![]() De La Cruz centers the first novel around six high school kids, all who have connections to the New York Blood Bank Committee. There are vampires there are angels and demons there are super rich teen kids attending prep schools and there is romance. I wasn’t entirely wrong that it is somewhat like Gossip Girl meets True Blood. There are a ton of spoilers below so don’t continue reading if plan to read the Blue Bloods series on your own. I’m sort of surprised that I haven’t heard of her previous to this point, but hey, you can’t catch them all. She’s also published other literatures that seem very much in the vein of Chiclit. Besides The Blue Bloods series, she also has a series entitled Au Pairs and another called The Ashleys. What I discovered was that she has been astonishingly productive, publishing dozens and dozens of books over the last decades. ![]() In this review (in order of the Blue Bloods Series): Blue Bloods (2007) Masquerade (2008) Revelations (2009) The Van Alen legacy (2009) Misguided Angel (2010) Lost in Time (2011)Ĭompanion Books: Keys to the Repository (2010) and Bloody Valentine (2010).Īfter finishing off The Witches of East End, I did a little research on De La Cruz’s longer publication history. ![]() Asian American Writers' Spotlight: Melissa de la Cruz (Blue Bloods Series)Ī Review of Melissa De La Cruz’s Blue Bloods Series (all by Hyperion) ![]()
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