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5 Vampire Novels That Don’t Sparkle

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5 Vampire Novels That Don’t Sparkle

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5 Vampire Novels That Don’t Sparkle

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Published on October 25, 2016

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The vampire, perennial monster, has received somewhat of a makeover in recent years. For almost two decades it has become romantic hero and seducer, often aimed at younger consumers. Twilight as well as the Vampire Diaries series may be the most obvious exponents of this trend, but the seeds were already planted in shows like Buffy (remember Angel?), and the territory continues to be watered with numerous vampire men in the urban fantasy or romance section of the bookstore, who must invariably profess eternal love to a nubile woman.

Before this trend kicked into full gear, vampires were more likely to be rich counts out to bite pretty young lasses à la Christopher Lee or Bela Lugosi. Sexually magnetic, perhaps, but not boyfriend material.

(If I refer to the vampire as male it is because it is most often portrayed as a man. Count the most popular incarnations and you’ll find six Edward analogues for every Carmilla.)

My novel, Certain Dark Things, set in a Mexico where vampire drug lords are busy carving out territories for themselves, is not about vampires who you’d bring home to meet the family (the word “gritty” seems to show up a lot in reviews). In that spirit, here is a list of five vampires that definitely don’t sparkle. To boot, I decided to focus on books you are less likely to have read, so no ’Salem’s Lot, Interview with the Vampire, or Dracula.

 

Vlad — Carlos Fuentes

vladThis short novel by literary darling Carlos Fuentes tells the story of a lawyer assisting an eccentric European refugee in finding proper lodgings in Mexico City. If you liked the black and white Mexican movie El Vampiro and ever wondered what it might look like in print, this is the book for you. Full of lush descriptions, it also features a nasty vampire, ensuring no romantic longings will be stirred upon the page. There are plenty of digs at Mexican bourgeoisie customs, but you do not need to get them all to enjoy it.

 

Fledgling Octavia Butler

fledglingScience fiction vampires are not as common as fantasy ones and Octavia Butler provides us with one of the more interesting examples available. Shori looks like a 10 year-old black child but is far older, the member of an alien species which lives by establishing symbiotic relationships with humans. Butler explores notions of agency, as Shori’s bite makes humans dependant on her venom. Race is also tackled: Shori’s skin color is markedly different from her fellow pale vampires, melanin proving a useful adaptation for an organism that can’t stand sunlight, but it is also a trait that marks her as different.

 

My Soul to Keep — Tananarive Due

soul-to-keepThe African immortals in Due’s series of novels might best be called reverse vampires, since it is humans who would want to get a hold of the immortals’ blood due to its special healing and life-extending properties. Still, the immortals hold parallels with what we call vampires in popular culture, so I’m placing them on this list. Due’s books tackle issues of power dynamics and although Dawit, a 500 year-old Ethiopian man, is not unfeeling and has a human wife, he is not a cuddly romantic hero and would not hesitate to kill to protect himself.

 

Enter, Night — Michael Rowe

enter-nightOn top of becoming younger and more romantic, vampires have also become more urban. Enter, Night, however, bucks that trend, taking place in a small town in the 1970s (and in Canada, to boot; the Great White North doesn’t get too many bloodsuckers so that’s an extra yay from me). A 300-year old vampire is sleeping in an old Jesuit mission and is about to wake up. This vampire is not just mean, it’s plain evil. I mentioned Salem’s Lot at the beginning of this list, so if you liked that vibe you should like this one too.

 

Lost Souls — Poppy Z. Brite

lost-soulsNowadays Billy Martin doesn’t write horror books anymore, but when he was still active penning stories and novels under the name Poppy Z. Brite he was an astounding example of the 1990s horror scene—the other astounding example of the 1990s was Kathe Koja—which rose from the ashes of the 1980s horror boom and bust. Lost Souls follows the colliding tales of a couple of musicians in a small North Carolina town, their associates, and a group of truly amoral and disturbing vampires. Random murder, incest, there’s very little these vampires won’t do and trying to become a vampire groupie is a very bad idea.

 

So there you have it: five books off the beaten path with vampires who won’t be sending you valentines. Stay fangy.

Top image: Nosferatu (1922)

certaindarkthingsSilvia Moreno-Garcia’s Certain Dark Things focuses on Mexican vampires involved in turf battles. She is the British Fantasy, Locus, Aurora and Solaris nominated author of Signal to Noise and the editor of the World Fantasy finalist Lovecraft-themed anthology She Walks in Shadows.

About the Author

Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Author

Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s Certain Dark Things focuses on Mexican vampires involved in turf battles. She is the British Fantasy, Locus, Aurora and Solaris nominated author of Signal to Noise and the editor of the World Fantasy finalist Lovecraft-themed anthology She Walks in Shadows.
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8 years ago

I like Wildwood Dancing by Juliet Marillier. It’s set in Transylvania, which she says Bram Stoker did a disservice to, and purports to draw on the land’s older legends. The vampires may be glamorous in a fae way, but I don’trecall them sparkling: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13929.Wildwood_Dancing?ac=1&from_search=true

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8 years ago

Vampires should not sparkle–unless they’re doused in white phosphorus.

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8 years ago

Sweet Silver Blues, the first book in The Garrett Files by Glen Cook has some nasty vamps in it.  I’ve been not-so-patientily waiting for this series to get the Audible treatment for a few years now so I can ‘re-read’.

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Atlas
8 years ago

Geoffrey Farrington’s The Revenants. Possibly the best vampire novel I have ever read.

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hng23
8 years ago

Agyar by Steven Brust
The Dragon Waiting by John M Ford
Stainless by Todd Grimson
Sabella by Tanith Lee
Fevre Dream by George RR Martin
The entire Anno Dracula series by Kim Newman

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hng23
8 years ago

and one more…

Fifth House of The Heart by Ben Tripp

wiredog
8 years ago

Saberhagen’s Count Dracula definitely doesn’t sparkle, even if he is a good guy.

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mbg1968
8 years ago

Terry Pratchett’s “Carpe Jugulum” comes to mind.

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Mayank
8 years ago

Vampire$, by John Steakley

Grim and likable characters.

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Chromosome Coyote
8 years ago

The Secret Life of Laszlo, Count Dracula, by Roderick Anscombe

And of course The Book of the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe

 

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8 years ago

There’s The Rhesus Chart by Charlie Stross, in which a vampire does sparkle, but only briefly as it is exposed to a basilisk gun.

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JohnnyMac
8 years ago

rickarddavid @2, if you like the concept of vampires doused with WP, you should read David Drake’s short story “Something Had to Be Done”, you can find it in his collection “From the Heart of Darkness”, Tor Books, 1983 or “The Military Dimension, Mark II”, Baen Books, 1995.

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paulinezed
8 years ago

The Vampire Tapestry by Suzee McKee Charnas has a more science fictional take on a vampire who’s a singular example of his species.

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Sandy
8 years ago

I like the President’s Vampire series by Christopher Farnsworth. Nathaniel Cade is a monster, knows he’s a monster, and is not even slightly angst-ridden about being a monster. He also doesn’t see the point in seducing humans, because why would he have sex with his food?

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Vivian
8 years ago

BISU”AA

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Vivian
8 years ago

The St. Germain series by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

The James Asher series by Barbara Hambly–especially Those Who Hunt the Night; one of the best vampire series around.

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8 years ago

I second Vivian on the James Asher series-really good with actually scary vampires.

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8 years ago
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NeenerNeener
8 years ago

No one has mentioned the two fabulous vampire books by Tim Powers: The Stress of Her Regard and Hide Me Among the Graves.

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Lucy
8 years ago

I’ll second “Vampire$” by John Steakley – very nasty creatures of the night in this one and they definitely do not sparkle.

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Nick
8 years ago

Recently read a very entertaining vampire hunter book by Alex Raines, “The Devil’s Mouth”. It’s his debut novel & follows the adventures of a samurai sword wielding, wise cracking cowboy who happens to kill vampires for a job.

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SeeingI
8 years ago

I adored “Lost Souls” and have read it 3 times I think. Hot, sexy, dark, homoerotic stuff. 

I will provide a shout-out for Kim Newman’s excellent “Anno Dracula,” which asks the question, “What if Van Helsing had failed, Dracula won, seduced and married Queen Victoria, and turned England into a homeland for every type of vampire from world folklore, as well as every famous (or obscure) vampire from Orlock to Yorga to Carmilla? And further, what if Jack the Ripper was murdering vampire prostitutes?” It’s a glorious read for anyone into vampires, Victoriana, or Jack the Ripper. 

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ChickJ
8 years ago

The toughest, kick ass vampires are the ones in the incredible Necroscope series by Brian Lumley. Just one of these bad boys can take on all the above vampires together and win without getting up sweat.

 

 

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8 years ago

The vamps in Octavia Butler’s Fledgling weren’t “aliens”, though they had a legend saying that. They were a related species of homo. How could aliens be so closely adapted to our biology?  An incredibly tedious book, by the way. Not long, but I gave up on it half way through. GRR Martin’s Fevre Dream had a similar take, but also a decent story.

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Brenda A.
8 years ago

Sunshine by Robin McKinley! 

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Jen
8 years ago

I’d vote for Sunshine by Robin McKinley as well, a really interesting read throughout. 

Denise L.
Denise L.
8 years ago

I enjoyed the graphic novel “Thirty Days of Night,” at least the first one (even if the end was pretty lame).  The brutal, uber-violent monsters portrayed in it were really refreshing after the whole sparkly vampire phenomenon.  I’m currently writing a book with vampires in it, and I took a lot of inspiration from the vampires in “Thirty Days.”

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Matthew W Carter
8 years ago

The villains of the Necroscope series have by far been the most monstrously inhuman vampire you could ever imagine . I love the books and those images still give me chills almost 30 years after reading the first series of books 

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8 years ago

Christopher Buehlman’s The Lesser Dead is a very very good story with believable vampires

13 Bullets by David Wellington ia atill available free to read online. Check it out

 

 

 

 

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8 years ago

Yes to McKinley’s Sunshine and Brust’s Agyar.

Ilona Andrews Kate Daniels/Magic Bites series in Post-Shift Atlanta has a pretty unique take on vampires– weird, desiccated monsters”piloted” remotely by necromancers.

One of the rare sci-fi instances of vampirism can be found in Peter Watts’ Blindsight and Echopraxia. His is one of the more interesting explanations of why vampires are sensitive to crosses.  

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Roxana
7 years ago

Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’ is a deeply disturbing book. I started to read it years ago thinking it wouldn’t be a problem because we all know this story don’t we? Well it was. About midway through I wasn’t sleeping nights and had to give it up. Stoker manages to convey the existential wrongness of the undead directly to your hindbrain. 

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Kira Roberts
7 years ago

None of y’all even mentioned the Department 19 series by Will Hill. The first few are a little bad, but the writing gets better once the authorsfigures things out a bit, stylistically and whatnot. He does an amazing job of portraying both the humanity and the inhumanity, and how vampirism is not a choice, and that there are vampire victims. A rather fascinating amount of history is woven into the plot as well. They’re a good teen read, and definitely the goriest books I have ever read. The gore isn’t over the top, though : he balances it beautifully. But then, I prefer my books bloody.