I've got to disagree with you here. Like I said, I've just recently started getting into the UF thing, and there really is just as much variety and individuality in the ways the different authors treat things like vampire, and werewolves as there is in ways that sci-fi writers treat aliens and spaceships. And even if the basic rules of vampirism and lycanthropy are the same, the author still tends to put there owns twists on the worlds that they inhabit and the characters that inhabit them. There is no way you could say that the worlds of The Dresden Files, Southern Vampire mysteries or The Hollows are all the same. And Harry Dresden, Rachel Morgan, and Sookie Stackhouse, are three very different charactersWriters aren't forced to write vampire/werewolf novels, they choose to because there is a market for them. If people stopped buying them, the "editors, publishers and marketing chimps" would move on to the next big thing.It's not the writers - it's the editors, publishers and marketing chimps who often insist on following the trend because that's what makes the company some money.
There are innumerable variations on "aliens, androids, or spaceships" but vampires and werewolves are just relationship fodder for paranormal P.I.s.As opposed to, say, science fiction writers who keep writing about aliens, androids, or spaceships?
Not a vampire comedy person, but thanks anyway.One set of "vampire" novels I enjoyed were those by Christopher Moore. Bloodsucking Fiends, You Suck, and Bite Me.
The first plays it out as a "serious" comedy novel. The second moves more toward parody of the Vampire genre. Not read the third yet, but it gets the best reviews of all three.
Greg, I understand where you're coming from, and you're most definitely closer to the genre than I am, being a reader and writer-trying-to-make-it, but I would appreciate any books you could recommend on vampires treated differently.
I will gladly change my opinion, if I see something where vampires are given a different treatment than in the usual suspects because I have sampled numerous vampire novels, and they all, to me, treat vampires as nothing more than sexual objects.
I'll put those on my list to read, since I am interested in finding something different, but I have one question.
How does Matheson's book differ from the two versions of the movie? I've seen both and wasn't really impressed. Is the book orders of magnitude better? (Though I should add that I am not generally a fan of Matheson's work, but who knows.)
Elizabeth Kostova.The Historian
Guillermo del Toro. (Yes, the film director.) This one is seriously bad-ass; imagine vampirism as a global flu pandemic, and you're in the neighborhood.The Strain
Elizabeth Kostova.The Historian
Guillermo del Toro. (Yes, the film director.) This one is seriously bad-ass; imagine vampirism as a global flu pandemic, and you're in the neighborhood.The Strain
One of the coolest vampire books I've ever read is Brian Stableford's The Empire of Fear. It's an alternate history of the Middle Ages, where the ruling families of Europe are vampires.
I loved the last man on earth fantastic vampire movie plus it had vincent frankn' price in it . also loved what dreams may come and I am legend was a great vampire book .
What's it called? I just watched a history channel program on the history of vampires (real and fictional) and I'd love to explore the topic some more.
Trying to start Reap the Whirlwind. I've already been spoilered that a favorite character will be leaving the station by book's end, though, so I'm a bit...reluctant to keep pressing on.
Trying to start Reap the Whirlwind. I've already been spoilered that a favorite character will be leaving the station by book's end, though, so I'm a bit...reluctant to keep pressing on.
Oh no seriously. Seriously. Whirlwind is amazing. Whatever you've been spoiled on, it doesn't mean or do what you think.
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