and the two boys at the baseball diamond. And I enjoyed Granny Ruth, a woman not only caught between two worlds, the Anishinabe and the western tradition, but also between her son and her granddaughter. I would have loved to see Pierre come clean to this woman, and see what she thought of him.
I'd give this book to fans of teen vampire novels, people looking for stories of reserve life, and to romance fans who are cranky after a breakup.
Vampires are still all the rage, and this book has enough in common with Twilight to recommend it to fans. The book does offer a unique take with a Native American vampire.
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The more I thought about this book, the more I liked it. At its heart, it is about home and family. Tiffany struggles with this, as she is constantly battling with her father over pretty much anything, though especially about her boyfriend Tony. There are a lot of underlying issues with this, as Tiffany's mother left her father, Keith, for a white man about a year earlier. Keith is still trying to recover, and unfortunately he isn't getting very far. He doesn't know how to handle his daughter, so he lets out his anger and pain on her—and she returns it full force. Stuck in the middle of this is Granny Ruth, Keith's mother. She's feisty, but is trying to deal with all of this pain and anger and not-talking-about-the-real-issue on her own, until Pierre enters the picture.
Pierre is a character we can sympathize with, though we're not sure we can trust him. His motives aren't clear until the very end. But what is clear is his attachment to his homeland, the place where he was born centuries before, when he made the decision to leave it and everything he knew for adventure and the unknown. He is not the tortured vampire struggling with what he is at his very essence, though there are hints that he has thought about it. He knows what he is and accepts it, which is truly a nice change from the brooding bad-boy vampire so popular in today's teen fiction.
Taylor works Anishinabe (more commonly known as Ojibwa) culture and language into Pierre's and Tiffany's intersecting stories—both in the modern and more ancient culture and teen experiences. Tiffany is trying to sort out what it means to be a part of her native community, often trying to escape it, though sometimes feeling guilty for not knowing more than she does (for example, she can't speak the language, like her grandmother). Usually I am hesitant to read fiction about certain cultures, especially Native American ones, for fear of misrepresentation of the people and the history. But because Taylor is Ojibwa himself, I trusted his descriptions and allowed myself to enjoy the story, knowing it is authentic. He also manages to include an interracial relationship and its resulting difficulties, such as racism and Tiffany's discomfort at being the only Native teen in a group of white ones.
Another thing I loved are the sometimes surprising little dashes of humor Taylor throws into his prose every so often. I found myself sporting a quick grin at many little details he includes, like this sentence in the middle of a suspenseful scene: "From deep in the bush, a hunter older than James, his house, and the mayonnaise at the back of his refrigerator all put together watched him closely" (79). But despite this comic relief, there are a few chapter that got my heart pounding—many strange and unnatural things are seen on the Otter Lake Reservation after Pierre arrives.
My only complaints lie with the characterization of Tiffany. For a while I felt like she was too flat of a character—I wasn't really getting where she was coming from, and she just seemed a bit off through the beginning. It took me a while to get into the book because it was mostly about Tiffany at first. However, once Taylor started writing about Pierre and other characters, I could see his talent better. I found out afterward that this was originally written as a play, and I thought that might have had something to do with it.
These days, everyone is sick of vampires and their sparkles and forbidden love interests in virginal white girls. But with his fresh interpretation and the addition of family drama and the importance of home, Taylor has given us a reason to enjoy vampire novels again.