Harry is also in trouble with the White Council as he has killed with magic, and to do so carries an automatic death penalty. In Harry’s case this was commuted to being watched and executed if he steps out of line as he was a teenager when it happened and he was acting in self-defence as his uncle was trying to make him a thrall and push him onto the black path.
There are many recurring characters in the books such as Murphy, a cop who is in charge of SI (special investigations) the wing of the police which looks into odd cases. The books contain a boggle factor element in that most ordinary folks do not believe in the supernatural, this includes many in SI but Murphy has seen enough that she does believe. Another constant character is Bob, an air spirit who is connected to a skull, the property of Harry’s uncle and now bound to serve Harry.
The reason for the Honourable mention is that there are several vampiric moments but (in the first six books) this ranges from the book being vampire based, the vampires having a cameo, the vampires being in the background but not active through to the vampires not appearing.
Firstly they look human, however they are far from it. Though human before being turned they are monstrous, the human shell now a mask, a camouflage for the hunt. They are fanged and produce a venom which is highly addictive and helps in their pursuit of prey. Their true form is described thus:
“…most stood naked, now, free of the flesh masks they wore. Black, flabby creatures, twisted, horrible faces, bellies bulging, mostly tight with fresh blood. Black eyes, empty of anything but hunger, glittered in the light. Long, skinny fingers ended in black claws, as did the grasping toes of their feet. Membranes stretched between their arms and flanks, horribly slime covered…” (from Grave Peril)
Book two, Fool Moon, is a werewolf book and has no vampiric interaction at all so we skip that and head straight for book 3, Grave Peril.
The Black Court are the most familiar of the vampires to us. These are dead things in the mode of Stoker’s Dracula. Indeed we find out in a later book that the White Court had Stoker write Dracula to leak the truth and this has lead to the near-extinction of the Black Court. Those of the Black Court who survived, however, are the oldest and most dangerous of their number.
The big difference between the Black Court and Stoker’s version is daylight, in this sunlight is deadly, though the oldest do not have to sleep and there is a hint that the very oldest, like Dracula in Stoker’s novel, can withstand it. As the book Blood Rites says: “They had acres of funky vampire powers, right out of Stoker’s book. They had the weaknesses too…”
We also meet the White Court. These are different again. Energy vampires, they are more human than the others. They can enter sunlight and standard vampire slaying techniques are fairly useless. They rapidly heal, though too much damage will kill them. These vampires work through lust and are often described, more accurately, as incubi and succubi. They are born vampires but the hunger does not take them until puberty and they only turn at their first sexual encounter. If that encounter is one of love they will not turn and become human, however if it is lust they turn and are slaves to the hunger which will, if allowed, destroy them.
The fourth book, Summer Knight, has the background of the vampire/wizard war but does not actually feature a vampire, bar a dream sequence involving Susan – who has left the Chicago area to keep her from the temptation that is Harry. The book concerns itself with the fairy realm and a potential war between the summer and winter courts.
Harry also becomes embroiled in the machinations of the White Court and the hatred of Thomas’ father who wants Dresden dead. In this we also discover why Thomas is so keen to help Harry and see the White Court in feeding mode where, “a cold wind seemed to gather around him. His features stretched, changing, his cheekbones starker, his eyes more sunken, his face more gaunt. His skin took on a shining, almost luminescent luster, like a fine pearl under moonlight. And his eyes changed as well. His irises flickered to a shade of chrome-colored silver, then bleached to white altogether.”
These are great books; Harry is a terrific character - a good man, perhaps too chivalrous for his own good, who finds he must tread a careful path of greys. There is no black and White for Harry. There is also a streak of humour through the books. The beginning of Blood Rites sees Harry rescuing puppy temple dogs that are guarded by demons in the form of flying monkeys. The demon’s attack is to scoop a handful of monkey poo which ignites like napalm when thrown! Well worth a read for vampire fans and fans of supernatural fiction generally.
From what I can gather there are at least three more books, which I will be getting at some point in the future, and of course there is the TV series. At the time of writing this, the UK is up to episode two. No vampiric action yet but IMDB indicates that episode 7, Bad Blood, has a character called Bianca. Whether I will do a further honourable mention for the TV series as a whole or a review of the vampire episode(s) is a judgement call I’ll make later.
Sound like good reads to me! I'll check em out if I see em.
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