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What is it about vampires?
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Brian
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May 19, 2013 07:43AM

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Small self-plug - I have written a vampire novel too; one reviewer said "With the whole cannon of vampiric literature being so pervasive it is rare to find a story that avoids all the usual clichés, but this book manages to do just that." Which is nice...



There are a LOT of them about. But I don't think everyone has run out of ideas, I think a lot of writers are pushing the cliches until they get something interesting; it's a nice challenge - take this potentially over-written scenario and produce something new with it. Not everybody does, but occasionally someone finds an untapped vein and produces something golden.

There are a LOT of them about. But I don't..."
True, but for every nugget of gold, there is ten tonne of coal! Sometimes, you feel sorry for the trees that were hacked down for half those books.

There are a LOT of them about. But I don't..."
As a vampire author myself, I can say that I tried very hard to walk the line between avoiding the usual cliches of the genre while still creating vampires that would satisfy most readers' definition of such.
There are a lot of run-of-the-mill vampire novels out there, I agree. However, I find that most of them are obvious in their write-ups, so it's not that hard to find some that sound original. How well an original concept is pulled off is up to the skill of the author.
To me, the attraction of the vampire is both its recognizability (if that's a word) and its versatility. Vampires make great metaphors. They're like people, but not quite people, so you can explore all kinds of ideas through them. I particularly love the immortality of the vampire and the ability of examining characters from earlier time periods in the modern day. How much have they changed? How successfully have they adapted? To me, that can make for wonderful characterization.
In my own work, one of the challenges I set for myself was to make my vampires make sense. I wanted to create transformed human beings without resorting to "magic" as an explanation. Granted, I wound up employing a good bit of pseudo-science instead, but I really enjoyed the challenge of explaining the everyday details of a vampire's life. I like that, because most authors just gloss over all those details and concentrate on the super-powers. For me, the fun was taking the concept of the vampire and making it feel like they could really exist in our world.
Congratulations on your novel, Charles, I'll have to take a look at that. I'm always eager to find those gold nuggets among the coal!

There are a LOT of them ab..."
Thanks Brian, I'll be sure to return the favour! I tried not to read any new Vampire novels while I was writing mine, I was terrified that I would discover someone else had already used the ideas I'd had! But I'm working on a sequel now, and a bit more relaxed and confident in the world and mythology I've created.




There are a LOT of them ab..."
You could say the same about taxmen. Human, but not quite human! :)

You may have found the next great horror archetype! That and lawyers! Though "Angel" used that idea quite well!

You may have found the next great horror archetype! That and lawyers! Though "Angel" used that idea quite well!"
Add accountants to that list as well!


You're not being pessimistic, you're being truthful!
I am not a vampy person, but I will jump in anyway.
I like the struggle between huamnity and inhumanity. The problem with vamp fic, especially what I have read of Anne Rice's work, is that the vamps are not human enough or not alien enough (also too much porn). Ironically, there is an erotic vamp series that actually did a great job of exploringcthe humanity and alienation issue.
Me, I like my vampire as monsters. They may masquerade as elegant creatures...but they are monsters.
I like the struggle between huamnity and inhumanity. The problem with vamp fic, especially what I have read of Anne Rice's work, is that the vamps are not human enough or not alien enough (also too much porn). Ironically, there is an erotic vamp series that actually did a great job of exploringcthe humanity and alienation issue.
Me, I like my vampire as monsters. They may masquerade as elegant creatures...but they are monsters.

I like the struggle between huamnity and inhumanity. The problem with vamp fic, especially what I have read of Anne Rice's work, is that the va..."
Thanks, Michelle! All opinions are welcome!


I agree with this to some extent; unfortunately the people who are pretty much re-hashing the same characters and relationship conflicts are spoiling the vampire fun for the rest of us. I know that the people who are sick of Twilight, True Blood, Vampire Diaries, who have had quite enough of the love-lorn sparkles and dark brooding, will probably not give my book a chance, even though there is zero glittering, brooding or love-lorning. There is toothpaste. There are cowpats. And there is feeding on human blood, but come on - you can't toss the baby out with the bathwater.
It's weird how people seem to feel about vampires though... Every agent I approached with my book said that the genre was pretty much dead on its feet and I should try another direction, whilst TV writer John Warburton was asked to insert them into his entirely non-supernatural new sitcom... (http://m.guardian.co.uk/media/2013/ju...)
Clearly the non-creative TV types still feel there's some life in the undead yet... And I do too - I just wish that the books getting the coverage and the support were doing a bit more to mess with the cliches.
Meanwhile I am going to work on that new and spectacular monster you mentioned. I have one lurking in the back of my mind. He's pretty awesome.


As humans we are obsessed with immortality...the idea that you can cheat death *thoughtful look*...mmm...


Oh please, it's obvious people are jumping on the band wagon, not running out of ideas.





Let's think about the perspective through which vampires were born, the 'real, original vampire Count Vlad, known in Literature as Dracula: what Literature made of this real historical character, a man who fought on the side of the very literary tradition that them transformed him into a 'monster' the Western, Christian tradition... Through a bit of fantasy, he was made to challenge God Him/Herself, thus repeating Satan's sin, by which he was punished to eternal damnation in life in death. He was also expelled from the family of Christ and made to roam a land inhabited by the very people he had fought ahgainst: non-Christians. Vampires represent our fear of the other, whether they were people of different ethnicity (one hopes most of us have got over it), of femininity (see Jane Eyre and The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination) and, even more the fear that we can become like them, now mainly applied to gay men.
Vampires become the receptacle of our fears while allowing us to fantasise about the very people we are afraid of.
Books mentioned in this topic
Jane Eyre (other topics)The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (other topics)
Hiding The Smile (other topics)