Book Review

Happy Hour at Casa Dracula, by Marta Acosta

C+

Title: Happy Hour at Casa Dracula
Author: Marta Acosta
Publication Info: Simon & Schuster 2006
ISBN: 1416520384
Genre: Chick Lit

If I had to label this book, I would not list “romance” first. It’s certainly one of those books that doesn’t fit neatly into one specific genre. The heroine, Milagro de los Santos, is Latina, and her character is certainly shaped by that fact, so does that make this a Chica Lit book? It’s a vampire story with a romance element that runs through it, but it’s also not just about the heroine’s development as a character or the romance she finds. Is it a paranormal? There’s some damn funny scenes, but it’s not entirely comedic. So since I’m half a queen of this website, I’m going to say this is a vampire fable, and it’s a good one at that.

Milagro de los Santos (which translates to “miracle of the saints,” which is quite a name for a protagonist) is one friendship apart from a marvelous life. She has a prestigious degree in literature from a very prominent university, and she’s friends with exceptionally wealthy, clever, and loyal people, but she herself lives in a crapful apartment with a significant rat problem. She’s been styled as a “reading consultant” by one of said friends, and advises wealthy individuals on their socially-important reading choices: quite a creative method of employment. As for her own writing, she’s been struggling with her art, and finds that it’s not satisfying herself or any potential publishers. But she keeps at it.

At the invitation of one of her clients, Milagro attends a book party for a former classmate and flame, Sebatian Beckett Witherspoon, who broke her heart and went on to pretentious literary success. She hated his book, but goes to the party anyway, and finds that he’s beyond furious to see her there, even though he was the one who dumped her for another girl who was more his social equal. Seems you can put the Latina in the Ivy League, but that doesn’t mean the other students won’t recognize the divide in culture and class. Milagro, because she has a backbone of steel from having grown up with a monstrous mother, seems to be aware of but largely immune to such snubs.

While at the party, she flirts with waiters, mingles a bit, and meets Oswaldo Krakatoa, with whom she has an incendiary attraction, and she follows him to his hotel room, where they make out in pre-booty-shaking fashion, which causes them to fall down, and somehow in the twister he ends up biting her. Then some funky crap begins.

Seems Milagro wakes up feeling sick as hell, and hides out at a friend’s house until she can get herself home. Then she’s kidnapped by Beckett Witherspoon, who turns out to be a member of a murderous and completely insane organization called CACA, but then rescued by a friendly waiter from the book party, who turns out to be Oswaldo’s brother.

She’s hidden away at Oswaldo’s family home so her recovery can be watched by the family, and where just about everything can be filed under “Is Not What It Seems.” First, the dude’s name is Oswald, but why he choses to tweak his identity, I couldn’t say. And why is she there? And are they actually vampires or just victims of a strange blood disorder, as they profess that they are? Then, there’s the crusty, cranky, bitchy matriarch of the family, Edna, who takes an instant dislike to Milagro. Does she belong with Oswald’s very wealthy and very elegant family? Should she leave? Should she stay? And is she now a vampire?

Obviously, I’m not giving all the answers, so if you’re looking for Miss Harriet, you know not to look here. A good number of the reviews published so far dwell on the point that this isn’t a romance; that’s fine, it’s not. It doesn’t have the structure of a romance and while there’s some great attraction between Oswald and Milagro, the challenges placed in their way serve to discredit his integrity and could easily make him seem like a disingenuous buttnoid if the reader expects noble, perfect hero.

Milagro, however, is a damn hell fascinating character. She speaks directly to the reader through asides and commentary within each situation, which was jarring at first, but then became one of the quirks of her character, like a Shakespeare character addressing the audience. Not every character does, so those that do are significant. At the beginning of the book, her manner of addressing the story and the reader can make her seem an unreliable narrator, but ultimately I recognized her written style as indicative of the fact that as a Latina trodding in the world of WASPS and the very flaky top of the upper crust, she herself did not feel entirely welcome in any situation she was in. Because she wasn’t sure if she was an observer or a participant, she steps back and forth into and out of the story.

By the end of the book, I found myself questioning whether Milagro did change, and if she grew or developed as an individual. She certainly changes, but then seems, on the surface, to change back. On one hand, she stops pushing herself to act on, and think, and write what she thinks will impress other people, and starts living solely to make herself happy. It’s as if, due to the dreadful childhood she experienced, she feels that all she deserves is to live on the fringes of security, happiness, and wealth, and that her near-bottom-dwelling apartment existence is all to which she should feel entitled. While it’s not said outright, Milagro learns to accept the possibility of her own acceptance.

Oswald, however, is a very curious hero, and his behavior is one reason you cannot read this novel expecting it to be a straight-up romance, neat with a twist. He’s not always honest, though he is charming and very self-assured, and, like Beckett Witherspoon, has a very difficult time avoiding his desire for Milagro. His redemption is questionable and his worthiness of Milagro is equally so, but at the same time, it’s difficult not to root for her happy ending with Oswald.

My problems with the story came from not being able to clearly discern what was real. Was the disease real, or was vampirism real? Was the villain real, or was it a puppet show with good looking, empty-headed people it’s front, believing that there was more support behind them than there actually was? What actually happened to Milagro’s health by the end of the book? The reason I want to call this story a fable, or perhaps an allegory, is that there seems to be a moral, or a metaphorical representation pointing to a larger subtext, but even with some serious time pondering the story, I can’t gain access to what it might be.

Further, while Acosta’s writing itself is crisp, funny, clever, and very, very sticky, in that you can’t very easily put the damn book down once you’ve started it, the story veers off the road a few times, leading me to question whether secondary characters are more important or less so than I thought, and adding to the sense of disorientation with the final and potentially greater implications of the ending. Something could be going on here, I’m not sure I get it, and I hate not getting it. Makes me feel stoopud.

Aside from the possibilities of subtext, and the questions surrounding the resolution to the story, Happy Hour at Casa Dracula is a marvelously fun book to read, and is published at just the right time. Expect to see it in a beachbag near you.

Comments are Closed

  1. azteclady says:

    [completely off topic, delete at will]

    Welcome back, SB Sarah!

  2. Laura V says:

    The reason I want to call this story a fable, or perhaps an allegory, is that there seems to be a moral, or a metaphorical representation pointing to a larger subtext, but even with some serious time pondering the story, I can’t gain access to what it might be.

    I’ve not read the book, but could the names be a key to this? ‘Milagro de los Santos’ sort of makes me think that there could be some magical realism. Or at least, something otherworldly/supernatural, and that would tie in with the question ‘are they actually vampires or just victims of a strange blood disorder, as they profess that they are?’, because some strange things happened in the magical realist novels I’ve read, and one isn’t sure there if what happens is due to natural causes or magic.

    And then there’s ‘Oswaldo Krakatoa, with whom she has an incendiary attraction’. His name’s pretty incendiary too, as Mount Krakatoa’s the name of a volcano. And could he have temporarily called himself ‘Oswaldo’, despite really being ‘Oswald’ because he wanted to make his name sound Latino, so that she’d feel more comfortable with him?

    There’s also the organisation ‘CACA’, which in Spanish is the word for ‘poo’.

    And could Beckett Witherspoon, with his ‘pretentious literary success’ have anything to do with Samuel Beckett? Anything that might be related to Waiting for Godot ?

    Like I said, I haven’t read the book, so all this is pure speculation based on word associations.

  3. SB Sarah says:

    Laura – you could certainly be on to something there. Magical realism and similar themes are definitely part of the story, particularly the mystery surrounding Milagro’s health at the end of the book.

  4. SB Sarah says:

    And thanks for the welcome azteclady – I missed a LOT while I was gone!!

  5. emdee says:

    I’m on board with the magical realism but the name Milagro(s) is fairly common for Latinas.

  6. Laura V says:

    Yes, of course. But she’s also got the surname ‘de los Santos’. Put the two together and it begins to look a lot more significant. And it is a novel, not real life, so there’s a possibility that the author’s chosen the names to fit the themes in the work.

    Like I said, I haven’t read the book, so I was only mentioning the associations that the names had for me.

  7. Marta Acosta says:

    :exclaim: First, let me say that Sarah is like a stern teacher that I adore.  My new goal in life is to earn a good grade from her.

    I think her review is spot on, and she catches the major points of my novel, Happy Hour at Casa Dracula.  I wanted the book to be a really fun and funny read, and I hope I’ve succeeded.

    Sarah is, as always, absolutely right in saying that my book is not a romance.  Her description, a vampire fable, is as good as any I’ve heard. 

    She is also right in describing Milagro, my heroine, as being a misfit in the world.  She’s on the outside looking in, desperately wanting a home and family she never had.  She is, as her name explains, a miracle of the saints:  her freakish immune system allows her to survive an otherwise deadly infection.

    Milagro’s connection with the vampires is that they are all outsiders together.  It takes her a while to realize this since they are wealthy and sophisticated and she is alone and living in an apartment with rats in the walls.

    I like the idea of being a little unsure of the characters.  Is the hero really such a great catch?  Will we see the dashing and degenerate brother and sister again?

    I left a few things ambiguous, and Sarah caught those, because I am writing a sequel called Midnight Brunch at Casa Dracula.  I didn’t want to wrap everything up neatly in the first book.

    I’d be happy to answer any questions about the book or my writing process.

    Marta

  8. Nicole says:

    Oooh…hey, I’ve been wanting to know more about this book ever since I saw the title on some website (I think Acosta’s agent’s site, if I remember right).  Then I liked the cover.  And now my interest is piqued about the story, so I think I’ll have to search this one out.

  9. Marta Acosta says:

    Hi, Nicole,

    Yes, do check it Casa Dracula.  BookSense just named the book a recommended read for August.

    I just saw my cover for the next book, and it is way cool, even if it has nothing to do with the actual story.  The background is orange, which, as everyone knows, is the color of insanity.

  10. Nicole says:

    Ah, but doesn’t orange also increase one’s appetite…perhaps for books in this case?  *g*

  11. Ashley says:

    I read the excerpt for casa dracula and, while it seems very funny, I kept getting annoyed by the fact that Milagro referred to the heroine of Pride and Prejudice as Eliza Bennett.  Now it’s been awhile since I read P + P but I’m pretty sure her name was Elizabeth.  I know that’s nitpicky, but if an author is going to demonstrate her (or her character’s) knowledge of a certain field, she should probably get her facts straight.  Or maybe I missed something and there is indeed an Eliza in P + P.

  12. Marta Acosta says:

    Hi, Ashley, it has been a while since you read P&P;!  I read it about once a year.  Elizabeth Bennet’s family use both Lizzy and Eliza as nicknames for her.

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