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Here are some great reads I've found on Vampires. Fiction and Non-Fiction
titles.
These
are books that I've enjoyed. Send me your favorite reads on Vampires!
cursedshadows@gmail.com
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J.
Gordon Melton has the credentials: he's a religious historian, author
of 25 books about religion and vampires, president of the American
chapter of the Transylvania Society of Dracula (founded in Bucharest,
Romania), and chairman of the committee that put on Dracula '97:
A Centennial Celebration in Los Angeles. The Vampire Book is meticulously
researched and well organized. Included are an article on the cultural
history of the vampire; a historical timeline; addresses of vampire
societies all over the world; a 55-page filmography; vampires in
plays, opera, and ballet; a 13-page list of vampire novels; and
an extensive index. The A to Z entries, each with a short bibliography,
include vampire lore in more than 30 different geographic regions
and a comprehensive "who's who," and cover topics ranging
from fingernails to sexuality, the Camarilla to Szekelys.
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Just
when you thought it was safe for a bloodsucker to go out in the
dark in New Orleans, along comes Merrick Mayfair, a sultry, hard-drinking
octoroon beauty whose voodoo can turn the toughest vampire into
a marionette dancing to her merry, scary tune. In Merrick, Anne
Rice brings back three of her most wildly popular characters--the
vampires Lestat and Louis and the dead vampire child Claudia--and
introduces them to the world of her Mayfair Witches book series.
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Here,
collected in one box-set, are the four bestselling, original titles
of Anne Rice's sprawling vampire series.
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