Map of Blue Book Balloon

22 October 2024

#Review - The Vengeance by Emma Newman

The Vengeance (The Vampires of Dumas, 1)
Emma Newman
Solaris, 8 May 2025
Available as: PB, 386pp, e   
Source: Advance e-copy
ISBN(PB): 9781837861644

I'm grateful to the publisher for giving me access to an advance e-copy of The Vengeance to consider for review.

While I feel I'm reviewing this way ahead of its release date next Spring, I'm so excited to see something new from Emma Newman and I want to shout about it. I expect this to be a highlight of 2025's reading for many!

The Vengeance is a really enjoyable adventure romp, taking us the Caribbean and to 18th century France and throwing vampires and werewolves into the mix. The story follows Morgane, a young woman who's grown up at sea as a pirate, believing herself to be the daughter of Anne Marie, fearsome captain of the Vengeance. Anne Marie has a particular hatred for the French "Four Chains Trading Company", whose vessels she hunts down without mercy. One day, this vendetta will that lead Morgane to surprising knowledge, and to danger and a quest for revenge.

Basically a "fish out of water" story as Morgane is forced to travel to France to discover who she really is, The Vengeance is at its very best showing the young pirate absorbing the ways of the land, discovering love, and trying to learn about her own origins. Her determination and courage are never in doubt, though her wisdom and self-restraint may be, as she stirs up enemies she never dreamed of. (You know, don't you, that when Anne Marie warns Morgane never to try and find her family, that the warning will be ignored, and that there will be Consequences?) 

By telling a story from an outsider's viewpoint, Newman is able to show up many injustices and wrongs in her imagined (but not so far from history) version of France, and the complacency and resignation of those involved. It's not only wrongs and tyrannies we will be familiar with from history, but a whole layer of the supernatural too. This sets up formidable obstacles for Morgane, but they don't overshadow the story, rather at its centre is a complex and tender portrayal of someone who is still a very young protagonist and who has to find her way as an adult in the world. That theme is given room to breathe, with due space too to a comedic subplot where Morgane, as a notorious pirate, thinks herself much more adult, much more experienced and much more capable than she really is. 

Witnessing this sea dog offered the services of a governess when her father eventually catches up with her is hilarious, but Newman doesn't only play it for laughs, the relationship with Lisette will be important to Morgane in future.

(Indeed it will I think be a strained relationship in some ways - Morgane, as a pirate born and bred, is clearly relaxed with the idea of a life driven by theft and murder. While this is something Newman perhaps chooses not to emphasise, Lisette is alive to it and will not, I think, tolerate it for long. I expect sparks to fly...)

Introducing and setting up many threads that will I'm sure be important in future stories, The Vengeance is a fun read with the sense of moral and psychological complexity I always expect from this author.

For more information about The Vengeance, see the publisher's website here.

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