Phantoms by Michael Leon and Chrissie Anthony

Phantoms by Michael Leon and Chrissie Anthony
Publisher: Self
Genre: Paranormal, Contemporary
Length: Full (370 pgs)
Heat: Spicy
Rated: 4
Review by Rose

Can you? 4.Money burning You know when to raise eyebrows if a product description tells a story of how they added gold and some rare herb that is worth thousands of pounds. order viagra on line Therefore, you are advised to control stress through intake of herbal pills like NF Cure viagra pills in india capsules. Not only purchase cheap levitra seanamic.com, other drugs in the market like levitra has their ads and promotion as well. Right now, Lyriana is considered to be the cheap viagra no prescription. Phantoms is an adult fiction that tells the story of Erik Destler, a latter day Phantom of the Opera. Erik sets out to take over and rule the Palais Garnier with La Divina – Carlotta Caccini, as his queen, but at each turn, is seemingly thwarted by his nemesis – the original Phantom of the Opera, now the Opera Ghost. Phantoms is set in that same famous Paris opera house, amidst the staging of Guiseppi Verdi’s opera, Macbeth, one hundred years on from the first appearance of Le Fantôme de l’Opéra in 1910.

I was excited to be able to read this – I love the original Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux (and, of course, the musical). There are definite parallels between this contemporary version and the original. We have a young singer, Christine, who has to stand in for the star, Carlotta (who, although not ill, is so much of a diva that she refuses to come to rehearsal so she can rest her voice for the opening night). We also have Raoul who has loved Christine all her life (in the modern day version, she is in love with Raoul’s brother, who is missing). Erik is still the “phantom” but this Erik is not scarred physically. He is, however, very scarred mentally due to torture that the reader finds out about during flashbacks he experiences.

There were several minor editing issues that occasionally took me out of the story, but that probably wouldn’t bother most people. I also never really understood Erik’s motivation in wanting to take over the Opera House – but then again, he was disturbed. However, even with that, the storyline itself was so compelling I was drawn right back into the story.
The characters were well-drawn and I found myself invested in them—wanting to discover what would happen next. Of the supporting characters, one of my favorite was Madame Giraud, the psychic concierge of the theatre, who (like her counterpart Madame Giry) hears the actual Phantom.

There is a lot of action going on and some beautiful descriptions of the opera house. It was fun reading through the book and seeing the parallels between it and the original. All in all, a good addition to the Phantom genre.

Comments

  1. Thanks for hosting!

    • Thank you for hosting this stop today, Long and Short Reviews. Thanks also for the review and thanks too, Goddess Fish. Wishing everyone good luck in the giveaway and looking forward to your comments and questions.

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Trackbacks

  1. […] pastiche-canon. It’s a sequel to the author’s previous work Phantom (see our review here, but can easily be read as a standalone. However, the reader will do herself a disservice if she […]

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