Youngblood by Sasha Laurens

cover image

Kat Finn is struggling, hiding her vampire life from her friends, paying the high price of Hema, the blood substitute that vampires live on after the Peril caused feeding off humans to be deadly, when she wins a fully paid scholarship and everything she needs paid for by an anonymous benefactor, allowing her to go to the exclusive vampire only high school Harcote. It's her dream, it will set her up for life (seeing as a Youngblood she'll have a very long one), then she gets tricked into a room swap - putting her with her ex-best friend, who betrayed her years ago.

Taylor Sanger has very little to care about, she's the school's out-and-proud lesbian who seems to be the 'tester' for many girls, but they never come back for anything serious, money is no issue at home and she doesn't care what the rest of the school thinks about her, though she is not looking forward to her allocated roommate for the year - until she walks into her room and sees Kath-er-ine Finn, her ex-best friend who suddenly vanished years ago.

Add all this together along with a death on campus, Youngbloods acting badly and a conspiracy underpinning all of Vampiredom, and Kat and Taylor may have to set their differences aside and join together to investigate what is going on at Harcote, and what is potentially happening between them...

Laurens brings new life to an age old fascination with vampires - by creating vampires who give birth to children who grow up the same as mortal children, but sometime after a pandemic essentially, so feeding off humans wasn't an option. In this version, vampires survive by drinking Hema, and humans might have a disease that kills the vampire or might not - why risk it. As with all good stories, there are traditionalist vs modernist - those that want the old ways to continue and those that want the new way to prevail. There are villains and heroes. There are bullies and victims. It's a high school. There are insecurities, learning, teachers, cliques and all the things you would expect (including instagram), but it's all done really well. Told in dual perspective, swapping between Kat and Taylor, the story is well rounded and evenly paced. Perfect for fans of vampires and fans of similar books such as Six Times We Almost Kissed (And One Time We Did) by Tess Sharpe.

Themes: YA; Romance, LGBTQIA+, High school, Lesbian, Vampires, Enemies, Relationships, Friends, Secrets, Conspiracy.

Melanie Pages