Frostbite

What is the author's style in Frostbite by Richelle Mead?

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The novel is written in the first-person point of view. The narrator is Rose Hathaway, a dhampir who goes to school at St. Vladimir's Academy where she will someday graduate to become a guardian of Moroi vampires. Rose is seventeen and has recently come back to school after running away with her best friend, Lissa, for two years to protect her from a Moroi who wanted to use her for her magic gifts.

The point of view of this novel is an intimate one that allows the reader to be extremely close to the main character of the novel. By telling the novel in the first person, the author has taken away any physical or emotional barriers that might have kept the reader from feeling concern for the safety of the main character. At the same time, the author has created a mental bond between Rose and Lissa, allowing Rose to describe events that happen only to Lissa that Rose is aware of because of the bond that allows her to enter Lissa's mind during times of emotional heights. In this way, it is as though there are two narrators of the book. However, the author remains with Rose the majority of the time and creates a bond between reader and main character that leaves the reader cheering for Rose by the end of the novel.

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Frostbite