The Vampire Shrink
by:
Lynda Hilburn (author)
Kismet Knight, PhD, doesn't believe in the paranormal. She especially doesn't believe in vampires, but she begins to wise up when she is introduced to a handsome man named Devereux who claims to be 800 years old. Kismet doesn't buy his vampire story, but she also can't explain why she has such...
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Kismet Knight, PhD, doesn't believe in the paranormal. She especially doesn't believe in vampires, but she begins to wise up when she is introduced to a handsome man named Devereux who claims to be 800 years old. Kismet doesn't buy his vampire story, but she also can't explain why she has such odd reactions and feelings when he is near. Then a client almost completely drained of blood staggers into her waiting room and two angry men force their way into her office, causing her to consider the possibility that she has run afoul of a vampire underworld. Enter FBI profiler Alan Stevens, who warns her that vampires are very real, and one is a murderer—a murderer who is after her.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781933836232 (1933836237)
Publish date: October 1st 2007
Publisher: Medallion Press
Pages no: 392
Edition language: English
Series: Kismet Knight, Ph.D., Vampire Psychologist (#1)
I really liked this series (what I read of it). The story line was very original and creative. To the average person I think the psychologist part may be viewed as a bit cheesy (and at times it was tolerably cheesy), but to someone (such as myself) who loves psychology it makes for an interesting tw...
Opening Line: "My involvement with vampires began innocently enough." Dr. Kismit Knight is a respected Denver Psychologist who doesn't believe in the paranormal. She especially doesn't believe in Vampires. Kismit's character has been written like a real person, not your average romance heroine, s...
Check out my full review here (:
Up to the point where she was involved in a ceremony where nothing was explained and everybody just kept going "later" to her I liked this story. However, this was a sticking point for me. It's a lazy cliche being used in too many books to bind the heroine to the supernatural creature without actu...