Considered the queen of teen drama, Meg Cabot also knows how to weave an adult story full of humor and adventure. Fast-paced dialogue, sharp scenes, and timely references are her trademark. So, the vampire trend couldn't escape her critical eye. In "Insatiable," she offers a humorous reflection on the trend of elongated canines that has taken over the global pop scene: be it in films, books, television series, or music. In the hilarious "Insatiable," Meena Harper plays a soap opera writer who has just lost a dream promotion to the niece of the network's executive producers. A talentless vagrant, with no commitment to the characters, whose only concern is her own weight. To make matters worse, her nemesis's first move is to introduce vampires into the plot. And Meena soon finds herself forced to write about the bloodsuckers, despite not believing in their existence. Not that Meena, short for Wilhelmina (a reference to Bram Stocker here!), is a complete skeptic. Nor could she be. She can predict when—and how—everyone she knows will die. But her dark gift doesn't exactly make her popular. After a few disappointments, she simply finds it easier to warn people to change their itineraries and visit the doctor, without any other information. That's why she finds it strange when she meets Lucien Antonesco, the handsome and mysterious Romanian prince and cousin of her neighbor, and doesn't grasp anything. The problem is, Lucien is already dead. Despite appearing to be everything Meena dreamed of finding in a boyfriend. Except for the part where he's in the middle of a war between rival vampire clans and on the run from the Palatine Guard, demon hunters in the service of the Vatican. Her relationship with him could turn into a nightmare in the blink of an eye. Maybe it's time Meena started predicting her own future... if she even has one.