Just transfered a old post from my previous blog, if you like vampires you might wanna check this book series
#blog #vampires #vampirefiction #vampirehunterd #books #literature #horror #scifi

https://www.ghastlymirror.xyz/blog/creator-appreciation-vampire-hunter/

Creator Appreciation Week: Vampire Hunter D - The Ghastly Mirror

I decided to talk about a book series I´ve into these past months. The Vampire Hunter D Light Novels and the Two Men behind them.

Blackthorn Castle does not fear time.
It feeds on it.

Immortality here is not blood—it is memory, inheritance, and decay stretched across centuries.
Some places don’t haunt people.
They choose them.

#GothicHorror #VampireFiction #DarkFiction #HorrorWriting #DraculaInspired #GothicLiterature

Do vampires use social media? Is it a way of finding victims? What would a vampire's profile look like? Do they show up in digital photos? What would they look like?

You should be very careful about meeting up with people who use oil paintings as their profile pictures. I would be particularly concerned if they want to meet up after dark.

Is this addressed at all in modern vampire fiction? I’d imagine it has been, but I haven’t encountered it.

#UrbanFantasy #ParanormalRomance #VampireFiction

The queen of vampire fiction gets her New Orleans farewell – Axios New Orleans

 Oct 31, 2025 – Culture

The queen of vampire fiction gets her New Orleans farewell

New Orleans pays homage this weekend to author Anne Rice in two grand events for fans of the vampire novelist and the fantastical world she created.

Anne Rice, shown here in 2016, is best known for her “Vampire Chronicles” series about Lestat. Photo: Phillip Faraone / Getty Images

Why it matters: It’s a delayed celebration of life for Rice, who died in 2021 when pandemic protocols prevented large gatherings.

The big picture: The fan club for her character Lestat gets the party started Friday at a formal ball.

  • The 37th annual vampire ball sold out in seven minutes, says co-host and French Quarter resident Alys Arden.
  • Arden, who also writes about vampires and witches in New Orleans, has attended for years with several hundred other revelers. They often dress as Rice’s characters.
  • “We’re really trying to make it feel like you walked into her world and that there’s an element of her words throughout the night,” Arden tells Axios in an exclusive interview.

The next day: Anne Rice’s son, Christopher, and her longtime friend, Eric Shaw Quinn, host the main fan event Saturday at The Orpheum.

  • It will be an immersive stage spectacle with musical performances, a recreation of her gardens and interviews with her family and colleagues.
  • It explores how she turned the worst thing that ever happened to her — the death of her daughter — into the best thing, Christopher Rice tells Axios in an exclusive interview.
  • “The genesis of her entire success was this terrible loss that she transformed into this world and invited all of these people in,” he says.

What he’s saying: “I want them to feel inspired,” he says of Saturday’s event, while also having moments to feel their grief about the loss of the author.

Christopher Rice, left, and Eric Shaw Quinn show off new Anne Rice merchandise. Image: Carlie Kollath Wells / Axios

State of play: Anne Rice grew up in New Orleans and lived in the Garden District for years.

  • The New York Times “trashed” “Interview with the Vampire” when it came out in 1976, Christopher Rice says, but his mom kept at it.
  • “The idea of taking dark fantasy seriously as a serious literary genre in which you could talk about the human condition — that was not popular when she was doing it,” he says.
  • She pioneered the technique of writing about vampires — the so-called villains — from their point of view, Quinn says. She published more than 35 books and sold more than 150 million copies.

Zoom in: A new generation of fans is being introduced to her work through AMC’s “Anne Rice Immortal Universe” television series.

  • “Talamasca” premiered this week and tells the story of the secret society mentioned in her books.
  • “Interview with the Vampire” and “Mayfair Witches” both have two seasons available for streaming. They were filmed in New Orleans.
  • Anne Rice and Christopher Rice are executive producers on the shows, the network confirmed.

The intrigue: Rice and Quinn teased new projects, including the possibility of new books. Christopher Rice wrote several books with his mother and says she left behind unfinished material.

Plus, they say they “salivate” over the idea of “Ramses the Damned” projects.

Fans often ask for more “Wolf Gift” books as well, the two business partners say.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The queen of vampire fiction gets her New Orleans farewell – Axios New Orleans

#2025 #America #AnneRice #Axios #AxiosNewOrleans #Books #Education #Films #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Movies #NewOrleans #NewOrleansFarewell #Opinion #Queen #Reading #UnitedStates #VampireFiction #Writing

Happy Anne Rice's birthday to all my fellow Gothic Fiends who celebrate.

For me, the later books perhaps drifted off too much for my taste, but the original Interview With the Vampire remains as one of the most influential vampire novels since Dracula.

#books #livres #horror #horreur #vampires #AnneRice #InterviewWithTheVampire #HorrorBooks #VampireFiction #bookstodon

Author Spotlight: Horror & Vampire Fiction Author C. Lenz

C. Lenz (she/her) is a writer, scientist, and odd little thing. Her stories have appeared in Metaphorosis, Fanatical Magazine, and on the NoSleep Podcast, among others.

She was and honorable mention in the 2023 Hamilton GritLit short story contest, and her debut novella, Thyrst Festival, was released in 2024.

She lives in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada with her wife Zoey.

Author Links:

Instagram: @sealenz
Threads: @sealenz

Get Thyrst Festival: Amazon Link

Free Stories: linktr.ee/sealenz

What is your favourite creature feature, and/or your favourite monster-slasher trope?

I love whenever someone thinks they can control the monster or use it for profit. Think Umbrella Corp from Resident Evil or Weyland-Yutani from the Aliens series wanting to use monsters for military applications. Yes, the spectacular backfiring of that idea is totally predictable, but when you look at the kinds of environmental destruction that venture capitalists invest in, the staggering lack of foresight is almost realistic. The attitude of “yeah, this is a bad idea, but I’ll be out of here before it’s a problem,” was definitely a bit of an inspiration for Mitchell, one of the villains of Thyrst Festival.

Tell us more about your book, Thyrst Festival. What inspired this story, and what inspirations might readers pick up on as they read?

I’ve always had a fascination for con artists. Obviously Fyre Festival was a huge inspiration for Thyrst Festival. For a while, I was watching and reading everything I could about it, before moving on to other recent stories about con artists and scammers like Anna Delvey (Inventing Anna) or Elizabeth Holmes (Bad Blood by John Carreyrou).

I was obsessed with the type of person who builds this elaborate lie. Do they think it will work? Do they think they’ll stay far enough ahead of the lie to keep it going indefinitely? Do they even know they’re lying?

I started out wanting to do something where the main characters know the antagonist is lying and have these kinds of questions.

The story I had planned would have been much shorter and much more like a dark comedy take on The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell, (and I might still write it at some point). I was also, at the time, working on a horror anthology I was planning to call Eat the Rich, with a focus on class warfare and conspicuous consumption.

Thyrst Festival was meant to be a short story within that anthology before it, y’know, got to novella length and I realized it stood very well on its own. (I also had a couple of the other intended stories, Confession and The Fishbowl, published on the NoSleep Podcast and Nobilis Erotica.)

Thematically, Thyrst Festival is about old money vs. new money, and how there isn’t much of a difference when they’re all vampires.

Can you tell us about your own festival-going (or gig/concert) experiences? Have any of these made it into the book?

I’ve been the first person (or at least part of the first group) to get to a music festival before, and I definitely used that for the vibe of what we see of Thyrst Festival.

It’s an interesting experience to sit on a blanket in a more-or-less empty field while surrounded by the structures of an outdoor concert, but none of the vendors are really open yet and the show hasn’t started.

It’s kind of relaxing but also really weird. You’re looking at this big stage and scattered booths, and you see some staff speed-walking around in the background sometimes, and you’re just wondering if everything’s still on track or if everyone is back there putting out some kind of fire. That uncertainty and lack of behind-the-scenes information, as an audience member, was a really fun flavour to add to a horror story.

How did you develop your protagonist and get into her head, what is your character-development process like when you’re drafting? Did she turn out the way you planned, or did she surprise you?

When I’m outlining a story, I mainly start with the plot and I’ll have a rough idea of who the character needs to be in terms of backstory and general personality in order for the events of the story to make sense. When I actually write the first draft, I’ll usually find the characters by letting myself dip more into what their thoughts would be about the things happening around them. In the case of Grace, the main character of Thyrst Festival, she is a personal assistant who’s ended up at the festival because she’s working for an influencer.

When I was coming up with the major plot beats, I more-or-less imagined her as needing this job to pay student loans but also used to being surrounded by rich people with trust funds, so she’s also usually the first person to actually address an issue rather than try to delegate. At that early stage, I was only thinking of the reasons for her to be there and why she would be the right character to follow.

When I actually began to write the first draft, I started to think more about how she would feel about where she is and who she’s with. I didn’t want her to strongly resent the people around her, because I felt that would feel too negative, but I also didn’t want her to be uncritical and feel like a long-suffering doormat. In trying to balance that, I ended up adding a bit more of myself than I maybe should have, and gave Grace a lot of morbid curiosity early on about how exactly Thyrst Festival is going to fall apart.

How do you build tension and suspense – what techniques do you use, and what’s your favourite way to elicit dread in your readers?

When I’m writing stories with a lot of suspense and action, I find it’s important to think about how fast things are happening. When you’re coming up on a reveal or turning point, you want to start drawing things out before suddenly hitting the reader with some big realization.

I find you can slow things down in a really effective, tense way by playing with the level of detail of the image you’re creating.

For example, if you want your main character to, say, stumble on a den of vampires, you can make the moment before the truth comes crashing in take a little longer by giving the POV a laser focus. Zoom in on little, out-of-context details to build up the image bit by bit, before throwing the big picture at the reader.

Share some reader responses to Thyrst Festival and let us know what they think!

I’ve been getting a lot of good reviews. Something I was proud to see come up was that I really de-romanticized vampires. They’re definitely more monstrous than how I think most media portrays them.

Most of my friends and family have also told me that they read it in one sitting.

Obviously as a novella it’s on the shorter end, but I’m very happy that people are into it enough to just finish it in one go.

I was also going for “beach read,” so that’s perfect!

Like This? Try These!

#AuthorInterview #AuthorSpotlight #monsterBooks #musicFestivalBooks #vampireBooks #vampireFiction #vampireHorror #vampires #WomenInHorror
Author Spotlight: C. Lenz

C. Lenz is a Canadian author and scientist who lives with her wife Zoey in Hamilton, Ontario. In this spotlight interview, she discusses her monster-vampire slasher, Thyrst Festival.

C. M. Rosens

What's that flapping noise? Might it be ... #vampires in our library?!

On 04/04/25 for #NachtDerBibliotheken blood-thirsty creatures of the night will haunt SUB Göttingen in Dorothea Schuller's #LiteraryStudies #CulturalStudies talk on #libraries in #VampireFiction: #Dracula #Nosferatu #BtVS & more

@subugoe

@RunalongWomble Morning Womble! After a disappointing brush with vampires* I’m on The Mermaids Singing by Val McDermid, the first of her Tony Hill novels.
#books #CrimeFiction #VampireFiction

*This Crimson Debt by Rose Sinister; I can’t pinpoint why I didn’t like it aside from ‘It wasn’t enough’. Scary, sexy, thought-provoking, unpredictable… I’d have taken any one of those but it fell short at every one for me. But a friend loved it, so maybe it’s just me.

Available now at your favorite digital store!

The Vampire Three by Kim Smeltzer