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Dodger Basilico

PostPosted: Tue Jul 31, 2007 6:19 pm


Hey I'm looking for some good vampire books if anyone knows any. btw this is to (possibly) escape the horror of reading all of the books on my school's reading list like my mom wants me to. So even if it's not a vampire book and it's just a good book you want to suggest that's also fine. Thanks!
PostPosted: Thu Aug 02, 2007 4:22 pm


I would like to know of some horror books too mrgreen Preferrably something contemporary and not full of corny vampires though...

glorybaby


bella75

PostPosted: Thu Aug 02, 2007 7:03 pm


You should try the Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer. The third book comes out in 5 days im so excited!
Book 1- Twilight
Book 2- New Moon
Book 3- Eclipse
PostPosted: Thu Aug 02, 2007 8:15 pm


All the vampire books by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes. If you haven't read them that is. Another book that you might like is The Sight by David Clement Davies.

buwieshingo

Durem Shapeshifter


deathrose121

PostPosted: Thu Aug 02, 2007 8:27 pm


I also read the Twilight,New Moon,and soon Eclipse books.Those are very good.I would sugest those over any ive read.I would also suggest Vampire Kisses if you havent read them.They are kind of a younger read but they are still good.
Hope I helped some!
PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 4:58 am


Twilight, or The Silver Kiss

bookfanatic1991


glorybaby

PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 5:53 pm


Out of some boredom and...stuff...here's an excerpt for Vampire Kisses ^_^ After that there's summaries for Amelia Atwater-Rhodes's books.


******



Chapter One: Little Monster


It first happened when I was five.


I had just finished coloring in My Kindergarten Book. It was filled with Picasso-like drawings of my mom and dad, an Elmer's-glued, tissue-papered collage, and the answers to questions (favorite color, pets, best friend, etc.) written down by our hundred-year-old teacher, Mrs. Peevish.


My classmates and I were sitting in a semicircle on the floor in the reading area. "Bradley, what do you want to be when you grow up?" Mrs. Peevish asked after all the other questions had been answered.


"A fire fighter!" he shouted.


"Cindi?"


"Uh . . . a nurse," Cindi Warren whispered meekly.


Mrs. Peevish went through the rest of the class. Police officers. Astronauts. Football players. Finally it was my turn.


"Raven, what do you want to be when you grow up?" Mrs. Peevish asked, her green eyes staring through me.


I said nothing.


"An actress?"


I shook my head.


"A doctor?"


"Nuh, uh," I said.


"A flight attendant?"


"Yuck!" I replied.


"Then what?" she asked, annoyed.


I thought for a moment. "I want to be . . . "


"Yes?"


"I want to be . . . a vampire!" I shouted, to the shock and amazement of Mrs. Peevish and my classmates. For a moment I thought she started to laugh; maybe she really did. The children sitting next to me inched away.


I spent most of my childhood watching others inch away.


I was conceived on my dad's water bed - or on the rooftop of my mom's college dorm under twinkling stars - depending on which one of my parents is telling the story. They were soul mates that couldn't part with the seventies: true love mixed with drugs, some raspberry incense, and the music of the Grateful Dead. A beaded-jeweled, halter-topped, cutoff blue-jeaned, barefooted girl, intertwined with a long-haired, unshaven, Elton John–spectacled, suntanned, leather-vested, bell-bottomed-and-sandaled guy. I think they're lucky I wasn't more eccentric. I could have wanted to be a beaded-haired hippie werewolf! But somehow I became obsessed with vampires.


Sarah and Paul Madison became more responsible after my entrance into this world - or I'll rephrase it and say my parents were "less glassy eyed." They sold the Volkswagen flower power van that they were living in and actually started renting property. Our hippie apartment was decorated with 3-D glow-in-the-dark flower posters and orange tubes with a Play-Doh substance that moved on its own - lava lamps - that you could stare at forever. It was the best time ever. The three of us laughed and played Chutes and Ladders, and squeezed Twinkies between our teeth. We stayed up late, watching Dracula movies, Dark Shadows with the infamous Barnabus Collins, and Batman on a black-and-white TV we'd received when we opened a bank account. I felt secure under the blanket of midnight, rubbing Mom's growing belly, which made noises like the orange lava lamps. I figured she was going to give birth to more moving Play-Doh.


Everything changed when she gave birth to the playdough - only it wasn't Play-Doh. She gave birth to Nerd Boy! How could she? How could she destroy all the Twinkie nights? Now she went to bed early, and that creation that my parents called "Billy" cried and fussed all night. I was suddenly alone. It was Dracula - the Dracula on TV - that kept me company while Mom slept, Nerd Boy wailed, and Dad changed smelly diapers in the darkness.


And if that wasn't bad enough, suddenly they sent me to a place that wasn't my apartment, that didn't have wild 3-D flower posters on the walls, but boring collages of kids' handprints. Who decorates around here? I wondered. It was overcrowded with Sears catalog girls in frilly dresses and Sears catalog boys in tapered pants and perfectly combed hair. Mom and Dad called it "kindergarten."


"They'll be your friends," my mom reassured me, as I clung to her side for dear life. She waved good-bye and blew me kisses as I stood alone beside the matronly Mrs. Peevish, which was as alone as one can get. I watched my mom walk away with Nerd Boy on her hip as she took him back to the place filled with glow-in-the-dark posters, monster movies, and Twinkies.


Somehow I made it through the day. Cutting and gluing black paper on black paper, finger painting Barbie's lips black, and telling the assisant teacher ghost stories, while the Sears catalog kids ran around like they were all cousins at an all-American family picnic. I was even happy to see Nerd Boy when Mom finally came to pick me up.


That night she found me with my lips pressed against the TV screen, trying to kiss Christopher Lee in Horror of Dracula.


"Raven! What are you doing up so late? You have school tomorrow!"


"What?" I said. The Hostess cherry pie that I had been eating fell to the floor, and my heart fell with it.


"But I thought it was just the one time?" I said, panicked.


"Sweet Raven. You have to go every day!"


Every day? The words echoed inside my head. It was a life sentence!


That night Nerd Boy couldn't hope to compete with my dramatic wailing and crying. As I lay alone in my bed, I prayed for eternal darkness and a sun that never rose.


Unfortunately the next day I awoke to a blinding light, and a monster headache.


I longed to be around at least one person that I could connect with. But I couldn't find any, at home or school. At home the lava lamps were replaced with Tiffany-style floor lamps, the glow-in-the-dark posters were covered with Laura Ashley wallpaper, and our grainy black-and-white TV was upgraded to a twenty-five-inch color model.

(Continues...)


******




I also looked up three vampire books by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes. The looked interesting... Not very horrific though O.o

Hawksong:
Danica is an avian shapeshifter, and her golden hawk's form in the sky is as natural to her as her human one on land. The only thing more familiar to her is war: It has raged between her people and the serpiente for so long, no one can remember how it began. All they know is hatred, fear and bloodshed. And Danica is tired of it


Midnight Predator:
Though she was once a happy teenager with a wonderful family and a full life, Turquoise Draka is now a hunter, committed to no higher purpose than making money and staying alive. In a deadly world of vampires, shape-shifters, and mercenaries, she'll track any prey if the price is right. Her current assignment: to assassinate Jeshikah, one of the cruelest vampires in history. To do so, she must hide her strength and enter Midnight, a fabled Vampire realm, as a human slave


Snakecharm:
The peace forged by the love between Zane and Danica, leaders of the avian and serpiente realms that had been at war for generations, is threatened by the arrival of Syfka, an ancient falcon who claims one of her people is hidden in their midst.
PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 6:09 pm


Another except! This time for Hawksong, which I think is the first book out of the three vampire books I listed in my previous post...



******



They say the first of my kind was a woman named Alasdair, a human raised by hawks. She learned the language of the birds and was gifted with their form.

It is a pretty myth, I admit, but few actually believe it. No record remains of her life.

No record except for the feathers in every avian’s hair, even when otherwise we appear human, and the wings I can grow when I choose—and of course the beautiful golden hawk’s form that is as natural to me as the legs and arms I wear normally.

This myth is one of the stories we hear as children, but it says nothing of reality or the hard lessons we are taught later.

Almost before a child of my kind learns to fly, she learns to hate. She learns of war. She learns of the race that calls itself the serpiente. She learns that they are untrustworthy, that they are liars and loyal to no one. She learns to fear the garnet eyes of their royal family even though she will probably never see them.

What she never learns is how the fighting began. No, that has been forgotten. Instead she learns that they murdered her family and loved ones. She learns that these enemies are evil, that their ways are not hers and that they would kill her if they could.

That is all she learns.

This is all I have learned.

Days and weeks and years, and all I know is bloodshed. I hum the songs my mother once sang to me and wish for the peace they promise. It’s a peace my mother has never known, nor her mother before her.

How many generations? How many of our soldiers fallen?

And why?

Meaningless hatred: the hatred of an enemy without a face. No one knows why we fight; they only know that we will continue until we win a war it is too late to win, until we have avenged too many dead to avenge, until no one can remember peace anymore, even in songs.

Days and weeks and years.

My brother never returned last night.

Days and weeks and years.

How long until their assassins find me?


Danica Shardae
Heir to the Tuuli Thea


Chapter 1

I took a deep breath to steady my nerves and narrowly avoided retching from the sharp, well-known stench that surrounded me.

The smell of hot avian blood spattered on the stones, and cool serpiente blood that seemed ready to dissolve the skin off my hands if I touched it. The smell of burned hair and feathers and skin of the dead smoldered in the fire of a dropped lantern. Only the fall of rain all the night before had kept that fire from spreading through the clearing to the woods.

From the forest to my left, I heard the desperate, strangled cry of a man in pain.

I started to move toward the sound, but when I took a step through the trees in his direction, I came upon a sight that made my knees buckle, my breath freezing as I fell to the familiar body.

Golden hair, so like my own, was swept across the boy’s eyes, closed forever now but so clear in my mind. His skin was gray in the morning light, covered with a light spray of dew. My younger brother, my only brother, was dead.

Like our sister and our father years ago, like our aunts and uncles and too many friends, Xavier Shardae was forever grounded. I stared at his still form, willing him to take a breath and open eyes whose color would mirror my own. I willed myself to wake up from this nightmare.

I could not be the last. The last child of Nacola Shardae, who was all the family I had left now.

I wanted to scream and weep, but a hawk does not cry, especially here on the battlefield, in the midst of the dead and surrounded only by her guards. She does not scream or beat the ground and curse the sky.

Among my kind, tears were considered a disgrace to the dead and shame among the living.

Avian reserve. It kept the heart from breaking with each new death. It kept the warriors fighting a war no one could win. It kept me standing when I had nothing to stand for but bloodshed.

I could not cry for my brother, though I wanted to.

I pushed the sounds away, forcing my lips not to tremble. Only one heavy breath escaped me, wanting to be a sigh. I lifted my dry eyes to the guards who stood about me protectively in the woods.

“Take him home,” I ordered, my voice wavering a bit despite my resolve.

“Shardae, you should come home, too.”

I turned to Andreios, the captain of the most elite flight in the avian army, and took in the worried expression in his soft brown eyes. The crow had been my friend for years before he had been my guard, and I began to nod assent to his words.

Another cry from the woods made me freeze. I started toward it, but Andreios caught my arm just above the elbow. “Not that one, milady.”

Normally I would have trusted his judgment without question, but not here on the battlefield. I had been walking these bloody fields whenever I could ever since I was twelve; I could not avert my eyes when we were in the middle of this chaos and someone was pleading, with what was probably his last breath, for help. “And why not, Andreios?”

The crow knew he was in trouble the instant I addressed him by his full name instead of his childhood nickname of Rei, but he kept on my heels as I stepped around the slain bodies and closer to the voice. The rest of his flight fell back, out of sight in their second forms-crows and ravens, mostly. They would take my brother home only when it did not mean leaving me alone here.

"Dani." In return, I knew Rei was serious when he lapsed into the informal and used my nickname, Dani, instead of a respectful title or my surname, Shardae. Even when we were alone, Rei rarely called me Danica. It was an entreaty to our lifelong friendship when he used that nickname where someone else could hear it, and so I paused to listen. "That's Gregory Cobriana. You don't want his blood on your hands."


******



I have excepts from the other two books if anyone wants to see...

glorybaby


Dodger Basilico

PostPosted: Sat Aug 04, 2007 5:12 pm


Thanks! The suggestions helped a lot! ^__^
PostPosted: Sun Aug 05, 2007 4:19 am


My favorite vampire novels:

I am Legend by Richard Matheson
The Dracula Tape and An Old Friend of the Family by Fred Saberhagen
Fevre Dream by George R.R. Martin
Anno Dracula and The Bloody Red Baron by Kim Newman
Guilty Pleasures, The Laughing Corpse, and Circus of the Damned by Laurell K. Hamilton
Sunglasses After Dark, In the Blood, and Paint It Black by Nancy Collins.
 

godhi


KiyoshiKyokai

PostPosted: Tue Aug 07, 2007 11:42 am


I'm reading the manga "Roasrio+Vampire" right now, and I think you can download an English translation of it online somewhere. That said, I usually read these kinds of things in spite of the vampires, not in a search for them...

Dark Magical Orchestra, a serial novel I'm writing, also features a vampire here or there. Perhaps that would satiate your urge for Dark Fantasy.
PostPosted: Tue Aug 07, 2007 1:05 pm


Actually glory the Kiesha'ra series (Hawsong, Snakecharm, Falcondance, Wolf Cry, and the 5 book) are not about vampires. Though In the Forest of the Night, Shattered Mirror, Demon in my view, and Midnight Predator are about vampires and they are by the same author. I know cause I have all of them excluding Wolf Cry and the 5 book. Thought I'd clear a little bit of confusion if there was any, but the Kiesha'ra series is good even if it doesn't revolve around vampires. Thats another good read.

~Buwie

buwieshingo

Durem Shapeshifter


longlived

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PostPosted: Thu Aug 09, 2007 9:55 am


Sweet blood. i forget who writes it and it isnt really about vampires but does mention them. It is a good book if you haven't read it yet
PostPosted: Fri Aug 10, 2007 2:11 am


...and for fans of Vampire: the Masquerade and the World of Darkness, there is A Dozen Black Roses by Nancy Collins.
It's Sonya Blue versus the Ventrue and the Tremere... and you almost feel sorry for the vampires!
 

godhi


GarraTheUltimateDeath

PostPosted: Sat Aug 11, 2007 10:22 pm


Try the darren shan saga
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