It is implied that a character is impregnated by the vampire but not confirmed whether it’s a baby or monster, described as “something growing inside me”
Not in the traditional sense, SPOILER: it is implied that a character was impregnated by the vampire and the “baby” would emerge when she died so she elected to be cremated immediately upon her death
A vampire targets and abducts children to feed on. Before people learn that he is a vampire, the protagonist thinks he is molesting the children. A character tells a story of how her husband, a police officer, hit an 11-year-old child so hard that the child lost hearing. The story is framed in such a way that the listener is supposed to feel sympathy for the cop, that he didn’t do it on purpose and couldn’t help himself.
Very gory details of a dead raccoon, description of rats dying, roaches being squished, description of dog being gravely injured (spoiler: he lives through that but dies at the end of the book)
A character is strapped to a hospital bed. There is another scene where a couple of characters restrain the antagonist. There is also a couple of scenes where the antagonist pins someone to the wall by their throat
A character struggles to breathe while in the hospital. The protagonist is, at one point, pinned against a wall by the neck by the titular vampire character.
There is a scene where one character puts another character under the shower to clean her up after a traumatic event, but the focus isn’t on the shower
The police are accurately portrayed as completely incompetent and uncaring, especially in regards to events taking place in a predominantly black neighborhood.
Some talk about “teenagers not wanting to eat because of what they see in magazines” one character mentions the “heroin chic” trend
Can be triggering to those with EDs
This is ambiguously worded, but a character says that her mother, who had been pregnant “lost my brother child.” I interpret that to mean there was a miscarriage
Not in the traditional sense, SPOILER: it is implied that a character was impregnated by the vampire and the “baby” would emerge when she died so she elected to be cremated immediately upon her death
The n-word isn't used but a term is used that starts with an n and ends with iggled. Now, technically the original meaning and etymology are not in themselves problematic nor is it in the context of its usage in the book, however, the fact that it is a term that has also been co-opted by racists with a different and derogatory connotation may make it disturbing for some readers. Now, again I'm not implying that the author meant it in this way at all, but it bears mentioning that it is a term that may cause offense inadvertently.
Chronologically, yes. An elderly character tells a memory of how a Black man is lynched after being falsely accused of abducting children. Plotwise, the first death is of an elderly white woman.