Vampires: The Recent Undead

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  VAMPIRES:

  The Recent Undead

  Edited by

  Paula Guran

  To Chelsea Quinn Yarbro:

  A woman to whom many who write (or read) vampire fiction owe more than they may realize.

  Copyright © 2011 by Paula Guran.

  Cover art by Szabo Balaz.

  Cover design by Stephen H. Segal.

  Ebook design by Neil Clarke.

  ISBN: 978-1-60701-298-6 (ebook)

  ISBN: 978-1-60701-254-2 (trade paperback)

  All stories are copyrighted to their respective authors,and used here with their permission.

  PRIME BOOKS

  www.prime-books.com

  No portion of this book may be reproduced by any means, mechanical, electronic, or otherwise, without first obtaining the permission of the copyright holder.

  For more information, contact Prime Books.

  Contents

  Introduction by Paula Guran

  The Coldest Girl in Coldtown by Holly Black

  This Is Now by Michael Marshall Smith

  Sisters by Charles de Lint

  The Screaming by J.A. Konrath

  Zen and the Art of Vampirism by Kelley Armstrong

  La Vampiresse by Tanith Lee

  Dead Man Stalking by Rachel Caine

  The Ghost of Leadville by Jeanne C. Stein

  Waste Land by Stephen Dedman

  Gentleman of the Old School by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

  No Matter Where You Go by Tanya Huff

  Outfangthief by Conrad Williams

  Dancing with the Star by Susan Sizemore

  A Trick of the Dark by Tina Rath

  When Gretchen was Human by Mary Turzillo

  Conquistador de la Noche by Carrie Vaughn

  Endless Night by Barbara Roden

  Dahlia Underground by Charlaine Harris

  The Belated Burial by Caitlín R. Kiernan

  Twilight States by Albert Cowdrey

  To the Moment by Nisi Shawl

  Castle in the Desert: Anno Dracula 1977 by Kim Newman

  Vampires in the Lemon Grove by Karen Russell

  Vampires Anonymous by Nancy Kilpatrick

  The Wide, Carnivorous Sky by John Langan

  Selected Vampire Anthologies: 2000-2010

  Publication History

  About the Editor

  Introduction

  “ . . . every age embraces the vampire it needs.”

  —Nina Auerbach

  The year 2010 may have marked a new high point in the popularity of the vampire. Although Stephenie Myer’s Twilight series (books and film), Charlaine Harris’s Southern Vampire Mystery series and its HBO incarnation as True Blood, and the Vampire Diaries television series (based on L.J. Smith’s young adult series of the same name from the nineties) all began earlier in the decade, their popularity hit blood-fever pitch in 2010. Films like Daybreakers and Let Me In (the American remake of Swedish film Let the Right One In based on John Ajvide Lindqvist’s novel Låt den rätte komma) also made an impact. In the UK, even Doctor Who featured vampire-like creatures in an episode titled “Vampires in Venice.” The Brits also enjoyed the second Being Human series—featuring a vampire living with a ghost and a werewolf—on BBC Three.

  As for vampire fiction not (yet) on TV or film, it ranged from the “literary horror” of The Passage by Justin Cronin to a bevy of best-selling urban fantasy and paranormal romance titles and series for both adult and young adult readers, There were children’s books as well (including Dick and Jane and Vampires). The final two books of Gail Carriger’s Parasol Protectorate trilogy featured a “Victorian vampire slayer” while Seth Grahame-Smith mashed up the Great Emancipator with fangsters in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.

  Vampires were inescapable.

  Hundreds of thousands of words have been written about vampires, our fascination with them, and their meaning and place in our culture. If you want in-depth information, either scholarly or written for popular consumption, there’s plenty available. The focus of this anthology is short vampire fiction published 2000-2010, but let’s take a quick sip of the bloody background for context.

  The idea of the vampire has probably been around since humanity first began to ponder death. In Western culture the vampire has been a pervasive icon for more than two centuries now, but the image of the vampire as something other than a disgusting reanimated corpse was profoundly reshaped in the early nineteenth century by a group of British aristocrats.

  Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, Percy Shelley, Matthew Lewis, Lord Byron, and Byron’s physician, Dr. John Polidori, decided to amuse themselves one damp summer 1816 evening in a villa on Lake Geneva by writing ghost stories. Mary Godwin (who later married Shelley) created a modern myth (and science fiction) with Frankenstein, or Prometheus Unbound. Polidori picked up a fragment written by Byron and produced a story based on it: “The Vampyre.” It featured Lord Ruthven, a seductive refined noble as well as a blood-sucking monster who preyed on others. The character was obviously based on the already notorious Byron himself.

  “The Vampyre” became wildly popular, particularly in Germany and France. The theatres of Paris were filled by the early 1820s with vampire-themed plays. Some of these returned to England in translated form.

  As Brian Stableford has written, “ The Vampyre” was the “most widely read vampire story of its era . . . To say that it was influential is something of an understatement; there was probably no one in England or France who attempted to write a vampire story in the nineteenth century who was not familiar with it, one way or another.” Poldori’s story was certainly the inspiration for the serialized “penny dreadful” Varney the Vampire or, The Feast of Blood (1845-47) by (most likely) James Malcolm Rhymer. Varney appealed to the masses, but was of even less literary merit than the short story to which it owed so much.

  It took Sheridan le Fanu to craft a true literary gem with his novella “Carmilla,” published in 1872. The tale of a lonely girl and a beautiful aristocratic female vampire in an isolated castle also brought steamy (albeit lesbian) sexuality into the vampire mythos.

  But it was Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula (1897) that became the basis of modern vampire lore: Dracula was a vampire “king” of indefinite lifespan who could not be seen in mirrors, had an affinity to bats and aversions to crucifixes and garlic. He had superhuman strength, could shapeshift and control human minds. Stoker’s vampires needed their native soil and the best way to kill one was with a stake through the heart followed by decapitation. There were humans who, like Abraham Van Helsing, hunted vampires . . . etc.

  Not that Stoker’s Count Dracula was originally all that he came to be. Stoker described him as a tall old man with “a long white moustache, and clad in black from head to foot, without a single speck of colour about him anywhere.” The Count’s “eyebrows were very massive, almost meeting over the nose” and there were hairs in the center of his palms. He also had bad breath.

  True cultural permeation—and refinement of the Dracula archetype—came through later stage and screen adaptations. The silent film Nosferau (1922), for instance, took Dracula’s nocturnal nature and turned it into the inability to survive sunlight. Bela Lugosi’s portrayal (first on stage then, in 1931, on screen) of a suave foreign aristocrat in evening attire who seduced beautiful young women and slept in a coffin had much to do with the popular image of the count.

  Various vampiric attributes and powers were added or subtracted in films and short stories in the decades thereafter. (Along wit
h other innovations, Christopher Lee’s Dracula “showed fang” for the first time in 1958.) But although the vampire thrived in those two media, no truly notable vampire novels were published until 1954 when Richard Matheson contributed the idea of vampirism as an infectious disease with apocalyptic consequence in his novel I Am Legend.

  Other novels from the 1960s also added embellishments to the icon, but in the 1970s the image of the vampire changed radically. Fred Saberhagen’s The Dracula Tape (1975) presented a sympathetic Dracula telling his own story. Stephen King downplayed vampiric eroticism, upped the level of terror, and focused on the vampire as a metaphor of corrupt power in his 1975 vampire novel ’Salem’s Lot (1975). Anne Rice introduced a vampire with a conscience who needed others of his kind, in Interview With the Vampire (1976). King and Rice brought the vampire fully into the cultural mainstream.

  Less well-known to the public, but highly influential, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro began her series featuring the first truly romantic and heroic vampire, the Count Saint-Germain, with Hôtel Transylvania in 1978.

  Meanwhile, millions had watched Jonathan Frid portray Barnabas Collins on television’s Gothic soap opera Dark Shadows (1966-1971) as he transformed from an evil villain to a vampire seeking redemption and his long-lost love. Dracula was again portrayed (beginning in 1977 on Broadway and followed by a 1979 film) by Frank Langella, who de-emphasized the violence and stressed the supremely seductive.

  Throughout the 1980s and 1990s vampires came in all varieties in literature and other media: traditional monsters, heroes, detectives, aliens, rock stars, psychic predators, loners, tribal, erotic, sexless, violent, placed in alternate histories, present in contemporary settings . . . the vampire became a malleable metaphor of great diversity in many forms, even—first in Lori Herter’s Obsession (1991)—in the romance marketing category. A number of notable vampire novels were published in the eighties and nineties, but Anne Rice continued to make the firmest impression on the masses as the best-selling queen of vampire novelists. The vampire also became graphically sexual in the mid-nineties as well.

  The 1990s also saw a number of vampire-themed anthologies of original stories and, consequently, more opportunities for short form vampire fiction. Among these were Ellen Datlow’s Blood Is Not Enough: 17 Stories of Vampirism (1990) and A Whisper of Blood (1995); Love In Vein: 20 Original Tales of Vampire Erotica (1994) and Love In Vein II: 18 More Tales of Vampiric Erotica (1997) edited by Poppy Z. Brite and Martin H. Greenberg; and 100 Vicious Little Vampire Stories (1995) edited by Stefan Dziemianowicz, Robert Weinberg, and Martin H. Greenberg. Marking the centenary of the publication of Dracula, the mostly original The Mammoth Book of Dracula: Vampire Tales for the New Millennium, edited by Stephen Jones, was published in 1997. For the very adult there were highly eroticized vampires in anthologies like Love Bites (1994), edited by “Amarantha Knight” (aka Nancy Kilpatrick). For younger readers there was Vampires: A Collection of Original Stories (1991) edited by Jane Yolen and Martin H. Greenberg (1991). Genre magazines and anthologies provided other venues for short vampire fiction, even if they had no specific connection to the icon.

  Toward the end of the last century—sometime after the release of Laurell K. Hamilton’s fourth Anita Blake Vampire Hunter fantasy novel, The Lunatic Cafe (1996), perhaps during the second (1997-1998) or third (1998-1999) season of television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and just before the first of Christine Feehan’s romance Dark Prince, the first of her Dark series (1999)—vampires started getting “hot.”

  The “good guy” vampire—usually sexy, often romantic, sometimes redeemed or redeemable, sometimes ever-heroic—started to dominate pop culture. So did sexy-but-empowered female vamps and kick-ass vampire hunters.

  The frightening vamp was most definitely still around, however, and making an impact. A few examples: films 28 Days Later (2002), I Am Legend (2007) Van Helsing (2004), and 30 Days of Night (2009), based on the 2002 comic book mini-series written by Steve Niles and illustrated by Ben Templesmith. The novel Fangland by John Marks (2007) was an homage to Stoker-type scares.

  The high literary metaphorical vampire (The Historian, Elizabeth Kostova, 2005) was still in our group psyche too, along with the viral/apocalyptic vamp (The Passage, Justin Cronin, 2010), the comedic vampire (You Suck: A Love Story, Christopher Moore, 2007), the science fictional/sociological vampire (The Fledgling, Octavia Butler, 2007), and just about every other variety—new or old.

  But the popularity of paranormal romance and urban fantasy vampires soared and at least seemed to be the numero uno vampire of the decade. Numerous best-selling series featured vampires and then Twilight, a vampire fantasy/romance for teens by Stephenie Meyer was released in 2005. It and the other three books of Meyer’s saga were immensely popular, but the films based on the series propelled the romantic vampire hero to stratospheric levels of popularity. The True Blood TV series (based on Charlaine Harris’s novels) helped fuel the bloodlust.

  What does all this mean? Pop culturists, scholars, pundits, various experts, and those who really have no idea but think they do will continue to weigh in. We’ll leave the analyses to them.

  In practical terms, for short vampire fiction it has meant a boom in anthology opportunities for original urban and paranormal romance stories and, increasingly, for both types of fiction written for the young adult market. Vamps also crept into many urban fantasy, paranormal romance, supernatural mystery, and cross-genre original anthologies without a specifically fanged theme. Even funny vampires found their way into anthologies in the oughts.

  There seem to have been fewer occasions, however, for writers with other vampiric ideas to show their talents. But new stories still found their way into periodicals, non-vamp anthologies, and compilations of reprinted stories that included a limited number of original stories. (See page 427 for a list of vampire anthologies published 2000-2010.)

  The stories of Vampires: The Recent Undead were published from 2000 into early 2010. If you are an avid vampirist, you are sure to have come across some of them previously—this is, after all, a retrospective—but I think you’ll also make some new discoveries. You will certainly find a wide variety of vampire stories herein. It is so diverse, I’m fairly sure not every selection will please every reader. But that is to be expected. This first decade of the twenty-first century seems to have been marked by division more than cohesion. The world of 2011 is not the same as that of the year 2000, nor even the world of 2007. New threats and, consequently, new terrors have arisen. How we face those fears—or escape them—has a lot to do with our preferences in vampires.

  Maybe we “needed” to embrace vampire heterogeneity in the past ten years.

  As we enter a new decade, what kind of vampire will we embrace? Nancy Kilpatrick edited a 2010 anthology Evolve: Vampire Stories of the New Undead. Its stories (none of which could appear here due to contractual necessity) may show a glimpse of the future of the vampire. Evolve²: Vampire Stories of the Future Undead is slated for this year. If you are looking for a glimpse of the Next Vampire, you might get some clues there.

  Meanwhile I hope you enjoy exploring these examples of the myth of the vampire as written—so far—for the New Millennium.

  Paula Guran, January 2011

  The Coldest Girl in Cold Town

  Holly Black

  I chose “The Coldest Girl in Coldtown” for The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror: 2010. Since then I’ve come to feel even more strongly that it has the makings of a classic. Black’s irony-rich tale has more characterization, world building, social commentary, and emotion than many novels can manage with a dozen times as many words.

  Black is a best-selling author of contemporary fantasy novels for teens and children. Her first book, Tithe: A Modern Faerie Tale (2002) was included in the American Library Association’s Best Books for Young Adults. She has since written two other books in the same universe, Valiant (2005), and Ironside (2007). Valiant was a finalist for the Mythopoeic Award for Young R
eaders and the recipient of the Andre Norton Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature. Black collaborated with artist Tony DiTerlizzi, to create the Spiderwick Chronicles. The Spiderwick Chronicles were adapted into a film and released in February 2008. Black has co-edited three anthologies: Geektastic (with Cecil Castellucci, 2009), Zombies vs. Unicorns (with Justine Larbalestier, 2010), and Bordertown (with Ellen Kushner, 2011). Her first collection of short fiction, The Poison Eaters and Other Stories, came out in 2010. She has just finished the third book in her Eisner-nominated graphic novel series, The Good Neighbors, and is working on Red Glove, the second novel in The Curse Workers series, which will be released in April 2011. White Cat, the first in the series, was published in May 2010. The author lives in Massachusetts with her husband, Theo, in a house with a secret library.

  Matilda was drunk, but then she was always drunk anymore. Dizzy drunk. Stumbling drunk. Stupid drunk. Whatever kind of drunk she could get.

  The man she stood with snaked his hand around her back, warm fingers digging into her side as he pulled her closer. He and his friend with the open-necked shirt grinned down at her like underage equaled dumb, and dumb equaled gullible enough to sleep with them.

  She thought they might just be right.

  “You want to have a party back at my place?” the man asked. He’d told her his name was Mark, but his friend kept slipping up and calling him by a name that started with a D. Maybe Dan or Dave. They had been smuggling her drinks from the bar whenever they went outside to smoke—drinks mixed sickly sweet that dripped down her throat like candy.

  “Sure,” she said, grinding her cigarette against the brick wall. She missed the hot ash in her hand, but concentrated on the alcoholic numbness turning her limbs to lead. Smiled. “Can we pick up more beer?”

  They exchanged an obnoxious glance she pretended not to notice. The friend—he called himself Ben—looked at her glassy eyes and her cold-flushed cheeks. Her sloppy hair. He probably made guesses about a troubled home life. She hoped so.

 

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