On All Things Considered 2/18/2010 host Margot Adler reported on her
reading of 75 vampire books and the associate film, televison shows. Here's her
list for your enjoyment!
1-4. The Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer
The four books — Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse and Breaking Dawn — have sold
millions around the world. I confess I enjoyed them all. Not everyone likes
these "sparkling vampires," but they definitely fit into my reluctant-vampire
thesis. The Cullen family is lovely, including the doctor, his wife, the
handsome Edward, two other kids and my personal favorite, Edward's sister Alice
Cullen. Then there are the werewolves: In this saga, the werewolves and the
vampires are kind of like the Capulets and the Montagues. By the way, the
vampire baseball scene in the first film may not rival the Quidditch matches in
Harry Potter, but it's still fun.
5-13.The Sookie Stackhouse
Novels by Charlaine
Harris
There are nine of these so far, starting with Dead Until Dark and ending
with Dead and Gone, and
more are coming. They take place in northern Louisiana; much of the action plays
out in two bars, Merlotte's and Fangtasia. The books are the basis for the HBO
series True Blood
. In this alternate world of today, the Japanese have developed a
synthetic form of blood, and vampires can "come out of the coffin" and live
among humans. Sookie Stackhouse is a mind-reading waitress who falls in love
with Bill Compton, a vampire who was turned after the Civil War.
14-15. A Touch Of Dead by Charlaine Harris
A Touch of Dead contains
the complete Stackhouse short stories; a short-story volume, Many Bloody Returns, also
has a Stackhouse story.
16-18. The Hunger, The Last Vampire, Lilith's Dream by Whitley Strieber
Whitley Strieber's three vampire novels; the most famous is The Hunger.
Strieber's idea was to imagine vampires as not supernatural, but simply as a
different, stronger, nearly immortal species. Much more the standard horror view
of vampires. Miriam
Blaylock — played by Catherine Deneuve in the 1983 film —
is truly rapacious.
19. Let The Right One In
by John Ajvide Lindqvist
A novel from Sweden with a young voracious vampire. Very much a horror story,
but also a morality tale of what happens to the bullied child. The
movie is exquisite, if terrifying.
. Must agree this is a top notch movie, not to be missed by the
vampire or horror aficanado!
20. Sucks To Be Me by Kimberly Pauley
Some of the best recent vampire novels are for teens, including my favorite,
Sucks To Be Me. Pauley turns the genre on its head, imagining some pretty
dreary, all too normal, nerdy vampires making their way in the regular
day-to-day world. The heroine finds out her parents are vampires, and she has to
make a choice. It's not easy as it seems, and the book is laugh-out-loud funny.
In the soon-to-be-published sequel, Still Sucks To Be Me, she becomes a vampire
but has to fake her death, leave her friends, live in a yucky town and still
obey her parents.
21. Suck It Up by Brian Meehl
Another great teen vampire novel, this one starring a pimply, unattractive,
geeky vampire, who still gets to be the first officially "outed" vampire in the
world.
22-25. The Vampire
Diaries by L.J.
Smith
There are plenty of novels for teens published after the breakout of Buffy,
the Vampire Slayer that involve high-school students. The original Vampire
Diaries series includes four short novels — The Awakening, The Struggle, The Fury, Dark Reunion. There is a
current TV show (The Vampire Diaries) based on the books, with a lovely
protagonist, Elena, and two incredibly handsome vampire brothers, one evil and
one good.
26-29. Blue
Bloods by Melissa
de la Cruz
Imagine Gossip Girl, plus vampires. The series is based on an outrageous idea —
so completely over the top that it almost works. The families that came over on
the Mayflower, the 400 "top families" in American society, are really vampires,
reincarnating over and over. So, many of the people going to elite private
schools on the Upper East Side of Manhattan and wearing Prada bags are really
vampires. (Perhaps that's why they don't eat and look like social X-rays!) But
besides being the reincarnation of people like Miles Standish, the author also
presupposes that they go back so far that they are the reincarnation of the
original archangels. East Side socialites as vampires? Totally believable.
Archangels? No way! There are four books so far in this series: Blue Bloods, Masquerade, Revelations and The Van Allen Legacy.
22-25. House Of
Night by P.C.
Cast and Kristin Cast
Hogwarts for vampires? Yes, Harry Potter had his wizard school, but there are at
least two series that give vampire teens their own school. First up: The House
of Night series, six books written by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast, a
mother-and-daughter team from Tulsa, Okla. Marked, Betrayed, Chosen, Untamed, Hunted and Tempted. Vampires are
chosen almost randomly, and they have to enter special academies, where they go
through a program and slowly change — or die. This series is quite well-done,
and has a lot of goddess theology and ritual in it.
36-39. The Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead
Four books so far: Vampire
Academy, Frostbite,
Shadow Kiss, Blood Promise. The academy
here is very Russian, and the main heroine is not a vampire but a particular
type of human-vampire mix who becomes a bodyguard for one strand of royal
vampires. These are the good vamps. There are also your basic evil vamps, the
strigoi, who kill.
40. Undead And Unwed by MaryJanice Davidson
The first of a long series of books with "undead" in the title — Undead and Unemployed, Undead and Unpopular are
others. Frothy, light, too much fashion. I didn't want to go further after the
first one.
41-50. Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter by Laurell K. Hamilton
There are some 18 or 19 of these novels, some of them as long as 700 pages. Many
of them almost reach the level of porn — a kind of R-rated Buffy. Anita Blake is
a gun-toting, knife-wielding vampire executioner, whose day job is as an
"animator" raising zombies from the dead, so people can question their
ancestors: "What did you really mean by that in your will?" In the first book,
Guilty Pleasures, Anita
is a fairly prudish and religious young woman who has only had sex once, with
her college fiance, who then left her. She would never get close to a vampire.
By Book 10, Narcissus in
Chains, Blake is having relationships with two vampires, including the
amazing Jean-Claude, as well as the Ulfric, or king of the local werewolf pack,
plus several were-leopards, and she is becoming more powerful and less human.
Totally over the top, with sex and violence, including S&M, even torture, more
so with each book. But Hamilton has fascinating characters and unusual
relationships. It's kind of like a car wreck: You can't turn your eyes away.
51-55. Blood Ties by Tanya Huff
This is a great series that creates a love triangle of amazing power and
tension. Blood Trail, Blood Price, Blood Lines, Blood Pact, Blood Debt. Victoria Nelson
is a former cop forced to leave the force because of vision loss. She becomes a
private eye in Toronto who often works with an active-duty cop, Celluci, who is
clearly romantically interested in her. But she also teams up with Henry
Fitzroy, the gorgeous bastard son of Henry VIII — and a 400-year-old vampire.
(He works as a romance writer in the books, and as a graphic novelist in the
TV series.) The three of them solve crimes, almost always with a
supernatural twist. But the best part in both the books and the TV show is the
unresolved tension between the three protagonists.
56-58. The Smoke Trilogy by Tanya Huff
Same author, but not as successful. A series of three books, Smoke and Shadows, Smoke and Mirrors, Smoke and Ashes. The series
takes place in Vancouver with Henry Fitzroy and his sometime-lover. More occult
crime. Didn't do much for me.
59. Interview With The
Vampire by Anne Rice
Clearly one of the first reluctant vamps. I personally do not like the gothic
trappings of the Anne Rice world, but this is clearly a book that influenced the
genre. There are many other Rice novels, The Vampire Lestat, etc.
60. Dracula by Bram Stoker
It's quite a gothic slog, but much of the current view we have of vampires comes
from this 1897 novel. It wasn't the first or even the second in the English
language, but it has staying power. The 1931 film with Bela Lugosi should be seen.
61-62. Bloodsucking Fiends: A
Love Story; You Suck: A
Love Story by Christopher Moore
These light, funny novels take place in San Francisco, and these vampires
definitely try to do the right thing. The best thing about the novels is that
Moore resurrects the character of Emperor Norton, based on the 19th century
historical person who claimed to be emperor, and San Francisco humored him by
accepting his money and posting his proclamations.
63-64. The Society Of S;
The Year Of
Disappearances by Susan
Hubbard
These are very literary works by a professor of English — serious novels
involving a family of vampires and the coming of age of a young adolescent.
Elusive, complex, poetic and sophisticated.
65. Hotel Transylvania
by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
This is the first book of a huge series that goes through all kinds of
historical periods, following the vampire Comte de Saint-Germain. Haven't read
the others, but this one is excellent.
66. The Vampire Tapestry
by Suzy McKee Charnas
Five related stories featuring the mysterious vampire Dr. Edward Weyland. Quite
beautifully done.
67. The Delicate Dependency, A Novel Of The Vampire Life by Michael Talbot
There are some who believe this is the best vampire novel ever written. Here,
vampires are truly another species, and both responsible for most of human
culture and dedicated to preserving it, though they don't much care about the
present human population. A very odd, mysterious and mesmerizing read. Out of
print, but available in used book marts.
68.Those Who Hunt The
Night by Barbara Hambly
A Sherlock Holmesian mystery plus vampires. Takes place in 1907.
69-71. Red Moon Rising, Malachi's Moon; Craven Moon by Billie Sue Mosiman
I liked these books. There are three different kinds (nations) of vampires in
these stories, and they are chosen in the dream world, depending on their
spirit: predators, naturals (who live as humans) and cravens. The first book is
about the coming of age of Dell, a natural, and the last two are about her son,
Malachi, a dhampir — half-human and half-vampire.
72. Eternally Yours by Stephen Juers
I am guessing this is self-published. It is a journal of a man who was made
vampire at the time of the American Revolution and charts his life until the
present. Good idea, but flawed.
73. Fledgling by Octavia Butler
The late Octavia Butler was a very talented African-American science fiction
writer, and this book is an exploration of difference, prejudice and race, with
a half-human, half-vampire protagonist who's a genetic experiment and can
operate in the daytime.
74. The Dead Travel Fast
by Eric Nuzum
A lighthearted nonfiction jaunt through vampires in fiction, history and the
present.
75. The Vampire Archives by Otto Penzler, Neil Gaiman, and Kim Newman
It calls itself the most complete volume of vampire tales ever published. Almost
a hundred selections — and most valuable, a bibliography that includes about
5,000 novels, short stories and other works. Seventy-five is clearly just the
tip of the iceberg.
On Margot's Bedside Table or the ones she MISSED!
The Historian, by Elizabeth Kostova, and I am Legend by Richard Matheson. And
everyone is telling me I forgot The Vampire Files — some 12 novels by P.N. Elrod. Urban fantasy
set in 1930s Chicago, featuring a hardboiled P.I. named Jack Fleming.
2 comments posted.
I never realized there were so many books with related movies and or TV shows and I know most of them. But one obvious one: Dracula written by Archibald Constable and then Bram Stoker and subsequent movies.
(Diane Sadler 6:28pm February 20, 2010)
Have read quite a few of these, not all ofthe series all the way through -- definately will have to look for The Vampire Archives. What about the TV shows Forever Knight -- one of my favorites and the old and resurrected for a brief time Dark Shadows, not sure if they were based off books first or not.
(Kelly Holt 8:17pm February 20, 2010)