Invariably Vampires

One of the things I like best about vampires in works of fiction is that they are almost always bad, always have at least the one same drive, and usually one or more of the same weaknesses. In other words, you do not have to learn much about the characters - the story is all in the plot.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Why I recommend "Necroscope"

by Brian Lumley

If you like vampire stories but pure fantasy does not quite do it for you, the series this book kicks off is just for you.

The monsters are scary, venial, with rapacious appetites – and no, they are not the ones you hear about on the news. They are much worse.

They decimate populations, hobble civilizations, and arise from the pasts they were put down in – given half a chance by one of the living decades or centuries after their deaths.

Crossing their path comes Harry Keogh, the Necroscope.

Harry talks to the dead. Or rather they talk to him… and he talks back. He is the only one who can. They love him for it. But that does not mean he has an easy – or boring – life.

This is a really great novel and so are the ones that follow it in the series.

Labels: , , , , ,

Saturday, October 28, 2006

How did Halloween become a sexy holiday for females?

A funny question from California just caught my eye in My Yahoo.

TWO CENTS / How did Halloween become a sexy holiday for females?:
t's Elvira's fault. She added all that cleavage to the vampire look while introducing insomniacs to horror flicks of nightmares past.

Lydia Nayo, Oakland

Friday, October 27, 2006

Creature Feature comes back from the dead!!

I just found out during the local TV news broadcast tonight that Count Gore De Vol, whom I used to watch present Creature Feature every weekend when I was a little kid, is back on the air.

Only now, instead of broadcasting from a TV station, he does it right from his own dungeon - I mean, home.

This is pretty cool.

I used to love watching those shows when I was little. The movies he aired were mostly very good horror classics.

Now everyone can enjoy them. Not just those who live in a certain darkened, foreboding city.

Better still, they can be watched at night - not just on weekend afternoons.

This week's show is: Attack of the Giant Leeches!

Anybody else out there ever used to watch Count Gore De Vol present Creature Feature each week back in the 1970s?

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Forever Knight - Trilogy Part 3 released this month

The Forever Knight TV series has finally completed its transition to DVD.

I just noticed over at the TV Shows On DVD website that the next 22 episodes have been released on DVD.

TVShowsOnDVD.com - Forever Knight - Trilogy Part 3:
Forever Knight - Trilogy Part 3


It was a really great series and I was sad to hear it ended.

Now however, it looks like it shall go on... despite its untimely demise on television.

Technorati tags: , ,

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Jim Butcher Dresden Files books and upcoming TV series

There is a new (well, to me) fantasy/thriller/crime drama author named James Butcher that is having quite a lot of success this decade.

He was discovered by the same agent that gave Laurell K. Hamilton her big break. He has subsequently been publishing books since the start of this decade.

Pretty cool-sounding books.

Here is a super brief excerpt from one of them. I urge you to chase the link and go read the chapter it is in, and the next two chapters in fact, over at the Jim-Butcher.com website.


Jim-Butcher.Com: Books - Dresden Files - Book 6 - Ch 1 :
"Yeah," Thomas said. "I need a favor."

I snorted. "What favor? You do remember that technically,
we're at war, right? Wizards versus vampires? Ring any
bells?"

"If you like, you can pretend that I'm employing
subversive tactics as part of a fiendishly elaborate ruse
meant to manipulate you," Thomas said.


I might buy some books in this series myself. They sound really interesting.

What is also interesting is that this is not merely a book series. There is a Dresden Files TV series coming out next year (early 2007) on the Sci Fi channel.

The books, and presumably the show, feature werewolves, vampires, wizards - and so forth.

Interesting, no?

Technorati tags: , ,

Sunday, September 17, 2006

death on a toothpick

Ever read one of those books about dining on a shoe string?

Well take a look at what death on a toothpick looks like:

http://www.amazingstarships.com/models/modelexpo/vampire.jpg

Pretty scary. Yet odd. Right?

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Welcome to our new vampire blogs

I just noticed another blog about vampires was born today, the same day as this one. Well, it was born in the morning - this one at night. But close enough!

The name of the senior weblog to this one is Lair of the Vampire.

Here is its opening post: Welcome to Our New Vampire Blog!.

Catchy saying.

Vampires are so predictable

I think the reason I like stories about vampires is that they are so predictable.

They usually have the same weaknesses, pose the same predictable threat - and are, predictably, scary.

I have been a very avid reader, ever since my first grade teacher taught me to read.

When I was a little kid in first grade, just learning to read, I loved books about: talking animals, dinosaurs, science, - and mysteries, ghosts, and other supernatural monsters.

In pursuit of the latter, I eventually checked out books from the library in first grade that I could not quite read.

I got my parents to read them to me. The next ones I checked out, I was able to read myself.

These were not books for first-graders, by the way. We are not talking books like Georgie the Ghost or Curious George. These were much longer books written at a level that targeted a preteen audience.

I was more than a few years shy of that myself, but I was determined to be entertained. I loved stories as a kid. There was something magical about being allowed to see something imaginative and wonderful, even if you only were told it by listening to it or reading it.

I might be wrong, but I seem to remember reading an Alfred Hitchcock novel or compendium of ghost stories while I was still in first grade. In grade school, I read all kinds of scary stories, including, of course - Edgar Allan Poe.

Unlike most kids, I remember reading Edgar Allan Poe in my elementary school cafeteria - while I was eating. Nothing too gruesome: it was just Murder dans la Rue Morgue.

I remember two things had me a little bit unsettled. One was, I cannot understand these French words. The other was, This really should bother me a little bit more. How come I can read this while I am eating?.

Anyway, you will be glad to know that I corrected at least one of the two problems when I enrolled in a French class at my junior high, Edgar Allan Poe, intermediate school.

Pretty funny, huh?

Yeah, I knew you would think so.

Oh, and you know what the name was of the elementary school where I sat reading one of Poe's bloodiest works while slurping down my 35 cent meal at noon?

Ravensworth!