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{{Short description|Speculative literary genre}}
{{cleanup}}
{{More citations needed|date=October 2017}}


]'s '']'', an early and influential work of vampire literature.]]
'''Vampire fiction''' covers the spectrum of literary work concerned principally with the subject of ].


'''Vampire literature''' covers the spectrum of literary work concerned principally with the subject of ]s. The literary vampire first appeared in 18th-century poetry, before becoming one of the stock figures of ] with the publication of ]'s '']'' (1819), inspired by a story told to him by ]. Later influential works include the ] '']'' (1847); ]'s tale of a ], '']'' (1872), and the most well known: ]'s '']'' (1897). Some authors created a more "sympathetic vampire", with ''Varney'' being the first,<ref>Lisa A. Nevárez (2013). The Vampire Goes to College: Essays on Teaching with the Undead". p. 125. McFarland</ref> and more recent examples such as ]'s series '']'' (1972–1976) and ]'s novel '']'' (1976) proving influential.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://skemman.is/stream/get/1946/17164/40073/1/BA_Essay_-_El%C3%ADsabet_Erla_Kristj%C3%A1nsd%C3%B3ttir.pdf|title=The Vampire in Literature - Old and New|publisher=]|date=2014-01-01|access-date=2015-11-27|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208103017/http://skemman.is/stream/get/1946/17164/40073/1/BA_Essay_-_El%C3%ADsabet_Erla_Kristj%C3%A1nsd%C3%B3ttir.pdf|archive-date=2015-12-08}}</ref>
The best known work in this genre is of course ]'s ] ]. It was not, however, the first. Myths and legends of blood-imbibing creatures capable of transmogrification predate the novel form. The immediate antecedent of ] is ]'s classic of the genre, ]. This in turn owes more than a little to ]'s ''The Vampyre''; this work was contemporaneous to ] poem ''The Giaour'' which also treats on this subject.


==History==
] introduced many common elements of the vampire theme to Western literature in his ] '']'' (1813). These include the combination of horror and lust that the vampire feels and the concept of the undead passing its inheritance to the living (''Note:'' In the following excerpt, ''corse'' is "corpse"):
] in ''] ]'']]
: ''But thou, false Infidel! shalt writhe''
: ''Beneath avenging Monkir's scythe;''


===18th century===
: ''And from its torment 'scape alone''
Vampire fiction is rooted in the "vampire craze" of the 1720s and 1730s, which culminated in the somewhat bizarre official exhumations of suspected vampires ] and ] in ] under the ]. One of the first works of art to touch upon the subject is the short German poem ''The Vampire'' (1748) by ], where the theme already has strong erotic overtones: a man whose love is rejected by a respectable and pious maiden threatens to pay her a nightly visit, drink her blood by giving her the seductive kiss of the vampire and thus prove to her that his teaching is better than her mother's ].<ref>An English translation, by Aloysius Gibson, appears in ''The Vampire in Verse: An Anthology,'' ed. Steven Moore (Chicago: Adams Press, 1985), p. 12.</ref> Furthermore, there have been a number of tales about a dead person returning from the grave to visit his/her beloved or spouse and bring them death in one way or another, the ] '']'' (1773) by ] being a notable 18th-century example (though the apparently returned lover is actually revealed to be death himself in disguise). One of its lines, ''Denn die Todten reiten schnell'' ("For the dead ride fast"), was to be quoted in Bram Stoker's classic ''Dracula''. A later German poem exploring the same subject with a prominent vampiric element was '']'' (1797) by ], a story about a young woman who returns from the grave to seek her betrothed:
: ''To wander round lost ]' throne;''
: ''And fire unquenched, unquenchable,''
: ''Around, within, thy heart shall dwell;''
: ''Nor ear can hear nor tongue can tell''
: ''The tortures of that inward hell!''
: ''But first, on earth as vampire sent,''
: ''Thy corse shall from its tomb be rent:''
: ''Then ghastly haunt thy native place,''
: ''And suck the blood of all thy race;''
: ''There from thy daughter, sister, wife,''
: ''At midnight drain the stream of life;''
: ''Yet loathe the banquet which perforce''
: ''Must feed thy livid living corse:''
: ''Thy victims ere they yet expire''
: ''Shall know the demon for their sire,''
: ''As cursing thee, thou cursing them,''
: ''Thy flowers are withered on the stem.''


{{poemquote|From my grave to wander I am forced
Ironically, Byron's own wild life became the model for the protagonist ] in the first vampire novel, '']'' (]) by ]. Polidori's Lord Ruthven seems to be the first appearance of the modern vampire, an undead, vampiric being possessing a developed intellect and preternatural charm, as well as physical attraction. By contrast, the vampire of folklore was almost invariably thought of as a hideous, unappealing creature.
Still to seek the God's long sever'd link,
Still to love the bridegroom I have lost,
And the lifeblood of his heart to drink.}}


The story is turned into an expression of the conflict between ] and Christianity: the family of the dead girl are Christians, while the young man and his relatives are still pagans. It turns out that it was the girl's Christian mother who broke off her engagement and forced her to become a nun, eventually driving her to her death. The motive behind the girl's return as a "spectre" is that "e'en Earth can never cool down love". Goethe had been inspired by the story of '']'' by ], a tale from ]. However, in that tale, the youth is not the girl's betrothed, no religious conflict is present, no actual sucking of blood occurs, and the girl's return from the dead is said to be sanctioned by the gods of the ]. She relapses into death upon being exposed, and the issue is settled by burning her body outside of the city walls and making an ] sacrifice to the deities involved.
An unauthorized sequel to Polidori's novel by Cyprien Bérard called ''Lord Ruthwen ou les Vampires'' (1820) was adapted by ] into the first vampire stage melodrama, which was in turn made into an opera by German composer Heinrich Marschner.


===19th century===
Bram Stoker's '']'' has been the definitive description of the vampire in popular fiction for the last century. Its portrayal of vampirism as a disease (contagious demonic possession), with its undertones of sex, blood, and death, struck a chord in a Victorian England where ] and ] were common.
The first mention of vampires in English literature appears in ]'s monumental oriental epic poem '']'' (1801), where the main character Thalaba's deceased beloved Oneiza turns into a vampire, although that occurrence is actually marginal to the story. It has been argued that ]'s poem '']'' (written between 1797 and 1801, but not published until 1816) has influenced the development of vampire fiction: the heroine Christabel is seduced by a female supernatural being called Geraldine who tricks her way into her residence. Though Coleridge never finished the poem, some argue that his intended plot had Geraldine eventually trying to marry Christabel after having assumed the appearance of Christabel's absent lover.<ref>Leatherdale, C. (1993) ''Dracula: The Novel and the Legend'':46&ndash;9.</ref> The story bears a remarkable resemblance to the overtly vampiric story of ] by ] (1872).{{original research inline|date=April 2013}}


In a passage in his ] '']'' (1813), ] alludes to the traditional folkloric conception of the vampire as a being damned to suck the blood and destroy the life of its nearest relations:
'']'' appears to be based at least partially on legends about a real person, ''Vlad &#354;epe&#351;'' (''Vlad the Impaler''), a notorious ] (]) prince of the 15th century known also as ]. He was the son of ]. Vlad II received the title ''Dracul'' ("The Dragon") after being inducted into the ] in ]. In ], ''Dracul'' means ] or ], and ''Dracula'' (or ''Draculea'') means "son of the Dragon" (or "son of the Devil", though "son of the Dragon" was intended in this case). Stoker is believed to have seen a reference in an article by Emily Gerard who said that Dracula was a word meaning ''the Devil''. (Emily Gerard, "Transylvanian Superstitions." ''Nineteenth Century'' (July 1885): 130&ndash;150). Oral tradition regarding &#354;epe&#351; includes his having made a practice of torturing enemy prisoners and hanging them, or parts of them, such as heads, on stakes around his castle or manor house. &#354;epe&#351; may have suffered from ]. His rumored periodic abdominal agony, especially after eating, and bouts of delirium might indicate presence of the disease.


<blockquote>
]goers met ] ] in ] in a landmark vampire film.]]
<span style="font-size: 90%">But first, on earth as vampire sent, <br/> Thy corpse shall from its tomb be rent: <br/> Then ghostly haunt thy native place, <br/> And suck the blood of all thy race;</span>


<span style="font-size: 90%">There from thy daughter, sister, wife, <br/> At midnight drain the stream of life; <br/> Yet loathe the banquet which perforce <br/> Must feed thy livid living corpse: <br/> Thy victims ere they yet expire <br/> Shall know thy demon for their sire, <br/> As cursing thee, thou cursing them, <br/> Thy flowers are withered on the stem.</span>
Stoker also probably derived inspiration from ] of blood-sucking creatures. He also was almost certainly influenced by a contemporary vampire story, '']'' by ]. Le Fanu was Stoker's editor when Stoker was a theatre critic in ], ].
</blockquote>


Byron also composed an enigmatic fragmentary story, published as "]" in 1819 as part of the '']'' collection, concerning the mysterious fate of an aristocrat named Augustus Darvell whilst journeying in the Orient&mdash;as his contribution to the famous ghost story competition at the ] by ] in the ], between him, ], ] and ] (who was Byron's personal physician). This story provided the basis for '']'' (1819) by Polidori. Byron's own wild life became the model for Polidori's undead protagonist ]. According to A. Asbjorn Jon, "the choice of name is presumably linked to ]'s earlier novel '']'', where it was used for a rather ill disguised Byronesque character".<ref>A. Asbjorn Jon (2003) 'Vampire Evolution', in ''Metaphor'' 3, 2003: 19&ndash;23.</ref>
Much 20th-century vampire fiction draws heavily on Stoker's formulation; early films such as '']'' and those featuring ] or ] are examples of this. ''Nosferatu,'' in fact, was clearly based on ''Dracula'', and Stoker's widow sued for copyright infringement and won. As a result of the suit, most prints of the film were destroyed. She later allowed the film to be shown in England.


An unauthorized sequel to Polidori's tale by Cyprien Bérard called ''Lord Ruthwen ou les Vampires'' (1820) was attributed to ]. Nodier himself adapted "The Vampyre" into the first vampire stage melodrama, ''Le Vampire''. Unlike Polidori's original story, Nodier's play was set in Scotland. This, in turn, was adapted by the English melodramatist ] as '']'' (1820) at the ] (then called the English Opera House), also set in Scotland. Planché introduced the "vampire trap" as a way for the title fiend to appear in a dream at the beginning and then to vanish into the earth at his destruction. Nodier's play was also the basis of an opera called '']'' by the German composer ], who set the story in a more plausible ]. Planché in turn translated the libretto of this opera into English in 1827, where it was performed at the Lyceum also. ] later redramatized the story in a play also entitled ''Le Vampire'' (1851). Another theatrical vampire of this period was "Sir Alan Raby", who is the lead character of ] (1852), a play by ]. Boucicault himself played the lead role to great effect, though the play itself had mixed reviews. Queen Victoria, who saw the play, described it in her diary as "very trashy".<ref>David J. Skal (2001) ''Vampires: Encounters With The Undead'': 47&ndash;8.</ref>
Though most other works of vampire fiction do not feature Dracula as a character, there is typically a clear inspiration from Stoker, reflected in a fascination with sex and wealth, as well as overwhelmingly frequent use of ] settings and iconography. A contemporary descendant is the series of novels by ], the most popular in a genre of modern stories that use vampires as their (sometimes sympathetic) protagonists. ] writes young adult books with a similar slant.


An important later example of 19th-century vampire fiction is the ] epic '']'' (1847), featuring ] as the vampire. In this story, we have the first example of the standard trope in which the vampire comes through the window at night and attacks a maiden as she lies sleeping. ] in ]'s '']'' (1847) is suspected of being a vampire by his housekeeper at one point, which he immediately laughs off as "absurd nonsense".
==Literature==
* ''] or The Feast of Blood'' (]) by James Malcolm Rymer, a Victorian best-seller and pot-boiler
* '']'' (]) by ], perhaps the most atmospheric vampire story ever
* '']'' (]) by ] (also the inspiration for many films)
* '']'' (]) by ]
* The ''Dracula'' series of novels (]&ndash;]) by ] author ].
* '']'' (]) (also a film) and other books in '']'', by ]
* ]'s (]) novel '']'', in which an aristocracy of vampires rules the world; ISBN 0330308742.
* '']'' (]) and '']'' (]) by Roxanne Longstreet
* '']'' (]) by ]
* The '']'' (]&ndash;]) series by ], "what if?" tales extrapolating the events of ''Dracula'' if Dracula had not been stopped and had later married ].
* ''Dead Until Dark'' and subsequent books in the The Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris.
* ''Guilty Pleasures'' and subsequent books in the Anita Blake series by Laurell K. Hamilton.


Fascinating erotic fixations are evident in ]'s classic novella '']'' (1872), which features a female vampire with lesbian inclinations who seduces the heroine Laura while draining her of her vital fluids. Le Fanu's story is set in the ]. Such central European locations became a standard feature of vampire fiction.
==Films and television==


Another important example of the development of vampire fiction can be found in three seminal novels by ]: ''Le Chevalier Ténèbre'' (1860), ''La Vampire'' (1865) and ''La Ville Vampire'' (1874). ]'s ''Le Capitaine Vampire'' (1879) features a Russian officer, Boris Liatoukine, who is a vampire.
=== Dracula and his legacy ===


In German literature, one of the most popular novels was Hans Wachenhusen's ''Der Vampyr &ndash; Novelle aus Bulgarien'' (1878), which, on account of the author's first-hand experience of Ottoman society, includes a detailed description of the multicultural society of Bulgaria, and which contains an atmosphere that is "in some parts comparable to ''Dracula''".<ref>J. Gordon Melton, ''The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead'', Visible Ink Press, 2010, p. 287.</ref>
By far, the most well-known and popular vampire in the movies is ]. An amazing number of movies have been filmed over the years depicting the evil count, some of which are ranked among the greatest depictions of vampires on film.


The most famous Serbian vampire was ], from a folklore-inspired novel, ''Ninety Years Later'', by ], first published in 1880.<ref>], "Posle devedeset godina" (''Ninety Years Later'').</ref> Serbian vampires—albeit depicted first in French (1839) and then Russian (1884)—also appear in ]'s novella '']''.
* '']'' (]; starring ], remade ] with ]) &ndash; unlicensed German adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel
*'']'' (]) &ndash; the first Universal Studio Dracula film, starring ]
*'']'' (]) &ndash; Spanish-language version starring ], made simultaneously with the original Universal Studio Dracula film, using the same sets on a timeshare basis
*'']'' (]) &ndash; Follow up to the original Universal Studio Dracula film, starring ]
*'']'' (]) &ndash; The last Universal Studio Dracula film, starring ]
*'']'' (]) &ndash; Lugosi played Dracula on film for only the second and final time.
*'']'' (]; aka ''Horror of Dracula'') &ndash; the first ] Dracula film, starring ]
*'']'' (]) &ndash; attempt at filming the story quite close to Stoker's novel; ] as Dracula
*'']'' (]) &ndash; a ] of Dracula films by ]; ] as Dracula
* '']'' (]); loosely connected through Mina Harker being vampiric after an encounter with Dracula.
*'']'' (]) &ndash; action movie only loosely connected to the original ''Dracula''; ] as Dracula
*'']'' (]); Drake the vampire is supposed to have had many forms throughout the centuries, Stoker's Dracula being one of them.


Karl Heinrich Ulrichs published the short story “Manor” in 1885, about two sailors and lovers. When the older of the two, Manor, drowns at sea he returns to his lover Har each night to suck his blood and lay together.
=== Other movies and television ===
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' TV series (] and ])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']l'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* ''] (])
* The serials '']'' (]) and '']'' (]) from the ] ] television series '']''.
* ''] (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
** '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
** ''Bloodstone: Subspecies II'' (])
** ''Bloodlust: Subspecies III'' (])
** ''Vampire Journals'' (])
** ''Subspecies 4: Bloodstorm'' (])
* '']'' (]), ] and its television spinoff '']''
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
** ''From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money'' (])
** ''From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman's Daughter'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' ([[1996
* '']'' ([[1998
* '']'' (])
** '']'' (])
** '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
** ''Vampires: Los Muertos'' (])
** ''Vampires: The Turning'' (])
* '']'' (1998)
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
* '']'' (])
** '']'' (])


==Other media== ====''Dracula''====
Bram Stoker's '']'' (1897) has been the definitive description of the vampire in popular fiction for the last century. Its portrayal of vampirism as a disease (contagious demonic possession), with its undertones of sex, blood, and death, struck a chord in a Victorian Britain where ] and ] were common.
Video game series featuring vampires primarily use Dracula or Dracula-inspired characters (such as the appearance in '']''). Konami's '']'' series is the longest running series which uses the Dracula legend, though its writers have made their own alterations to the legend. An exception to this trend is the '']'' video game series, which features vampires set in an entirely fictional world called Nosgoth.


Although it has been claimed that the character of ] is based upon Vlad Draculesti III (]), also known as Vlad Ţepeş', a notorious 15th-century ]n (Romanian) warlord, or ], this has been debunked by multiple scholars.<ref>{{Cite web|title=No, Bram Stoker Did Not Model Dracula On Vlad The Impaler|url=https://gizmodo.com/no-bram-stoker-did-not-model-dracula-on-vlad-the-impal-1648969679|access-date=2021-07-31|website=Gizmodo|date=21 October 2014 |language=en-us}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Miller|first=Elizabeth|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/171541362|title=Dracula : sense and nonsense.|date=2006|publisher=Desert Island Books|isbn=1-905328-15-X|location=|oclc=171541362}}</ref><ref>{{Cite magazine|last=Acocella|first=Joan|date=2009-03-08|title=In the Blood|url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2009/03/16/in-the-blood|access-date=2021-07-31|magazine=The New Yorker|language=en-US}}</ref> Unlike the historical personage, however, Stoker located his Count Dracula in a castle near the ] in ], and ascribed to that area the supernatural aura it retains to this day in the popular imagination.
Other vampire tales seen in several places include:

* ]s and ]s such as '']'' (]), '']'' (]), the aforementioned '']'' (]), and '']'' (]). In addition, many major ]es have faced vampire ]s at some point.
Stoker likely drew inspiration from ] of blood-sucking creatures. He was also influenced by Le Fanu's ''Carmilla''. Le Fanu was Stoker's editor when Stoker was a theater critic in ], Ireland. Like Le Fanu, Stoker created compelling female vampire characters such as ] and the ].
* The ] series '']'' (]&ndash;present) is a long-running series in which the protagonist battles a new incarnation of ] in every game.

* ]ese ] and ] features vampires in several titles, including '']'' (OAV],TV series]),'']''(]), '']'' (]), '']'' (]), '']'' (]), '']'' (]), '']'' (]) and '']'' (]).
Stoker's vampire hunter ] was a strong influence on subsequent vampire literature.
* ]s such as '']'' (]), in which the participants play the roles of fictional vampires (for specifics, see ]).

* ] game series involves vampires, these vampires were created by a daedra prince (demon lord). They have all the typical attributes, but can absorb the 'life force' of an enemy merely by touching their skin. Whenever they try to sleep they are visited by disturbing nightmares.
===20th century===
* The '']'' (]) ] series (known as ''Vampire'' in ]) features a vampire along with other mythological and ] characters.
]''.]]
* The '']'' series (]-present) by ], featuring a society where vampires are citizens and a necromantic protagonist.
Though Stoker's Count Dracula remained an iconic figure, especially in the ], as in the film '']'', 20th-century vampire fiction went beyond traditional Gothic horror and explored new genres such as science fiction. An early example of this is ]'s ''Le prisonnier de la planète Mars'' (1908) and its sequel ''La guerre des vampires'' (1909), in which a native race of bat-winged, blood-drinking humanoids is found on ]. In the 1920 novella ''La Jeune Vampire'' (''The Young Vampire''), by ], vampirism is explained as a form of possession by souls originating in another universe known simply as the Beyond.
* The video game series '']'' (]&ndash;present) is a five game long series, in which vampires were a wise, ancient race who had their thirst for blood, immortality, and aversion to sunlight inflicted on them by another race called the ].

* ] (]) is a musical from ]
Possibly the most influential example of modern vampire science fiction is ]'s '']'' (1954).<ref>{{cite news|title=I Am Legend is named vampire novel of the century|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/apr/03/i-am-legend-vampire-novel-century|work=The Guardian|first=Alison|last=Flood|date=April 3, 2012|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170312012844/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/apr/03/i-am-legend-vampire-novel-century|archive-date=March 12, 2017}}</ref> The novel is set in a future Los Angeles overrun with undead cannibalistic/bloodsucking beings. The protagonist is the sole survivor of a ] of a ] that causes ]. He must fight to survive attacks from the hordes of nocturnal creatures, discover the secrets of their biology, and develop effective countermeasures. The novel was adapted into three movies: '']'' starring Vincent Price in 1964, '']'' starring ] in 1971, and '']'' starring ] in 2007.
* '']'' (]), a ] and film series, one in a subgenre that features half-human, half-vampire warriors or protagonists.

* '']'' (]) by ] ]s the traditions of vampire literature, plays with the mythic archetypes and features a tongue-in-cheek reversal of vampyre subculture with young vampires who wear bright clothes, drink wine, and stay up until noon.
The latter part of the 20th century saw the rise of multi-volume vampire epics. The first of these was Gothic romance writer ]'s '']'' series (1966&ndash;71) loosely based on the contemporary American TV soap opera '']''. It also set the trend for seeing vampires as poetic, tragic heroes rather than as the traditional embodiment of evil. This formula was followed in the popular '']'' (1976-2018) series of novels by ] and ]'s massive Saint-Germain series (1978&ndash;). Ross, Rice and Yarbro set the trend for multi-volume vampire sagas which are now a stock feature of mass-market fiction (see below for list). Rice's work also saw the beginning of the convergence of traditional Gothic ideas with the modern ] and a more explicit exploration of the transgressive sexualities which had always been implicit in vampire fiction.
* The comic book series '']'' (]&ndash;present) (]): a slavegirl in ancient Egypt becomes a Vampire Goddess.

* ]'s ] novels, in which vampires were created by a race of aliens known as the Nephilim.
], while not a writer of multi-volume epics on vampires, has become a very influential horror writer of the late 20th and early 21st century, evidenced by the nearly sixty books he has published over the past 50 years selling around the world in multiple languages. King's repertoire often hybridizes traditional vampire folklore with the coy charm inspired by Bela Lugosi's performance while increasing the physical violence, carnage, and overall butchery. His work describes very graphically in detail the ruthlessness of what essentially is a supernatural, parasitic predator that unleashes itself and intrudes on ordinary life for ordinary people, a recurring theme of his books. According to King himself, he was still a teacher at a high school when one of the books the class was studying was Bram Stoker's ''Dracula.'' Over dinner, he asked his wife, ], what would happen if Dracula came back in the 20th century. "He'd probably be run over by a Yellow Cab on Park Avenue and killed," his wife replied, and it was from there that she suggested a different, rural setting.<ref name="auto">{{cite web|url=https://stephenking.com/works/novel/salems-lot.html|title=Stephen King &#124; 'Salem's Lot|website=stephenking.com}}</ref>
* ]'s urban fantasy series, '']'', whose system of magic borrows liberally from various folkloric traditions. White, Red and Black Court vampires all exist, embodying different vampire myths (Black Court being the standard American vampire).
]'' (1975), a vampire tale by ]]]
''],'' the book that resulted from that conversation, was published in 1975 as the follow-up to '']''<ref name="auto"/>'';'' as of 2022, the process of weaving vampires into his stories is still ongoing. King's overall body of work spans both the late 20th and early 21st centuries and ''Salem's Lot'' has over the years become one of his most important works.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jun/11/rereading-stephen-king-salems-lot|title=Rereading Stephen King: week two – Salem's Lot|date=11 June 2012|website=the Guardian}}</ref> The title references a Maine town called ] and it is the centerpiece of 2 full novels and one short story, plus twelve other books that reference the town's existence within the multiverse that runs through all Stephen King books.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/stephen-king-jersusalems-lot-every-story/|title=Every Stephen King Story Set in Jerusalem's Lot|date=20 July 2020|website=ScreenRant}}</ref> King also has written several other works with vampires included in them in both long and short form including '']'' (1998), '']'' (1993, in ''Nightmares and Dreamscapes''), and several books in his series '']'' (1982-2012) which also contains at least one character from ''Salem's Lot''. Many of these have been brought to film and television as well as comic books.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000175/|title=Stephen King|website=IMDb}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/oct/27/stephen-king-debut-comic|title=Stephen King writes debut comic book|date=27 October 2009|website=the Guardian}}</ref>

The 1981 novel '']'' (adapted as a film in 1983) continued the theme of open sexuality and examined the biology of vampires, suggesting that their special abilities were the result of physical properties of their blood. The novel suggested that not all vampires were undead humans, but some were a separate species that had evolved alongside humans. This interpretation of vampires has since then been used in several science-fiction stories dealing with vampires, most famously the '']'' movie series. The 1982 novel '']'' by notable author ] tells the tale of a race of living vampires, extremely human-like but ] predators on humans, set in the Mississippi ] era, where one of them has developed a ] to "cure" them, and is fighting for the right and opportunity to distribute it.

]'s ] (1992&ndash;) returns to Stoker's Count Dracula, looking at an alternate world where Dracula defeated Van Helsing's group and conquered Britain, and gives the genre a somewhat ] spin. The television series '']'', created and largely written by ], also explored vampire folklore in the light of ] and ], defining the 'condition' as humans who were made to drink vampire blood after the vampire drinks from them, with turned vampires being essentially demons possessing human corpses; ''Buffy'' and its spin-off, '']'', also feature the character of ] in a prominent role, with Angel being a vampire who was cursed with his ], restoring his capacity for compassion, but also forcing him to live with the guilt of what he did as a regular vampire.

] perspectives on the vampire legend are provided in ]'s novel ''Brown Girl In The Ring'' (1998), which features the ], a vampire of Caribbean folklore, and in ]'s '']'' (1995) and its sequel '']'' (2001).

One of the more traditional vampire works of the 20th century is ]'s '']'' (1975), which re-imagines the archetypal ''Dracula''-type story in a modern American small town setting. King acknowledged the influence of ''Dracula'' on the work, as well as the violent, pre-] vampires portrayed in horror comics such as those released by ].<ref>Author's introduction, '']''.</ref>

In 1989, a comprehensive bibliography of vampire literature was published – Margaret L. Carter's ''The Vampire in Literature. A Critical Bibliography'' (Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.: Umi Research Press).

One of the best-known stories of ] winning Israeli writer ] is "The Lady and the Peddler" ({{Script|Hebrew|האדונית והרוכל}}). It tells of Yosef the Peddler who wanders a great East European forest and encounters a lonely house inhabited by a mysterious lady named Helen. First finding refuge there from a pouring rain, he is eventually seduced to stay and enter into a sexual relationship. Eventually, however, he discovers that she is in the habit of killing her husbands, devouring them and drinking their blood, which keeps her young and beautiful, and that she had done it to 17 men before him. She also tries to kill Yosef but fails, wounds herself and eventually dies. She is then eaten by birds while Yosef the Peddler picks up his pack and resumes his wanderings.

===21st century===
Many books based on vampires are still being published, including several continuing series. ], inspired by Anne Rice, but mostly dropping the open sexuality of her characters in favor of more conventional sexual roles, is a remarkable contemporary publishing phenomenon.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2006-06-28-vampire-romance_x.htm |title=USATODAY.com - Romance fans: Vampires are just our type |website=] |access-date=2008-09-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=http://archive.wikiwix.com/cache/20110717090930/https://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2006-06-28-vampire-romance_x.htm |archive-date=2011-07-17 }} Vampire Romance</ref> Romances with handsome vampires as the male lead include ]' Argeneau family series (2003&ndash;), ] '']'' series (2001&ndash;2013), and ]'s Carpathian series (1999&ndash;). However, ]'s '']'' series has again shifted the genre boundaries from romance back toward the territory of erotica.

The ] subgenre is represented by ]'s '']'' fantasy series (2000&ndash;), and ]'s '']'' (2001&ndash;).

In the field of juvenile and young adult literature, ] wrote a 12-book series ('']'') about a boy who becomes a vampire's assistant, beginning with '']'' (2000) and ending with '']'' (2006). A film adaptation has been made of the first three books called '']'' (2009). He is also currently writing a prequel to the ''Saga'', a series of four books all about ] (one of the main characters) starting with ''Birth of a Killer'' (2010) and finishing with ''Brothers to the Death'' (2012). ] created a young adult series about Raven Madison and her vampire boyfriend Alexander Sterling, starting with ''Vampire Kisses'' (2005). In ]'s young adult novel '']'' (2005), the protagonist carries a contagious parasite that causes vampire-like behavior.

Count Dracula also continues to inspire novelists, for example ] in '']'' (2005).

Swedish author ]'s critically praised vampire story ''Låt den rätte komma in'' (2004), about the relationship of a 12-year-old boy with a 200-year-old vampire child, has now been translated into English as '']'' (2007) and ] has been produced. The story takes place in ], a suburb of Stockholm. This particular novel does not follow the modern romantic trend, and instead focuses on a human-vampire friendship. Crucially, it retains many of the vampire traits popularized by '']''.

]'s second book of the '']'' trilogy '']'' handles the vampire legend in the context of a ritualistic post-theatrical drama performance.<ref>Max Godwin Brown, With the People from the Bridge. Versal Magazine, Amsterdam 2015.http://www.versaljournal.org/blog/2015/3/12/with-the-people-from-the-bridge-by-dimitris-lyacos</ref> In a dystopian setting, under the arches of a derelict bridge, a group of social outcasts<ref>Bethany W. Pope, With the People from the Bridge. Ofi Press Magazine, Mexico City 2015.http://www.ofipress.com/lyacosdimitris.htm</ref> present an unconventional, non-Gothic version of a vampire drawing from ancient Greek religion<ref>An interview with Dimitris Lyacos. The Writing Disorder Magazine, Los Angeles 2015. {{cite web |url=http://writingdisorder.com/dimitris-lyacos/ |title=Dimitris Lyacos - the Writing Disorder |date=19 June 2015 |access-date=2015-06-22 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150622160514/http://writingdisorder.com/dimitris-lyacos/ |archive-date=2015-06-22 }}</ref> and literature, ] as well as traveler reports of vampire epidemics in the Balcans.<ref>Vampires, Burial and Death. Paul Barber. Yale University Press 2010.</ref> The story is recounted in a ] style that makes no explicit mention to vampires, the undead, graves or the Underworld, conveying, nevertheless, the underlying theme unambiguously and in striking physical detail.<ref>Ada Fetters, Review of Dimitris Lyacos's With the People from the Bridge. The Commonline Journal, Seattle Washington, 2015 {{cite web |url=http://www.commonlinejournal.com/2015/12/review-of-dimitris-lyacoss-with-people.html |title=The Commonline Journal: Review of Dimitris Lyacos's with the People from the Bridge &#124; Editor Note by Ada Fetters |access-date=2015-12-08 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208204751/http://www.commonlinejournal.com/2015/12/review-of-dimitris-lyacoss-with-people.html |archive-date=2015-12-08 }}</ref>

]' novel '']'' has explored a scientific basis for vampires, depicting them as an evolutionary offshoot from humanity who were not the dominant species on the planet solely due to an evolutionary glitch making them averse to Euclidean geometry (right angles cause seizures in what is called "Crucifix Glitch", leading to them dying out when modern technology with all its structures swept the world). Implied to have vastly superior intelligence and problem-solving capabilities, they were recreated from gene snippets for special tasks, with special drugs alleviating their crucifix glitch. One particularly important vampire trait is their ability to hibernate for extended periods of time, which makes cryogenic stasis possible and is applied to astronauts via gene-therapy. At the end of the novel it is implied the vampires have taken control of earth and may be exterminating baseline humanity.

In recent years, vampire fiction has been one of many supernatural fiction genres used in the creation of ]s. These works combine either a pre-existing text or a historic figure with elements of genre fiction. One of the best-known of these works is '']'' by ], in which the historic ] has a fictional secret identity as a hunter of evil vampires.

The 21st century brought more examples of vampire fiction, such as ]'s ] series, and other highly popular vampire books which appeal to teenagers and young adults. Such vampiric ] novels and allied vampiric ] and vampiric ] stories are a remarkably popular and ever-expanding contemporary publishing phenomenon.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110805040230/http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2006-06-28-vampire-romance_x.htm |date=5 August 2011 }}</ref> ]' '']'', ]'s erotic '']'' series, and ]'s '']'' series, portray the vampire in a variety of new perspectives, some of them unrelated to the original legends. Vampires in the ] (2005–2008) by ] ignore the effects of garlic and crosses and are not harmed by sunlight, although it does reveal their supernatural status.<ref name="slate">{{cite web|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2205143/|title=I Vant To Upend Your Expectations: Why film vampires always break all the vampire rules|last=Beam|first=Christopher|date=20 November 2008|website=Slate Magazine|access-date=2009-07-17|archive-date=16 September 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110916173859/http://www.slate.com/id/2205143/|url-status=live}}</ref> ] further deviates from traditional vampires in her '']'' series (2007–2010), basing the novels on Romanian lore with two races of vampires, one good and one evil, as well as half-vampires.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/east_king/kir/lifestyle/79852562.html|title=Vampire buzz takes bite in Kirkland|publisher=Pnwlocalnews.com|date=21 December 2009|access-date=2010-12-05|archive-date=15 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110715094826/http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/east_king/kir/lifestyle/79852562.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

==Traits of vampires in fiction==<!-- This section is linked from ] -->
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2014}}
The traits of the literary vampire have evolved from the often repulsive figures of folklore. Fictional vampires can be romantic figures, often described as elegant and sexy (compare demons such as ] and ]). This is in stark contrast to the vampire of Eastern European folklore, which was a horrifying animated corpse. However, as in folklore, the literary vampire is sustained by drinking blood. They do not need other food, water, or even oxygen. They are sometimes portrayed as being unable to eat human food at all, forcing them to either avoid public dining or mime chewing and eating to deceive their mortal victims. The fictional vampire, however, often has a pale appearance rather than the dark or ruddy skin of folkloric vampires and their skin is cool to the touch. As in folklore, literary vampires can usually be warded off with ] and symbols of the Christian faith, such as ], a ], or a ].

According to literary scholar ] in ''Our Vampires, Ourselves'', the influence of the moon was seen as dominant in the earliest examples of vampire literature:

{{Quote|For at least fifty years after Planche's Vampire, the moon was the central ingredient of vampire iconography; vampire's solitary and repetitive lives consisted of incessant deaths and – when the moon shone down on them – quivering rebirths. Ruthven, Varney and Raby need marriage and blood to replenish their vitality but they turn for renewed life to the moon...a corpse quivering to life under the moon's rays is the central image of midcentury vampire literature; fangs, penetration, sucking and staking are all peripheral to its lunar obsession.}}

Bram Stoker's ''Dracula'' was hugely influential in its depiction of vampire traits, some of which are described by the novel's vampire expert ].
Dracula has the ability to change his shape at will, his featured forms in the novel being that of a wolf, bat, mist and fog. He can also crawl up and down the vertical external walls of his castle in the manner of a lizard. One very famous trait that Stoker added is the inability to be seen in mirrors, which is not found in traditional Eastern European folklore, as Stoker combined the folklore of ] being terrified of their own reflection with the material fact of the silver backed mirrors of the time. Dracula also had protruding teeth, though was preceded in this by Varney the Vampire and Carmilla.
In Anne Rice's books, the vampires appear their best self of the age they were turned into a vampire; for instance, when Claudia was turned into a vampire, her golden curls became tight and voluminous, her skin turns a pale but smooth and clear, and rids her of the rotting disease. But it also seems like a curse as she retains her child-body for her entire vampire lifetime and any modifications on her body, such as even cutting her hair, grows it back to the same length as it was before.
A similar occurrence can be observed in the ''Twilight'' series - when Bella is turned into a vampire, her wounds heal, hair becomes healthy and shiny, her broken back and ribs get mended, the color comes back to her skin, and her sunken eyes, cheeks and skinny body return to a healthy state; in fact she is brought back to life from the brink of death by turning her into a vampire.

In the ''Dracula'' novel, the vampire hunter Van Helsing prescribes that a vampire be destroyed by a wooden stake (preferably made of ]) through the heart, ], drowning, or incineration. The vampire's head must be removed from its body, the mouth stuffed with ] and holy water or relics, the body drawn and quartered, then burned and spread into the four winds, with the head buried on hallowed ground. The destruction of the vampire Lucy follows the three-part process enjoined by Van Helsing (staking, decapitation, and garlic in the mouth).

Traditional vampire folklore, followed by Stoker in ''Dracula'', does not usually hold that sunlight is fatal to vampires, though they are nocturnal. It is also notable in the novel that Dracula can walk about in the daylight, in bright sunshine, though apparently in discomfort and without the ability to use most of his powers, like turning into mist or a bat. He is still strong and fast enough to struggle with and escape from most of his male pursuers. Fatal exposure to sunlight of a vampire in their coffin dates at least as far back as ''The Story Of Yand Manor House'' (1898) by E. and H. Heron; such scenes in ] however, most especially 1922's '']'' and the closing scene of the 1958 film '']'' in which Count Dracula is burnt by the sun, were very influential on later vampire fiction. For instance, Anne Rice's vampire Lestat and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's Count Saint-Germain both avoid the lethal effects of daylight by staying closeted indoors during the day.<ref>Nina Auerbach (1981)'' Our Vampires, Ourselves'': 119&ndash;47.</ref>

A well-known set of special powers and weaknesses is commonly associated with vampires in contemporary fiction. There is a tendency, however, for authors to pick and choose the ones they like, or find more realistic ones, and have their characters ridicule the rest as absurd. For example, in the movie '']'', the vampire hunter ] tells Karen Jenson what kills vampires (stakes, silver, and sunlight), and dismisses tactics seen in vampire movies (namely crosses and running water) as ineffective.<ref>''Blade'' Distributed by New Line Cinema (released August 21, 1998) ''About 49 minutes in, Blade gives Karen a quick "Vampire Anatomy 101" lesson in what kills vampires and what doesn't.''</ref> Some vampires can fly. This power may be supernatural levitation, or it may be connected to the vampire's shape-shifting ability. Some traditions hold that a vampire cannot enter a house unless he or she is invited in. Generally, a vampire needs be invited in only once and then can come and go at will. ]'s novel '']'' explored an unusual direction with this myth in having one of the protagonists revoke a vampire's invitation to a house; the vampire was forced to flee the building immediately. This is also featured in the American TV series '']'', where Sookie withdraws her invitation on a number of occasions, causing vampires to be thrown out by supernatural forces. Also, in '']'' when a newly turned vampire wakes up in a house that he was not invited into, he immediately flees.

Some tales maintain that vampires must return to a coffin or to their "native soil" before sunrise to take their rest safely. Others place native soil in their coffins, especially if they have relocated. Still other vampire stories, such as Le Fanu's '']'', maintain that vampires must return to their coffins, but sleep in several inches of blood as opposed to soil. Vampires are generally held to be unable to bear children, though the concept of a "half vampire" and similar creatures does exist in folklore and in some modern fiction. Some fictional vampires are fascinated with counting, an idea derived from folk stories about vampires being compelled to stop and count any spilled grain that they find in their path. The most famous fictional counting vampire is likely the ] character ] on television's '']''. Other examples include a ] episode of the '']'' titled '']'', and the ] novel, '']'' by ]. Some modern fictional vampires are portrayed as having magical powers beyond those originally assigned by myth, typically also possessing the powers of a witch or seer. Such examples include ] from '']'' (Drusilla was a seer before she was a vampire, and carried those powers into her undeath), and ] from ''The Nightshade Chronicles''. Also, vampires from the ''Vampire Academy'' books, also known as the moroi, are skilled in elemental magic. Also, in the ''Twilight'' series, certain vampires appear to have special gifts like Edward (telepathy), Alice (visions), Bella (shielding), that are either supernatural or evolved from their own personalities like Victoria (survival instinct).

===Vampire hybrids===<!-- This section is linked from ] -->

{{Main|Dhampir}}
{{Main|List of fictional dhampirs}}

The ], the offspring of a vampire and a human known from Serbian folklore, has been popularized in recent fiction.

=={{anchor|Timeline of Vampire Literature}}Literature==
===Poems===
* ''Der Vampir'' (''The Vampire'') by ] (1748)<ref>{{cite book|last= Melton|first=J. Gordon|title=The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead|year= 2010|publisher= Visible Ink|isbn=978-1578590766|pages=xxiii|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BwmGVdVxJ18C&pg=PR23}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Hallab|first=Mary|title=Vampire God: The Allure of the Undead in Western Culture|year=2009|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-1438428598|pages=74|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FFP_Z2hY7FoC&pg=PA74}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1774), including a story of fighting against vampires<ref>Biljana Oklopčić, Ana-Marija Posavec (2013) ''Gotički tekst, kontekst i intertekst Tajne Krvavoga mosta''</ref>
* ] by ] (1797)
* '']'' by ] (1801)
* ''The Vampyre'' by ] (1810)<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.simplysupernatural-vampire.com/vampire-characteristics-preDracula.html|title=Pre-Dracula Vampire Characteristics Tracked Through Stories and Poems|website=simplysupernatural-vampire.com |access-date=4 May 2018|url-status=dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120706024334/http://www.simplysupernatural-vampire.com/vampire-characteristics-preDracula.html|archive-date=6 July 2012|df=dmy-all}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1813)
* '']'' by ] (1816)
* '']'' by ] (1820)<!-- https://web.archive.org/web/20090923212011/http://lesvampires.org/lit_older.html --><ref name="lesvampires/belledame">{{cite web |last1=Keats |first1=John |author1-link=John Keats |title=La Belle Dame Sans Merci |url=http://www.lesvampires.org/belledame.html |website=lesvampires.org |access-date=25 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090923185514/http://www.lesvampires.org/belledame.html |archive-date=23 September 2009 |date=1820}}</ref>
* "Vurdalak" by ] (1836)
* '']'' by ] (1845)<ref name="lesvampires/maxwell">{{cite web |last1=Maxwell |first1=James Clerk |author1-link=James Clerk Maxwell |title=The Vampyre, Compylt into Meeter |url=http://www.lesvampires.org/maxwell.html |access-date=25 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090924122215/http://www.lesvampires.org/maxwell.html |archive-date=24 September 2009 |date=1845}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1857)<ref name="lesvampires/baudelaire">{{cite web |last1=Baudelaire |first1=Charles |author1-link=Charles Baudelaire |title=Metamorphosis of the Vampire |url=http://www.lesvampires.org/baudelaire.html |website=lesvampires.org |access-date=25 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090923175945/http://www.lesvampires.org/baudelaire.html |archive-date=23 September 2009 |quote=Translated by ] |date=1857}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1897)<ref>{{cite web |title=Strigoiul (Vasile Alecsandri) |url=https://ro.wikisource.org/Strigoiul_(Vasile_Alecsandri) |website=ro.].org |access-date=25 April 2023 |language=ro}}</ref><ref name="isfdb/3168476">{{cite web |last1=Alecsandri |first1=Vasile |author1-link=Vasile Alecsandri |title=Strigoiul |url=https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?3168476 |website=] |access-date=25 April 2023 |date=1886}}</ref><ref name="GALE%7CA418846239">{{cite journal |last1=Tudor |first1=Lucia-Alexandra |title=Children of the night |journal=Romanian Journal of Artistic Creativity |date=22 March 2015 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=60–104 |url=https://go.gale.com/ps/anonymous?id=GALE%7CA418846239 |access-date=25 April 2023 |language=English}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1897)<ref name="frameliteraryjournal/24-2/morey-nelson">{{cite journal |last1=Morey |first1=Anne M. |last2=Nelson |first2=Claudia |title=Phallus and Void in Kipling's 'The Vampire' and Its Progeny |journal=Frame Journal of Literary Studies |publisher=] |date=2011 |volume=24 |issue=2 |pages=39–55 |url=<!-- https://www.tijdschriftframe.nl/24-2-literatuur-en-erotiek/anne-morey-and-claudia-nelson-phallus-and-void-in-kiplings-the-vampire-and-its-progeny/ https://scholars.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n92640SE/Documents/View%20All https://www.frameliteraryjournal.com/24-2-literatuur-en-erotiek/anne-morey-and-claudia-nelson-phallus-and-void-in-kiplings-the-vampire-and-its-progeny/ -->http://www.frameliteraryjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/04.-Anne-orey-and-Claudia-Nelson-Phallus-and-Void-in-Kiplings-The-Vampire-and-Its-Progeny-main.pdf |access-date=25 April 2023}}</ref><ref name="libraries.ua.edu/3261">{{cite web |title=The Vampire, Rudyard Kipling, circa 1900 |url=https://digitalcollections.libraries.ua.edu/digital/collection/u0003_0000313/id/3261/ |website=Henry De Lamar Clayton Sr. papers |publisher=] Libraries Special Collections |access-date=25 April 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Poetry, Vampires in |url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Poetry%2C+Vampires+in |website=] |access-date=25 April 2023}}</ref><ref>]</ref><ref name="jwa/bara-theda">{{cite web |title=Theda Bara |url=https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/bara-theda |website=] |access-date=25 April 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
** '']'' by ] (1897)<ref name="elt.2012.0042">{{cite journal |last1=Mitchell<!-- https://hcommons.org/members/jmitchell/
https://myaggienation.com/am_news/professor-j-lawrence-mitchell-shares-rare-boxing-and-literature-artifacts-in-exhibit/article_0cd00844-bee1-11e4-9a0b-3b486868ebe1.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20200830162024/https://liberalarts.tamu.edu/english/profile/j-lawrence-mitchell/ --> |first1=J. Lawrence |title=Rudyard Kipling, The Vampire, and the Actress |journal=English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920 |date=2012 |volume=55 |issue=3 |pages=303–314 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/74/article/479931 |access-date=25 April 2023 |issn=1559-2715}}</ref>
* '']'' by ] (1924)<ref name="vampires/aiken">{{cite web |title=The Hauntingly Beautiful Poetry of Conrad Aiken |url=https://www.vampires.com/the-hauntingly-beautiful-poetry-of-conrad-aiken/ |website=Vampires |access-date=25 April 2023 |date=17 May 2012}}</ref><ref name="poets.org/vampire">{{cite web |title=The Vampire by Conrad Aiken - Poems |url=https://poets.org/poem/vampire |website=] |publisher=]}}</ref><ref name="isfdb/2087945">{{cite magazine |last1=Aiken |first1=Conrad |author1-link=Conrad Aiken |title=The Vampire: 1914 |url=https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?2087945 |access-date=25 April 2023 |magazine=] |date=9 April 1924 |via=]}}</ref><ref name="lesvampires/aiken">{{cite web |last1=Aiken |first1=Conrad |author1-link=Conrad Aiken |title=The Vampire - 1914 |url=http://www.lesvampires.org/aiken.html |website=Les Vampires |access-date=25 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090925031054/http://www.lesvampires.org/aiken.html |archive-date=25 September 2009}}</ref><ref name="google/books=MjMuAAAAIAAJ">{{cite book |last1=Aiken |first1=Conrad |author1-link=Conrad Aiken |editor1-last=Burns |editor1-first=Vincent Godfrey |editor1-link=Vincent Godfrey Burns |title=The Red Harvest: A Cry for Peace |date=1930 |publisher=Macmillan |url=https://www.abaa.org/book/27971236 |access-date=25 April 2023 |language=en |chapter=The Vampire: 1914 |quote=Anti-war poetry}}</ref><ref name="Vampire-Verse-Anthology">{{cite book |last1=Aiken |first1=Conrad |author1-link=Conrad Aiken |chapter=The Vampire: 1914 |editor1-last=Moore |editor1-first=Steven |editor1-link=Steven Moore (author) |title=The Vampire in Verse: An Anthology |date=1985 |publisher=Dracula Press |isbn=978-0-9611944-1-3 |oclc=13189452 |url=http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13189452 |access-date=25 April 2023 |language=en}}</ref>

===Prose===
*'']'', unfinished vampire story by ] (1819)
*'']'' by ] (1819)
*'']'' by Uriah D'Arcy (1819)
* '']'' by ] (1820) (often attributed to ] who, as a matter of a fact, only made the theater play version of it)
*''Vampirismus'' by ] (1821)
* '']'' by ] (1823), often misattributed to ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Crawford|first=Heide|title=The Origins of the Literary Vampire|year=2016|publisher=Rowmann & Littlefield|isbn=9781442266742|pages=87–88|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jt7dDAAAQBAJ&q=tieck+or+raupach&pg=PA87}}</ref>
* ''The Virgin Vampire'' by Étienne-Léon de Lamothe-Langon (1825)
* '']'' (The Dead Woman in Love) by ] (1836)
* '']'' by ] (1843)
* ''] or The Feast of Blood'' by ] (or ]) (1847)
* ''Vampire'' by ] (1848)
* ''The Pale Lady'' by ] (1849)
* ''The Mysterious Stranger'' by ] (translated from the original German, this vampire tale appeared in the English magazine ''Odds and Ends'' in 1860)
* '']'' (''Knightshade'') by ] (1860)
* '']'' (''The Vampire Countess'') by ] (1865)
* '']'' (''The Immortal Woman'') by ] (1869)
* '']'' (''The Vampire: True Story'') by ] (1869)
* '']'' (1872) by ]
* '']'' (''Vampire City'') by Paul Féval (1874)
* '']'' (''Captain Vampire'') by ] (1879)
* '']'' by ] (1880)
* '']'' by ] (1880)
* ''Manor'' by ] (1884)
* '']'' by ] (1894)
* '']'' by ] (1895)
* '']'' by ] (1897)
* '']'' by ] (1897)
* ''The Tomb of Sarah'' by ] (1900)
* '']'' by ] (1907)
* ''Vampiro'' by ] (1908)
* '']'' by ] (1911)
* ''For the Blood is the Life'' by ] (1911)
* ''Wampir ("The Vampire")'' by ] (1911)
* '']'' by ] (1912)
* "]" by ] (1914)
* ''The Vampire'' by ] (1920 – posthumous)
* ''Mrs. Amworth'' by ] (1922)
* ''Bewitched'' by ] (1927)
* "The Hills of the Dead" by ] (1930)
* ''The Dark Castle'' by Marion Brandon (1931)
* ''Revelations in Black'' by ] (1933)
* ''Vampires Overhead'' by Alan Hyder (1935)
* ''Doom of the House of Duryea'' by Earl Peirce Jr. (1936)
* '']'' by ] (1936)
* "The Man Upstairs" by ] (1943)
* ''The Girl with the Hungry Eyes'' by ] (1949)
* '']'' by ] (1954)
* "The Longest Night" by ] (1960)
*''Progeny of the Adder'' by ] (1965)
*''Vampire's Moon'' by ] (1970)
*''The Night Stalker'' by ] (1973)
*''Pages from a Young Girl's Journal'' by ] (1973)
* '']'' by ] (1975)
** "]" by ] (1977). A sequel to '']''
** "]" by ] (1988)
** "]" by ] (1993)
** "]" by ] (1998)
** "]" by ] (2003)
** "]" by ] (2004)
*'']'' by Anne Rice (1976)
*'']'' by ] (1977)
* '']'' by ] (1981)
* '']'' by ] (1981)
* '']'' by ] (1981)
* '']'' by ] (1981)
* '']'' by ] (1982)
* '']'' by ] (1982)
* '']'' by ] (1983)
* '']'' by ] and ] (1986)
* '']'' (UK title: ''Immortal Blood'') by ] (1988)
* '']'' by ] (1989)
* '']'' by ] (1990)
* '']'' by ] (1991)
* '']'' by ] (1991)
* ''Vampire of the Mists'' by ] (1991)
* ''Knight of the Black Rose'' by ] (1991)
*''Children of the Night'' by ] (1992)
* '']'' by ] (1992)
*''Agyar'' by ] (1993)
* The books ''I, Strahd, Memories of the Vampire'' (1993) and ''I, Strahd, the War with Azalin'' by ] tells the tale of the vampire lord ], who occupies the castle ]
* ''Travelling with the Dead'' by ] (1995). A sequel to ''Immortal Blood''
* '']'' by ] (1997) (commissioned by Penguin books as a sequel to Bram Stoker's ''Dracula'' for the centenary of the latter's first publication)
* '']'' by ] (1998)
* '']'' by ] (2003)
* '']'' (''Låt Den Rätte Komma In'' in the original Swedish) by ] (2004). Translated into English in 2007
* '']'' by ] (2005)
* '']'' by ] (2005)
* ''Renfield: Slave of Dracula'' by ] (2006)
* "Morrigan's Cross", "Dance of the Gods" and "Valley of Silence" (The Circle Trilogy) by ] (2006)
* ''Empire V'' (the original Russian title ''Ампир В'' is an acronym of the word "vampire") by ] (2006)
*'']'' by John Marks (2007)
*''Blood Oath'' by ] (2010).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/37567/blood-oath-a-political-thriller-novel-with-vampires|title=Sylvester Stallone Tracking Creatures in the Arctic Circle in Hunter - Dread Central|website=www.dreadcentral.com|date=18 September 2012 |access-date=4 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121014005550/http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/37567/blood-oath-a-political-thriller-novel-with-vampires|archive-date=14 October 2012}}</ref>
* ''Modern Marvels – Viktoriana'' by ] (2011)
* ''Batman Apollo'' (original Russian title ''Бэтман Аполло'') by ] (2013)
*'']'' by ] (2013)
* '']'' by ] (2013). A sequel to King's novel '']'' (1977)
* '']'' by ] (2014)
* '']'' by ] (2014)
* ''Vlad, the last confession'' by ]
*''The Orange Spong and Storytelling at the Vamp-Art Café'' by ] (2020)
*''Silver Under Nightfall'' by ] (2022)

==Fiction series==
There are several recent series in vampire fiction, of variable literary quality. They tend to either take the form of direct ]s (or ]s) to the first book published or detail the ongoing adventures of particular characters.

* ] - '']'' series (2007 to 2014 - excluding spin-off books)
* ]'s ''Midnight Breed'' series (2007&ndash;)
*]'s '']'' series (1983&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Austra Vampires'' series (1989&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Guardians of The Night'' series (2006&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series (2000&ndash;). Not all of these novels concern themselves largely with vampires, but a war between vampires and wizards figures heavily in the story
* ] and ]'s '']'' series
* ]'s ''The Immortals After Dark'' series (2006&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series (1989&ndash;)
* ]' ''Don Sebastian: Vampire Chronicles'' series
* ]'s '']'' series (2004&ndash;)
* ] with ]'s '']'' (2009), '']'' (2010) and '']'' (2011) ''(La trilogía de la oscuridad)''
* ]'s '']'' series (1990&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Jonathan Barrett, Gentleman Vampire'' series
* ]'s ''Dark'' series (1999&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Night Huntress'' series (2007&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Shadow Saga'' (1994&ndash;2014)
* ]'s '']'' series (1993&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' (2001&ndash;2013)
* ]'s '']'' series (2004&ndash;)
* ]'s Blood Books series (1991&ndash;1997)
* ]'s ] series (2009&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Joe Pitt Casefiles'' series (2005&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' (2009&ndash;)
* ]s ''] (2010),'' '']'' (2012) and '']'' (2016)
* ]'s '']'' (2002&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series (2003&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series (1986&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' and '']'' series
* ]'s '']'' series (2005&ndash;2008)
* ]'s '']'' (2011&ndash;2018)
* ]'s ''A Love Story'' series (1995&ndash;2007)
* ]'s '']'' series (1992&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series (1976&ndash;2018)
* ]'s ] series (1966&ndash;1971)
* ]'s ''Vlad Tepes'' series (1975&ndash;2002)
* ]'s '']'' series (2000&ndash;2006)
* ]'s ''Wings in the Night'' series (1993&ndash;)
* ] '']'' series
* ]'s ''Anna Strong'' series
* ]'s ''The Hunger'' series (1981&ndash;2002)
* ]'s ''Black Dagger Brotherhood'' series (2011&ndash;)
* ]'s ''Bloodwine'' series (1992&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'' (Laura Caxton, James Arkeley series)
* ]'s '']'' ] (1999&ndash;2001)
* ]'s ''Saint-Germain'' series (1978&ndash;)
* ]'s '']'' series

], a maker of ], releases novels set in the fantasy world of its '']'' game. These series of novels were released in 13-book sets, each corresponding to one of the 13 clans of vampires in their game universe.

==Juvenile fiction==
* '']'' series by ] (2007 to 2014 - excluding spin-off books)
* '']'' series by ] (1979)
* The '']'' series by ] and ] (1979)
* The '']'' series by ] (1985)
* The ''Darkangel'' series by ] (1982&ndash;1990)
* '']'' series by ] (1991&ndash;)
* The '']'' series by ] (1996&ndash;)
* ''The Silver Kiss'' by ] (1992)
* '']'' series by ] (1994&ndash;)
* '']'' (1995) by ]
* ''How to Be a Vampire'' (1996) by ]
**"A Vampire in the Neighborhood" short story in ''Tales to Give you Goosebumps'' by ] (1994)
**'']'' book #49 in the '']'' series by ] (1996)
**'']'' book #15 in the '']'' series by ] (1997)
**'']'' series by ] (2007)
**'']'' book #6 in the '']'' series by ] (2009)
**'']'' book #13 in the '']'' series by ] (2009)
**''Goosebumps Monster Survival Guide'' (2015)
*'']'' (1984) book #31 in ''Choose Your Own Adventure''
**'']'' (1996) book #7 in ''Choose Your Own Nightmare''
* ]'s novels '']'' (1999), '']'' (2000), '']'' (2001), '']'' (2002) and ''Persistence of Memory'' (2008)
* '']'', also known as the ''Cirque Du Freak'' series (2000&ndash;2004) by ]
* '']'' by ] (2003)
* The ''Vampire Kisses'' series by ] (2005&ndash;)
* '']'' by ] (2005)
* The '']'' series by ] (2005&ndash;2008)
* '']'' by ] (2006)
* The '']'' series by ] (2006&ndash;)
* The '']'' series by ] (2006&ndash;2010)
* ''Tantalize'' by ] (2007)
* The '']'' series by P. C. Cast and Kristin Cast (2007&ndash;)
* ''The Reformed Vampire Support Group'' by ] (2009)
* '']'' by Beth Fantaskey (2009)
* The '']'' series by ] and Joseph Wright (1986&ndash;2001)
* '']'' by ] (2013)
* The '']'' series by ] (2015-2021)
* The ''Crave'' series by Tracy Wolff (2020-2023)

== Vampire fiction based on TV series ==
*'']''; see: ]
*'']''; see: ]
*'']''; see:
** ]
** ]
*'']''; see: ]
* '']''; see:
** '']''
** '']''
** '']''
** '']''
** '']''
** '']''
** '']''
*'']''; see '']'' (novels #6-32)
*'']''; see ]
*'']''; see '']''
*'']''; see '']''
*'']''; see: '']''

== Comic books ==
Comic books and graphic novels which feature vampires include '']'' (Warren Publishing, 1969), '']'' (Marvel, 1971), '']'' (Shogakukan 1972), '']'' (Marvel Comics, 1972), '']'' (Marvel, 1973), '']'' (DC Comics, 1981), '']'' (Shonen Gahosha, 1997), '']'' (Shodensha, 1999–unknown), '']'' (IDW Publishing, 2002), '']'' (Monthly Dragon Age, 2003), '']'' (''Weekly Shonen Jump'' 1986–2004, ''Ultra Jump'' 2004-) '']'' (''Monthly Shōnen Jump'' 2004), '']'' (LaLa, 2005), '']'' (MediaWorks, 2005), '']'' (Silent Devil Productions, 2005), '']'' (Media Factory, 2006), '']: Guilty Pleasures'' (Dabel Brothers Productions/Marvel Comics, 2007), ''Half Dead'' (Dabel Brothers Productions/Marvel Comics, 2007), '']'' (Dark Horse Comics, 2007), '']'' (Akita Shoten, 2008), '']'' (Viper Comics, 2010), '']'' (2010)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/|title=Stephenie Meyer - The Official website|website=Stephenie Meyer|access-date=4 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081026033055/http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/|archive-date=26 October 2008}}</ref> and '']'' (Kodansha, 2010).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2014-07-28/aya-shouoto-he-my-only-vampire-manga-will-end-in-2-more-chapters/.77050|title= Aya Shouoto's He's My Only Vampire Manga Will End in 2 More Chapters|date= 28 July 2014|access-date= 28 July 2014|work= ]|url-status= live|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140729200652/http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2014-07-28/aya-shouoto-he-my-only-vampire-manga-will-end-in-2-more-chapters/.77050|archive-date= 29 July 2014}}</ref>

], the supporting lead male in ]' comic book series '']'' (DC/Vertigo, 1995), is a vampire of Irish origin. In addition, many major superheroes have faced vampire supervillains at some point. In the Belgo-French comic ''Le Bal du rat mort'',<ref>{{in lang|fr}}]</ref> police inspector Jean Lamorgue is a hybrid vampire and he is a king of rats. He is guiding an invasion of ]s in ] and he sucks the blood of his human victims.

In 2009, ] Comics launched '']'', a story of teenage vampirism in a Catholic orphanage taking place in South ]. The story follows new girl Maddie in a world of ninja nuns and black magic.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.comicmonsters.com/features-1063-LaMorte_Sisters_Interview_with_Tony_Trov_and_Johnny_Zito.html |title=Horror Comic Book News - Comic Monsters -LaMorte Sisters Interview with Tony Trov and Johnny Zito |access-date=2009-12-03 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091207170703/http://www.comicmonsters.com/features-1063-LaMorte_Sisters_Interview_with_Tony_Trov_and_Johnny_Zito.html |archive-date=2009-12-07 }}</ref>

'']'', created by Scott Snyder, was published in 2010. It explores the idea of the evolution of vampires, leading to new species throughout American history.

== Magazines ==
Magazines which feature vampires include ''Bite me'' magazine (launched 1999). Typical features include interviews with vampire actors, features on famous vampire film classics, vampire-related news, forthcoming vampire film and book releases.
Defunct vampire magazines include ''Crimson'' (England); ''Journal of the Dark'' (US), Father Sebastiaan's ''Vampyre Magazine'' (US) and ''The Velvet Vampyre'' (available to members of the disbanded The Vampyre Society, England).

==See also==
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]

==References==
{{Reflist}}

== Bibliography ==
{{Library resources box
|onlinebooks=no
|by=no
}}
* Freelad, Cynthia A. (2000) ''The Naked and the Undead: Evil and the Appeal of Horror''. Westview Pres Adaptations. Greenwood Press.
* Melton, J. Gordon. (1999) ''The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead''. Visible Ink Press.
* ] (1928) ''The Vampire: His Kith and Kin'', (book reprinted with alternate title: ''Vampires and Vampirism'' {{ISBN|0-486-43996-8}}). Chapter 5 - "The Vampire in Literature" is reprinted in Clive Bloom (2007) ''Gothic Horror'': 108–126. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
*
*
*M. J. Trow (2003) ''Vlad the Impaler''. Sutton: Stroud.

{{Horror fiction}}
{{Fantasy fiction}}
{{Film genres}}
{{Gothic}}
{{Goth subculture}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Vampire Literature}}
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Latest revision as of 04:56, 27 December 2024

Speculative literary genre
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Artwork based on Sheridan le Fanu's Carmilla, an early and influential work of vampire literature.

Vampire literature covers the spectrum of literary work concerned principally with the subject of vampires. The literary vampire first appeared in 18th-century poetry, before becoming one of the stock figures of gothic fiction with the publication of Polidori's The Vampyre (1819), inspired by a story told to him by Lord Byron. Later influential works include the penny dreadful Varney the Vampire (1847); Sheridan Le Fanu's tale of a lesbian vampire, Carmilla (1872), and the most well known: Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897). Some authors created a more "sympathetic vampire", with Varney being the first, and more recent examples such as Moto Hagio's series The Poe Clan (1972–1976) and Anne Rice's novel Interview with the Vampire (1976) proving influential.

History

18th century

Vampire fiction is rooted in the "vampire craze" of the 1720s and 1730s, which culminated in the somewhat bizarre official exhumations of suspected vampires Petar Blagojevich and Arnold Paole in Serbia under the Habsburg monarchy. One of the first works of art to touch upon the subject is the short German poem The Vampire (1748) by Heinrich August Ossenfelder, where the theme already has strong erotic overtones: a man whose love is rejected by a respectable and pious maiden threatens to pay her a nightly visit, drink her blood by giving her the seductive kiss of the vampire and thus prove to her that his teaching is better than her mother's Christianity. Furthermore, there have been a number of tales about a dead person returning from the grave to visit his/her beloved or spouse and bring them death in one way or another, the narrative poem Lenore (1773) by Gottfried August Bürger being a notable 18th-century example (though the apparently returned lover is actually revealed to be death himself in disguise). One of its lines, Denn die Todten reiten schnell ("For the dead ride fast"), was to be quoted in Bram Stoker's classic Dracula. A later German poem exploring the same subject with a prominent vampiric element was The Bride of Corinth (1797) by Goethe, a story about a young woman who returns from the grave to seek her betrothed:

From my grave to wander I am forced
Still to seek the God's long sever'd link,
Still to love the bridegroom I have lost,
And the lifeblood of his heart to drink.

The story is turned into an expression of the conflict between Heathendom and Christianity: the family of the dead girl are Christians, while the young man and his relatives are still pagans. It turns out that it was the girl's Christian mother who broke off her engagement and forced her to become a nun, eventually driving her to her death. The motive behind the girl's return as a "spectre" is that "e'en Earth can never cool down love". Goethe had been inspired by the story of Philinnion by Phlegon of Tralles, a tale from classical Greece. However, in that tale, the youth is not the girl's betrothed, no religious conflict is present, no actual sucking of blood occurs, and the girl's return from the dead is said to be sanctioned by the gods of the Underworld. She relapses into death upon being exposed, and the issue is settled by burning her body outside of the city walls and making an apotropaic sacrifice to the deities involved.

19th century

The first mention of vampires in English literature appears in Robert Southey's monumental oriental epic poem Thalaba the Destroyer (1801), where the main character Thalaba's deceased beloved Oneiza turns into a vampire, although that occurrence is actually marginal to the story. It has been argued that Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem Christabel (written between 1797 and 1801, but not published until 1816) has influenced the development of vampire fiction: the heroine Christabel is seduced by a female supernatural being called Geraldine who tricks her way into her residence. Though Coleridge never finished the poem, some argue that his intended plot had Geraldine eventually trying to marry Christabel after having assumed the appearance of Christabel's absent lover. The story bears a remarkable resemblance to the overtly vampiric story of Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu (1872).

In a passage in his epic poem The Giaour (1813), Lord Byron alludes to the traditional folkloric conception of the vampire as a being damned to suck the blood and destroy the life of its nearest relations:

But first, on earth as vampire sent,
Thy corpse shall from its tomb be rent:
Then ghostly haunt thy native place,
And suck the blood of all thy race;

There from thy daughter, sister, wife,
At midnight drain the stream of life;
Yet loathe the banquet which perforce
Must feed thy livid living corpse:
Thy victims ere they yet expire
Shall know thy demon for their sire,
As cursing thee, thou cursing them,
Thy flowers are withered on the stem.

Byron also composed an enigmatic fragmentary story, published as "A Fragment" in 1819 as part of the Mazeppa collection, concerning the mysterious fate of an aristocrat named Augustus Darvell whilst journeying in the Orient—as his contribution to the famous ghost story competition at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva in the summer of 1816, between him, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley and John William Polidori (who was Byron's personal physician). This story provided the basis for The Vampyre (1819) by Polidori. Byron's own wild life became the model for Polidori's undead protagonist Lord Ruthven. According to A. Asbjorn Jon, "the choice of name is presumably linked to Lady Caroline Lamb's earlier novel Glenarvon, where it was used for a rather ill disguised Byronesque character".

An unauthorized sequel to Polidori's tale by Cyprien Bérard called Lord Ruthwen ou les Vampires (1820) was attributed to Charles Nodier. Nodier himself adapted "The Vampyre" into the first vampire stage melodrama, Le Vampire. Unlike Polidori's original story, Nodier's play was set in Scotland. This, in turn, was adapted by the English melodramatist James Planché as The Vampire; or, the Bride of the Isles (1820) at the Lyceum (then called the English Opera House), also set in Scotland. Planché introduced the "vampire trap" as a way for the title fiend to appear in a dream at the beginning and then to vanish into the earth at his destruction. Nodier's play was also the basis of an opera called Der Vampyr by the German composer Heinrich Marschner, who set the story in a more plausible Wallachia. Planché in turn translated the libretto of this opera into English in 1827, where it was performed at the Lyceum also. Alexandre Dumas, père later redramatized the story in a play also entitled Le Vampire (1851). Another theatrical vampire of this period was "Sir Alan Raby", who is the lead character of The Vampire (1852), a play by Dion Boucicault. Boucicault himself played the lead role to great effect, though the play itself had mixed reviews. Queen Victoria, who saw the play, described it in her diary as "very trashy".

An important later example of 19th-century vampire fiction is the penny dreadful epic Varney the Vampire (1847), featuring Sir Francis Varney as the vampire. In this story, we have the first example of the standard trope in which the vampire comes through the window at night and attacks a maiden as she lies sleeping. Heathcliff in Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) is suspected of being a vampire by his housekeeper at one point, which he immediately laughs off as "absurd nonsense".

Fascinating erotic fixations are evident in Sheridan Le Fanu's classic novella Carmilla (1872), which features a female vampire with lesbian inclinations who seduces the heroine Laura while draining her of her vital fluids. Le Fanu's story is set in the Duchy of Styria. Such central European locations became a standard feature of vampire fiction.

Another important example of the development of vampire fiction can be found in three seminal novels by Paul Féval: Le Chevalier Ténèbre (1860), La Vampire (1865) and La Ville Vampire (1874). Marie Nizet's Le Capitaine Vampire (1879) features a Russian officer, Boris Liatoukine, who is a vampire.

In German literature, one of the most popular novels was Hans Wachenhusen's Der Vampyr – Novelle aus Bulgarien (1878), which, on account of the author's first-hand experience of Ottoman society, includes a detailed description of the multicultural society of Bulgaria, and which contains an atmosphere that is "in some parts comparable to Dracula".

The most famous Serbian vampire was Sava Savanović, from a folklore-inspired novel, Ninety Years Later, by Milovan Glišić, first published in 1880. Serbian vampires—albeit depicted first in French (1839) and then Russian (1884)—also appear in Count Tolstoy's novella The Family of the Vourdalak.

Karl Heinrich Ulrichs published the short story “Manor” in 1885, about two sailors and lovers. When the older of the two, Manor, drowns at sea he returns to his lover Har each night to suck his blood and lay together.

Dracula

Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) has been the definitive description of the vampire in popular fiction for the last century. Its portrayal of vampirism as a disease (contagious demonic possession), with its undertones of sex, blood, and death, struck a chord in a Victorian Britain where tuberculosis and syphilis were common.

Although it has been claimed that the character of Count Dracula is based upon Vlad Draculesti III (Vlad the Impaler), also known as Vlad Ţepeş', a notorious 15th-century Wallachian (Romanian) warlord, or Voivode, this has been debunked by multiple scholars. Unlike the historical personage, however, Stoker located his Count Dracula in a castle near the Borgo Pass in Transylvania, and ascribed to that area the supernatural aura it retains to this day in the popular imagination.

Stoker likely drew inspiration from Irish myths of blood-sucking creatures. He was also influenced by Le Fanu's Carmilla. Le Fanu was Stoker's editor when Stoker was a theater critic in Dublin, Ireland. Like Le Fanu, Stoker created compelling female vampire characters such as Lucy Westenra and the Brides of Dracula.

Stoker's vampire hunter Abraham Van Helsing was a strong influence on subsequent vampire literature.

20th century

Vampires appeared commonly in 20th-century literature, such as in this 1936 issue of Weird Tales.

Though Stoker's Count Dracula remained an iconic figure, especially in the new medium of cinema, as in the film Nosferatu, 20th-century vampire fiction went beyond traditional Gothic horror and explored new genres such as science fiction. An early example of this is Gustave Le Rouge's Le prisonnier de la planète Mars (1908) and its sequel La guerre des vampires (1909), in which a native race of bat-winged, blood-drinking humanoids is found on Mars. In the 1920 novella La Jeune Vampire (The Young Vampire), by J.-H. Rosny aîné, vampirism is explained as a form of possession by souls originating in another universe known simply as the Beyond.

Possibly the most influential example of modern vampire science fiction is Richard Matheson's I Am Legend (1954). The novel is set in a future Los Angeles overrun with undead cannibalistic/bloodsucking beings. The protagonist is the sole survivor of a pandemic of a bacterium that causes vampirism. He must fight to survive attacks from the hordes of nocturnal creatures, discover the secrets of their biology, and develop effective countermeasures. The novel was adapted into three movies: The Last Man on Earth starring Vincent Price in 1964, The Omega Man starring Charlton Heston in 1971, and I am Legend starring Will Smith in 2007.

The latter part of the 20th century saw the rise of multi-volume vampire epics. The first of these was Gothic romance writer Marilyn Ross's Barnabas Collins series (1966–71) loosely based on the contemporary American TV soap opera Dark Shadows. It also set the trend for seeing vampires as poetic, tragic heroes rather than as the traditional embodiment of evil. This formula was followed in the popular Vampire Chronicles (1976-2018) series of novels by Anne Rice and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's massive Saint-Germain series (1978–). Ross, Rice and Yarbro set the trend for multi-volume vampire sagas which are now a stock feature of mass-market fiction (see below for list). Rice's work also saw the beginning of the convergence of traditional Gothic ideas with the modern Gothic subculture and a more explicit exploration of the transgressive sexualities which had always been implicit in vampire fiction.

Stephen King, while not a writer of multi-volume epics on vampires, has become a very influential horror writer of the late 20th and early 21st century, evidenced by the nearly sixty books he has published over the past 50 years selling around the world in multiple languages. King's repertoire often hybridizes traditional vampire folklore with the coy charm inspired by Bela Lugosi's performance while increasing the physical violence, carnage, and overall butchery. His work describes very graphically in detail the ruthlessness of what essentially is a supernatural, parasitic predator that unleashes itself and intrudes on ordinary life for ordinary people, a recurring theme of his books. According to King himself, he was still a teacher at a high school when one of the books the class was studying was Bram Stoker's Dracula. Over dinner, he asked his wife, Tabitha, what would happen if Dracula came back in the 20th century. "He'd probably be run over by a Yellow Cab on Park Avenue and killed," his wife replied, and it was from there that she suggested a different, rural setting.

First edition book cover of 'Salem's Lot (1975), a vampire tale by Stephen King

Salem's Lot, the book that resulted from that conversation, was published in 1975 as the follow-up to Carrie; as of 2022, the process of weaving vampires into his stories is still ongoing. King's overall body of work spans both the late 20th and early 21st centuries and Salem's Lot has over the years become one of his most important works. The title references a Maine town called Jerusalem's Lot and it is the centerpiece of 2 full novels and one short story, plus twelve other books that reference the town's existence within the multiverse that runs through all Stephen King books. King also has written several other works with vampires included in them in both long and short form including The Little Sisters of Elluria (1998), The Nightflier (1993, in Nightmares and Dreamscapes), and several books in his series The Dark Tower (1982-2012) which also contains at least one character from Salem's Lot. Many of these have been brought to film and television as well as comic books.

The 1981 novel The Hunger (adapted as a film in 1983) continued the theme of open sexuality and examined the biology of vampires, suggesting that their special abilities were the result of physical properties of their blood. The novel suggested that not all vampires were undead humans, but some were a separate species that had evolved alongside humans. This interpretation of vampires has since then been used in several science-fiction stories dealing with vampires, most famously the Blade movie series. The 1982 novel Fevre Dream by notable author George R. R. Martin tells the tale of a race of living vampires, extremely human-like but obligate predators on humans, set in the Mississippi Riverboat era, where one of them has developed a dietary supplement to "cure" them, and is fighting for the right and opportunity to distribute it.

Kim Newman's Anno Dracula series (1992–) returns to Stoker's Count Dracula, looking at an alternate world where Dracula defeated Van Helsing's group and conquered Britain, and gives the genre a somewhat postmodern spin. The television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, created and largely written by Joss Whedon, also explored vampire folklore in the light of postmodern and feminist theory, defining the 'condition' as humans who were made to drink vampire blood after the vampire drinks from them, with turned vampires being essentially demons possessing human corpses; Buffy and its spin-off, Angel, also feature the character of Angel in a prominent role, with Angel being a vampire who was cursed with his soul, restoring his capacity for compassion, but also forcing him to live with the guilt of what he did as a regular vampire.

Post-Colonial perspectives on the vampire legend are provided in Nalo Hopkinson's novel Brown Girl In The Ring (1998), which features the Soucouyant, a vampire of Caribbean folklore, and in Tananarive Due's My Soul to Keep (1995) and its sequel The Living Blood (2001).

One of the more traditional vampire works of the 20th century is Stephen King's 'Salem's Lot (1975), which re-imagines the archetypal Dracula-type story in a modern American small town setting. King acknowledged the influence of Dracula on the work, as well as the violent, pre-Comics Code vampires portrayed in horror comics such as those released by E.C. Comics.

In 1989, a comprehensive bibliography of vampire literature was published – Margaret L. Carter's The Vampire in Literature. A Critical Bibliography (Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.: Umi Research Press).

One of the best-known stories of Nobel Prize winning Israeli writer Shmuel Yosef Agnon is "The Lady and the Peddler" (האדונית והרוכל‎). It tells of Yosef the Peddler who wanders a great East European forest and encounters a lonely house inhabited by a mysterious lady named Helen. First finding refuge there from a pouring rain, he is eventually seduced to stay and enter into a sexual relationship. Eventually, however, he discovers that she is in the habit of killing her husbands, devouring them and drinking their blood, which keeps her young and beautiful, and that she had done it to 17 men before him. She also tries to kill Yosef but fails, wounds herself and eventually dies. She is then eaten by birds while Yosef the Peddler picks up his pack and resumes his wanderings.

21st century

Many books based on vampires are still being published, including several continuing series. Paranormal romance, inspired by Anne Rice, but mostly dropping the open sexuality of her characters in favor of more conventional sexual roles, is a remarkable contemporary publishing phenomenon. Romances with handsome vampires as the male lead include Lynsay Sands' Argeneau family series (2003–), Charlaine Harris The Southern Vampire Mysteries series (2001–2013), and Christine Feehan's Carpathian series (1999–). However, Laurell K. Hamilton's Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series has again shifted the genre boundaries from romance back toward the territory of erotica.

The occult detective subgenre is represented by Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files fantasy series (2000–), and Charlaine Harris's The Southern Vampire Mysteries (2001–).

In the field of juvenile and young adult literature, Darren Shan wrote a 12-book series (The Saga of Darren Shan) about a boy who becomes a vampire's assistant, beginning with Cirque Du Freak (2000) and ending with Sons of Destiny (2006). A film adaptation has been made of the first three books called Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant (2009). He is also currently writing a prequel to the Saga, a series of four books all about Larten Crepsley (one of the main characters) starting with Birth of a Killer (2010) and finishing with Brothers to the Death (2012). Ellen Schreiber created a young adult series about Raven Madison and her vampire boyfriend Alexander Sterling, starting with Vampire Kisses (2005). In Scott Westerfeld's young adult novel Peeps (2005), the protagonist carries a contagious parasite that causes vampire-like behavior.

Count Dracula also continues to inspire novelists, for example Elizabeth Kostova in The Historian (2005).

Swedish author John Ajvide Lindqvist's critically praised vampire story Låt den rätte komma in (2004), about the relationship of a 12-year-old boy with a 200-year-old vampire child, has now been translated into English as Let the Right One In (2007) and a film adaptation has been produced. The story takes place in Blackeberg, a suburb of Stockholm. This particular novel does not follow the modern romantic trend, and instead focuses on a human-vampire friendship. Crucially, it retains many of the vampire traits popularized by Dracula.

Dimitris Lyacos's second book of the Poena Damni trilogy With the People from the Bridge handles the vampire legend in the context of a ritualistic post-theatrical drama performance. In a dystopian setting, under the arches of a derelict bridge, a group of social outcasts present an unconventional, non-Gothic version of a vampire drawing from ancient Greek religion and literature, Christian eschatology as well as traveler reports of vampire epidemics in the Balcans. The story is recounted in a minimalist style that makes no explicit mention to vampires, the undead, graves or the Underworld, conveying, nevertheless, the underlying theme unambiguously and in striking physical detail.

Peter Watts' novel Blindsight has explored a scientific basis for vampires, depicting them as an evolutionary offshoot from humanity who were not the dominant species on the planet solely due to an evolutionary glitch making them averse to Euclidean geometry (right angles cause seizures in what is called "Crucifix Glitch", leading to them dying out when modern technology with all its structures swept the world). Implied to have vastly superior intelligence and problem-solving capabilities, they were recreated from gene snippets for special tasks, with special drugs alleviating their crucifix glitch. One particularly important vampire trait is their ability to hibernate for extended periods of time, which makes cryogenic stasis possible and is applied to astronauts via gene-therapy. At the end of the novel it is implied the vampires have taken control of earth and may be exterminating baseline humanity.

In recent years, vampire fiction has been one of many supernatural fiction genres used in the creation of mashups. These works combine either a pre-existing text or a historic figure with elements of genre fiction. One of the best-known of these works is Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith, in which the historic Abraham Lincoln has a fictional secret identity as a hunter of evil vampires.

The 21st century brought more examples of vampire fiction, such as J. R. Ward's Black Dagger Brotherhood series, and other highly popular vampire books which appeal to teenagers and young adults. Such vampiric paranormal romance novels and allied vampiric chick-lit and vampiric occult detective stories are a remarkably popular and ever-expanding contemporary publishing phenomenon. L. A. Banks' The Vampire Huntress Legend Series, Laurell K. Hamilton's erotic Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series, and Kim Harrison's The Hollows series, portray the vampire in a variety of new perspectives, some of them unrelated to the original legends. Vampires in the Twilight series (2005–2008) by Stephenie Meyer ignore the effects of garlic and crosses and are not harmed by sunlight, although it does reveal their supernatural status. Richelle Mead further deviates from traditional vampires in her Vampire Academy series (2007–2010), basing the novels on Romanian lore with two races of vampires, one good and one evil, as well as half-vampires.

Traits of vampires in fiction

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The traits of the literary vampire have evolved from the often repulsive figures of folklore. Fictional vampires can be romantic figures, often described as elegant and sexy (compare demons such as succubi and incubi). This is in stark contrast to the vampire of Eastern European folklore, which was a horrifying animated corpse. However, as in folklore, the literary vampire is sustained by drinking blood. They do not need other food, water, or even oxygen. They are sometimes portrayed as being unable to eat human food at all, forcing them to either avoid public dining or mime chewing and eating to deceive their mortal victims. The fictional vampire, however, often has a pale appearance rather than the dark or ruddy skin of folkloric vampires and their skin is cool to the touch. As in folklore, literary vampires can usually be warded off with garlic and symbols of the Christian faith, such as holy water, a crucifix, or a rosary.

According to literary scholar Nina Auerbach in Our Vampires, Ourselves, the influence of the moon was seen as dominant in the earliest examples of vampire literature:

For at least fifty years after Planche's Vampire, the moon was the central ingredient of vampire iconography; vampire's solitary and repetitive lives consisted of incessant deaths and – when the moon shone down on them – quivering rebirths. Ruthven, Varney and Raby need marriage and blood to replenish their vitality but they turn for renewed life to the moon...a corpse quivering to life under the moon's rays is the central image of midcentury vampire literature; fangs, penetration, sucking and staking are all peripheral to its lunar obsession.

Bram Stoker's Dracula was hugely influential in its depiction of vampire traits, some of which are described by the novel's vampire expert Abraham Van Helsing. Dracula has the ability to change his shape at will, his featured forms in the novel being that of a wolf, bat, mist and fog. He can also crawl up and down the vertical external walls of his castle in the manner of a lizard. One very famous trait that Stoker added is the inability to be seen in mirrors, which is not found in traditional Eastern European folklore, as Stoker combined the folklore of Jiangshi being terrified of their own reflection with the material fact of the silver backed mirrors of the time. Dracula also had protruding teeth, though was preceded in this by Varney the Vampire and Carmilla. In Anne Rice's books, the vampires appear their best self of the age they were turned into a vampire; for instance, when Claudia was turned into a vampire, her golden curls became tight and voluminous, her skin turns a pale but smooth and clear, and rids her of the rotting disease. But it also seems like a curse as she retains her child-body for her entire vampire lifetime and any modifications on her body, such as even cutting her hair, grows it back to the same length as it was before. A similar occurrence can be observed in the Twilight series - when Bella is turned into a vampire, her wounds heal, hair becomes healthy and shiny, her broken back and ribs get mended, the color comes back to her skin, and her sunken eyes, cheeks and skinny body return to a healthy state; in fact she is brought back to life from the brink of death by turning her into a vampire.

In the Dracula novel, the vampire hunter Van Helsing prescribes that a vampire be destroyed by a wooden stake (preferably made of white oak) through the heart, decapitation, drowning, or incineration. The vampire's head must be removed from its body, the mouth stuffed with garlic and holy water or relics, the body drawn and quartered, then burned and spread into the four winds, with the head buried on hallowed ground. The destruction of the vampire Lucy follows the three-part process enjoined by Van Helsing (staking, decapitation, and garlic in the mouth).

Traditional vampire folklore, followed by Stoker in Dracula, does not usually hold that sunlight is fatal to vampires, though they are nocturnal. It is also notable in the novel that Dracula can walk about in the daylight, in bright sunshine, though apparently in discomfort and without the ability to use most of his powers, like turning into mist or a bat. He is still strong and fast enough to struggle with and escape from most of his male pursuers. Fatal exposure to sunlight of a vampire in their coffin dates at least as far back as The Story Of Yand Manor House (1898) by E. and H. Heron; such scenes in vampire films however, most especially 1922's Nosferatu and the closing scene of the 1958 film Dracula in which Count Dracula is burnt by the sun, were very influential on later vampire fiction. For instance, Anne Rice's vampire Lestat and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's Count Saint-Germain both avoid the lethal effects of daylight by staying closeted indoors during the day.

A well-known set of special powers and weaknesses is commonly associated with vampires in contemporary fiction. There is a tendency, however, for authors to pick and choose the ones they like, or find more realistic ones, and have their characters ridicule the rest as absurd. For example, in the movie Blade, the vampire hunter Blade tells Karen Jenson what kills vampires (stakes, silver, and sunlight), and dismisses tactics seen in vampire movies (namely crosses and running water) as ineffective. Some vampires can fly. This power may be supernatural levitation, or it may be connected to the vampire's shape-shifting ability. Some traditions hold that a vampire cannot enter a house unless he or she is invited in. Generally, a vampire needs be invited in only once and then can come and go at will. Stephen King's novel Salem's Lot explored an unusual direction with this myth in having one of the protagonists revoke a vampire's invitation to a house; the vampire was forced to flee the building immediately. This is also featured in the American TV series True Blood, where Sookie withdraws her invitation on a number of occasions, causing vampires to be thrown out by supernatural forces. Also, in The Vampire Diaries when a newly turned vampire wakes up in a house that he was not invited into, he immediately flees.

Some tales maintain that vampires must return to a coffin or to their "native soil" before sunrise to take their rest safely. Others place native soil in their coffins, especially if they have relocated. Still other vampire stories, such as Le Fanu's Carmilla, maintain that vampires must return to their coffins, but sleep in several inches of blood as opposed to soil. Vampires are generally held to be unable to bear children, though the concept of a "half vampire" and similar creatures does exist in folklore and in some modern fiction. Some fictional vampires are fascinated with counting, an idea derived from folk stories about vampires being compelled to stop and count any spilled grain that they find in their path. The most famous fictional counting vampire is likely the Muppet character Count von Count on television's Sesame Street. Other examples include a fifth season episode of the X-Files titled Bad Blood, and the Discworld novel, Carpe Jugulum by Terry Pratchett. Some modern fictional vampires are portrayed as having magical powers beyond those originally assigned by myth, typically also possessing the powers of a witch or seer. Such examples include Drusilla from Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Drusilla was a seer before she was a vampire, and carried those powers into her undeath), and Olivia Nightshade from The Nightshade Chronicles. Also, vampires from the Vampire Academy books, also known as the moroi, are skilled in elemental magic. Also, in the Twilight series, certain vampires appear to have special gifts like Edward (telepathy), Alice (visions), Bella (shielding), that are either supernatural or evolved from their own personalities like Victoria (survival instinct).

Vampire hybrids

Main article: Dhampir Main article: List of fictional dhampirs

The dhampir, the offspring of a vampire and a human known from Serbian folklore, has been popularized in recent fiction.

Literature

Poems

Prose

Fiction series

There are several recent series in vampire fiction, of variable literary quality. They tend to either take the form of direct sequels (or prequels) to the first book published or detail the ongoing adventures of particular characters.

White Wolf, a maker of role-playing games, releases novels set in the fantasy world of its Vampire: The Masquerade game. These series of novels were released in 13-book sets, each corresponding to one of the 13 clans of vampires in their game universe.

Juvenile fiction

Vampire fiction based on TV series

Comic books

Comic books and graphic novels which feature vampires include Vampirella (Warren Publishing, 1969), Morbius the Living Vampire (Marvel, 1971), The Poe Clan (Shogakukan 1972), The Tomb of Dracula (Marvel Comics, 1972), Blade (Marvel, 1973), I...Vampire (DC Comics, 1981), Hellsing (Shonen Gahosha, 1997), Vampire Girl (Shodensha, 1999–unknown), 30 Days of Night (IDW Publishing, 2002), Chibi Vampire (Monthly Dragon Age, 2003), JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (Weekly Shonen Jump 1986–2004, Ultra Jump 2004-) Rosario + Vampire (Monthly Shōnen Jump 2004), Vampire Knight (LaLa, 2005), Blood Alone (MediaWorks, 2005), Dracula vs. King Arthur (Silent Devil Productions, 2005), Dance in the Vampire Bund (Media Factory, 2006), Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter: Guilty Pleasures (Dabel Brothers Productions/Marvel Comics, 2007), Half Dead (Dabel Brothers Productions/Marvel Comics, 2007), Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight (Dark Horse Comics, 2007), Black Rose Alice (Akita Shoten, 2008), Nosferatu (Viper Comics, 2010), Twilight: The Graphic Novel (2010) and He's My Only Vampire (Kodansha, 2010).

Proinsias Cassidy, the supporting lead male in Garth Ennis' comic book series Preacher (DC/Vertigo, 1995), is a vampire of Irish origin. In addition, many major superheroes have faced vampire supervillains at some point. In the Belgo-French comic Le Bal du rat mort, police inspector Jean Lamorgue is a hybrid vampire and he is a king of rats. He is guiding an invasion of rats in Ostend and he sucks the blood of his human victims.

In 2009, Zuda Comics launched La Morté Sisters, a story of teenage vampirism in a Catholic orphanage taking place in South Philadelphia. The story follows new girl Maddie in a world of ninja nuns and black magic.

American Vampire, created by Scott Snyder, was published in 2010. It explores the idea of the evolution of vampires, leading to new species throughout American history.

Magazines

Magazines which feature vampires include Bite me magazine (launched 1999). Typical features include interviews with vampire actors, features on famous vampire film classics, vampire-related news, forthcoming vampire film and book releases.

Defunct vampire magazines include Crimson (England); Journal of the Dark (US), Father Sebastiaan's Vampyre Magazine (US) and The Velvet Vampyre (available to members of the disbanded The Vampyre Society, England).

See also

References

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