Thursday, May 27, 2010

Daniel Farson's Great-Uncle

Finished reading Daniel Farson's The Man Who Wrote Dracula: A Biography of Bram Stoker (London: Michael Joseph, 1975), today.

Soon after the hundred and thirteenth anniversary of its publication, as it turns out.

A few items of note: firstly, Farson (1927-1997) was Stoker's great-nephew. Here's the lineage, as explained by Farson:
Bram was named after his father, Abraham, a civil servant in Dublin Castle. His mother, Charlotte, may have been twenty years younger than her husband but was the more formidable personality with a vaulting ambition for her five sons, though little time for her two daughters. Her father was Lieut. Thomas Thornley (1796-1850) of the 43rd Reg and married her mother, Matilda Blake, in 1817. Bram's elder brother, William, became known as W. Thornley Stoker. Tom, my grandfather, was two years younger (13).
This lineage has also been exploited by Dacre Stoker, Bram's great-grandnephew, who recently co-wrote an "official" sequel to Dracula, called Dracula: The Un-Dead.

But I digress.

The second item of note is Farson's discussion of "The Dracula Game" (152-161), which concerns the then-burgeoning forays into Dracula scholarship, specifically the psychological interpretations of Bierman ("Dracula: Prolonged Childhood Illness and the Oral Triad"), Royce MacGillivray and Shuster's "Dracula and Surgically Induced Trauma in Children".

Farson is astute in noting that
Playing the Dracula Game is fun, but too easy. The simple explanation, that Bram Stoker sat down to create a first-rate story, is not acceptable to the interpreters who frequently credit the artist with meanings that never occurred to him: Bram would have been astonished, and probably outraged, at their ideas. For in dragging their fantasies from the subconscious, they deny the power of Bram Stoker's imagination which, ultimately, was alone responsible for his masterpiece (160-161).
Interestingly, Farson also prefigured Elizabeth Miller's assertion that very little of the "real" Dracula (i.e. Vlad Ţepeș) was incorporated into the novel: "Even a cursory assessment will show that Stoker seized on the name of Dracula, together with a vague impression of the background, and that was all (130)."

Of course, this doesn't stop the biography being rife with speculation and assumptions, itself. For instance, "While he was absorbed in the vampirism of Carmilla. . ." (23), "Stoker might have seen the Lubek print of 1485" (129), right down the claim that Bram died of syphilis contracted from French prostitutes (233-235). It's from Farson and his doctor's diagnosis that this allegation originates. Peter Haining and Peter Tremayne did a commendable job disputing it in The Un-Dead: The Legend of Bram Stoker and Dracula (London: Constable, 1997), pp. 174-184.

Now, as to Bram himself, he generally seemed to exist on the periphery of larger figures, especially his friend Henry Irving. Seemingly little more than a lapdog, Renfield to Irving's Dracula. After a while, he tends to blur into the background of his own story.

But he was clearly a man with a profound sense of loyalty and a very kind heart. He was quite social and had a large circle of friends. Thus, it was a shame to read of him being exploited so readily. And when he was down and out, it seemed only his "Dear Friend Hommy-Beg" (Sir Hall Caine), willingly offered assistance (229-230).

Stoker's work ethic was admirable, even if it probably came at the expense of fostering a healthy family life. His only son, Noel (born Irving Noel Thornley Stoker), apparently resented Bram's association with Henry (215-216).

The biography itself is a brisk, compelling read. It's scholarly value is hampered by a lack of footnotes and bibliography, in favour of narrative fluency. Nonetheless, it's a recommended tome for your Dracula scholarship shelf.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

What Is the LRA?

I mentioned the Lord Ruthven Award in the previous entry.

For those not-in-the-know, they're dished out by The Lord Ruthven Assembly, which is composed of "scholars and writers who maintain active interest in the presence of vampires in literature, myth, and folklore".

Their Awards go to a "a deserving work in vampire fiction or scholarship," which are "usually announced at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts each March in Ft. Lauderdale, FL."

For a list of previous winners, by category, click here.

Bell, Book and E-Mail

Shortly after I wrote this, I contacted Mr. Bell ("Food for the Dead", Wednesday, 5 May 2010 4:45:07 PM) as to whether his blog was the upcoming book, or if the book's gonna be available hardcopy.

I also asked about the "privately published" 2009 edition of Food for the Dead: On the Trail of New England's Vampires, that he sells through his site. How does it differentiate from the 2001 Carroll & Graf original?


In terms of the sequel, The Vampire's Grasp: America's Restless Vampires, and its intended format, he mentioned ("Re: Food for the Dead‏", Sunday, 9 May 2010 1:16:14 AM) that, "The blog is basically a preview of some of the material I will be including in a hardcopy version of the new book."

And here's what he wrote concerning Food's 2009 edition:
Food for the Dead went our of print when the publisher, Carroll & Graf, was bought by the publisher of Basic Books, who eliminated the C&G imprint, so that everything that C&G had published was out-of-print. People still contacted me requesting copies, so I decided to have it reprinted. The text, photos, pages of the reprint are identical to the C&G trade paper edition. The cover is glossy instead of mat.
If you haven't got a copy of Food yet, then you're missing out! As I said before, it's "a classic of the vampirological genre." It even won the 2002 Lord Ruthven Award for Non-Fiction.

So, as you can imagine, I'm pretty enthused about the sequel. Still not crazy about its title, though.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Be Vewy Qwiet, I'm Hunting Vampiwers

Came across D. Dunham's "Vampire Hunting" list on Amazon.

Of the forty items, twenty-two are books. The rest...well...it includes items like a Thunderbird Forest 324194 Wood Stake 1"x2"x48", 80 lbs Cobra Self-Cocking Crossbow Pistol Cross Bow and a Black Cord Wrapped Boken Daito Wood Practice Sword.

So let's hope this guy's taking the piss.

Melton's Cover Revealed!

It's the best I can muster up for the time being, folks, but we finally get to see what the cover for J. Gordon Melton's The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead, 3rd ed., is gonna look like:


Kinda looks like a demonic Na'vi, doesn't it?

I should also point out that if you do "Click to LOOK INSIDE!", you're only gonna see content from the second edition. As of this writing, anyway.

If you wanna see what the covers for the previous editions looked like, click here.

Pozzuoli's Bible

Speaking of Pozzuoli, I'm surprised I didn't come across this one earlier.

The author of Dracula (1897-1997) : Guide du centenaire (1996), Dracula : Le lexique du vampire (2004) and editor of Baisers de sang : 20 histoires érotiques de vampires (2005), has a new book out:


That's right, La Bible Dracula : Dictionnaire du vampire (2010). It weighs in at a hefty 653 pages, so I'm sure it'd have something of value in it. If only I had French lessons at school. Comment enfonçant.

Books of a Feather

Came across the Amazon entry for Robert Curran's upcoming The Werewolf Handbook: An Essential Guide to Werewolves and, More Importantly, How to Avoid Them (August 1, 2010).

It's the cover that got me:


Hmm...now where have I seen that motif before...

Oh, yes, of course! Alain Pozzuoli's Dracula : Le lexique du vampire (2004)!


Naughty, naughty!
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