Monday, March 02, 2015

The Rivals of Dracula – review

Editor: Michel Parry

First published: 1977

Contains spoilers

The Blurb: Vampires!

Vampires – those toothy denizens of darkness with their deathly-pale faces and hot-coal eyes and their craving for rich, warm, red blood – have been scaring hell out of people for centuries. Visions of abject terror – of satin-lined opera cloaks and polished black hair, of long twisty fingers beckoning beautiful virgins and turreted castles shrouded in mist and moonlight, of creaking coffins and garlic garlands, of flapping bats’ wings and stakes through the heart – have stirred the imaginations of millions through the ages.

Now, in the brilliantly original collection, you are invited to meet some of the very best vampires ever...

The rivals of Dracula

The review: This is an old anthology and, as well as being cheap second hand, I hoped there might be a rare tale or two in it.

The introduction by Michel Parry is woefully out of date, it mentions a more definitive connection between Dracula and Vlad Ţepeş than there actually is, it mentions penny dreadful stories that have now been proven not to exist, it gets the authorship of Varney the Vampire wrong… but all of the above is simply a product of the time.

The volume is thin and some of the stories are newer than I’d have liked – with the title Rivals of Dracula I was hoping for older or contemporary tales. The Anonymously penned the Mysterious Stranger is such a tale – translated from German into English in 1854. It is a marvellous tale and I should feature it as an interesting short at some point (in the meantime I do look at it in my volume The Media Vampire.) E & H Heron’s the Story of Baelbrow is from 1898 and is particularly interesting as it combines an Egyptian Mummy with vampire lore. The house is haunted by a ghost, vampiric in nature but non-corporeal until it is able to possess the mummy’s remains.

The other tales run from M.R. James’ 1904 piece Count Magnus, though whether that is actually a vampire tale is debatable, through to the 70s. A favourite piece was the Undead Die (1948) by E Everett Evans – this has love overcoming monstrosity and the vampires are also called lamia within it. Manly Wade Wellman reminds us, in the Horror Undying (1936), that “A werewolf, if killed and left unburnt, would rise from death, and rise to be a blood-drinking vampire.

Though thin, the stories are well chosen and there are some unusual entries in the collection that perhaps do not show up in every collection of shorts. The legend on the cover declaring “A century of vampire fiction” was a misnomer, of course, as there was a story dated before 1877, as mentioned above. Worth having, however, and I love the manbat cover. 7 out of 10.

2 comments:

vampiregirls said...

Help!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmkJ5oqLW2k&list=UUQAEJT7o8922XpgqvDzbtBA

where can I download this movie (theme of the movie about vampires) ? the entire Internet was searched, but nothing found ( willing to pay for help

Taliesin_ttlg said...

hi vampiergirls - not one that i've come across before but I'll start searching through.

It seems that this was a mini-series rather than movie, which might help the search