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French Tales of Vampires 3

edited by J.-M. & Randy Lofficier
translated by Brian Stableford & others

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In the 1850s, when Paul Féval wrote The Vampire Countess, no one in France knew for sure how tolerant the reading public might be of fictions which brought vampirism into the real world. All the French literary works in which vampires had previously been featured had been calculatedly fanciful romances drawn from foreign sources and set in faraway places. A tale of Paris in the final days of the Consulate, which pretended to be true to the facts of history and employed a cast mingling real and fictitious individuals, must have seemed a different matter.

There were good reasons to doubt the propriety of placing a “real” vampire in such a setting. The victory of science over superstition, if not yet entirely secure, seemed inevitable. French readers had thrilled to the dark delights of German and English Gothic novels, but French novelists had not been nearly so willing to dabble in such absurdities.

The Vampire Countess, was probably the sixth full-length vampire novel to be published, and the first time the word vampire appeared as a feminine rather than a masculine noun. It would be a long time before any other writer contrived a vampire as perversely charismatic as The Vampire Countess or any of the characters featured in this anthology.

Contents:
Introduction by Brian Stableford
Paul Féval: The Vampire Countess
Théodore de Banville: The Alibi
Villiers de l’Isle-Adam: The Vampire Soul
Camille Debans: Graour the Monster
Guy d’Armen: Doc Ardan and the Vampires (not translated by Brian Stableford)
Eugène Scribe & Mélesville: The Vampire (A vaudeville) (not translated by Brian Stableford)
Dola Rosselet: To Die for... (2015) (not translated by Brian Stableford)

Cover by Mike Hoffman

Published by Black Coat Press in March 2025
ISBN: 978-1-64932-369-9

The Brian Stableford Website