"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!" (Mary Quallo, St Louis)

"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!"  (Mary Quallo, St Louis)
Coming next week - Carla Eatherington
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

The Dance of the Vampires: Emma Edwards meets Dracula buff, Shane O'Neill


In the third last Cauldron interview before the summer hiatus (a Wizard's conference, somewhere near Krakow, don't worry about it...), Emma Edwards, sparky, innovative, author of Cardiff vampire novels "Sanguinary" and "Imbrued" takes over from Ngaire in the Cauldron hot seat.  

http://greenwizard62.blogspot.com.es/2012/08/an-interview-with-emma-edwards.html


Emma has become a top friend of mine and is a big supporter of all things Green Wizard and I've been looking forward to seeing her stir the pot, as it were. 

For her interview, Emma chose vampire historian, football nut, Sabbath fan, Nosferatist and big Dracula buff, Shane O'Neill, author of "The Dracula Chronicles." 

...and here's Emma!


_____________________________________________
Emma: You know I only agreed to this gig because I thought Igor would be here…where is he?


Cousin Igor, at your service, Emma!
Anyway, I digress.  I am in fact very honoured to be asked to take a turn at stirring the Cauldron, especially after the great job Ngaire Elder has done over the past few weeks.
About nine months ago I first stumbled into the business of Indie authordom, I didn’t have much of a clue what I was doing…I had written a book and published it…now what?  

I was very lucky to be approached very early on by Wiz and asked if I would like to include my book in The Independent Paperback Giftshop.  


And am I so glad that he asked because Wiz himself and the fellows of the Wizard’s Court have been amazing with all the support, advice and occasional kick in the butt that I have needed.
I once read a comment that described authors as competitive with a lack of will to help others.  I have found the exact opposite of this to be true.  The Indie authors I have met in the past year have been a great bunch, always supportive and ready to offer advice and help.
Another shining example of this is another good friend I have made since my Indie journey began, fellow vampire author and one time Wales dweller Shane O Neil.  

So I am doubly honoured to be able to spend some time taking over at the Cauldron with Shane.
Welcome to The Cauldron, Shane.  Tell us about your series, The Dracula Chronicles.



The Dracula Chronicles is a series 20 years in the making, and seriously for the last 12.  Originally it was going to be 8 very large tomes, but I’ve started to break them up into novels of about 125k-140k words each, so there could be as many as 15-20 by the time I have finished with it.
The series is an epic journey through the ages where the forces of Light and Darkness struggle for supremacy until the Second Great War, as foretold in the Book of Revelations. This bitter feud began after the creation of mankind. Lucifer’s jealousy leads to the First Great War of the angels. Hundreds of thousands of years on the feud simmers beneath the surface. It plots the course of history as we know it today. Both sides manipulate the major players through the centuries to seek an advantage over the other.


Bound by Blood by Shane O'Neill - highly rated old school
 vampire horror
 
On a cold night in December 1431 in Sighisoara an old gypsy woman delivers a prophecy to the great Vlad Dracul. She tells him he is about to sire two sons, one an angel and the other a devil. He returns to his fortress just as his wife bears him a son, whom he names Vlad. In the very same moment across the country on the border between Transylvania and Hungary a gypsy girl gives birth to another son, Andrei. The die is cast. The twin souls are born. The young Vlad Dracula becomes the instrument of the forces of Darkness. To balance this, the baby Andrei is blessed by the angels and bestowed with awesome powers. These chronicles are their story.



Vlad Dracula - the ruler who started it all

You have published two volumes of The Dracula Chronicles so far, what is next for the series?


Yes I began with Bound By Blood which I broke into Volume 1 & 2 and released together.  This is not the beginning of the series, but the first one where readers will see Dracula the vampire.  I felt it necessary to begin with the vampire first.  In the summer I intend to release the very first book in the series, The Path To Decay.  

This goes back to the night of Dracula’s birth and of course, the birth of his brother, Andrei; sired by the same father but born in very different circumstances.   
What first sparked your interest in Vampires and more specifically Dracula?

]


When I was about 12 years old and I started babysitting my sisters I often saw one of Christopher Lee’s Dracula movies.  Of course they were quite terrifying at so tender an age and I was completely hooked.  Very soon after that I saw Salem’s Lot, which scared the living crap out of me and hooked me further.  So the interest in Dracula was already there.


Christopher Lee tattoo
I became aware of Dracula the man in my later teens and with my deep love of history I began to study him in great depth.  When I began writing I wanted to create something that combined the two.


This scene from "Salem's Lot" softened my evacuate for a week after I saw it.
The scariest TV movie ever made? And a brilliant book, King's second best - Wiz.
The Dracula Chronicles have been described as ‘a lesson in history’, you must have to do a great deal of research?


I’m still not sure whether to be flattered by that comment or not, but yes it has been said.  As I said this project has been ongoing for a lot of years and it involved a lot of very meticulous research.  The books begin in the 15th Century and I wanted to portray Dracula’s life and times and his character as accurately as I possibly could.  But I have also mixed various legends and folklore in with the real historical events.  The most exciting aspects of writing these novels was where I had opportunities to fill in some gaps not covered by historical texts.  This allowed me to manipulate events to suit my purpose.
You are also very dedicated to the promotion of your works….
Oh yes.  I don’t think I’ve ever heard a truer word spoken.  I use many social media outlets to raise awareness of my work.  

The problem is I tend to overdo it and have promoted my books for as much as 12 hours a day on lots of days.  Not a good thing when you have a wife who doesn’t appreciate what you’re trying to build and wants you for other things.  Something had to give I guess and sadly I’m a single man again.
I believe you are also something of a football fan (as is the great Wizard who is watching over us).  Do you get to go to many matches?  Who do you support?

The very first game I saw live was a pre-season friendly between Luton Town and Manchester United. I was only a little kid but met George Best and Denis Law after the game. There were bars in the football grounds back then and George lifted me up and sat me on the bar where he was standing.  I loved both teams always after that and continued to watch Luton as I lived there until I was 9.  




I watched them a lot in the late 80’s and early 90’s too and also got up to Old Trafford as often as I could.  Sadly I haven’t seen a live game in this millennium.  I also love Glasgow Celtic being that I am an Irishman.
You are also working on a series of short horror stories, the first being the beautifully titled, Orchid.  Can you tell us a bit more about your plans for these short stories?

The horror shorts are called Tales Of The Black Sabbath and each title is named after a song by the legendary hard rock band.  I thought of incorporating lyrics into the stories but decided against it for copyright reasons.  I remember Shaun Hutson doing it years ago though and he had such stories featured in Kerrang magazine.  I have dreamed of that same thing my whole life.


The band (and track) that invented heavy metal and changed my life. 
Up till this point, I was into The Wombles. 
(I love Sabbath...oh and if you go ahead, Shane, I'll send you a 5000 - NIB? :-)
Orchid is the first and is about a young woman who is killed way before her time in a car accident.  As her husband is burying her a mysterious stranger comes to him at the graveside and tells him he can bring her back as long as he doesn’t let them bury her.  The husband can’t resist such an offer and so starts off a chain of events with startling consequences, for such things always come with a price.
I hear you’re also something of a Scrabble Buff?   What was your highest scoring word ever?


Yes I was for a time.  I took the game up in 2004 and really fancied myself as a player though I had no conception of how good the real top players are.  I foolishly boasted I’d make it to the World Championships.  Well I did and in 2007 I went to Mumbai and represented Wales, but had a terrible tournament, my world ranking dropping from 86th to 205th.  I quit the game the same week, having achieved what 
I set out to do.  

My highest scoring word was 301 for QUICKEST through two triple word scores.  In the game we call that a 9-timer as it scores 3x3.  I managed my highest score in that same game with 921.
You recently got re-tweeted by Luke Goss from everyone’s favourite Boyband, Bros….
Oh yes!! I posted a Top 5 on-screen vampires on my blog and ranked him at #1 for his role as Jared Nomak in Blade II.  


Luke Goss - Jared Nomak in Blade II
In all fairness he was brilliant in it.  He is actually a very talented actor and enjoying a flourishing movie career now.  Best of luck to him.  Here is the post if anyone fancies a look.
Jared Nomak is furious with you as you refused to write him a part in the next instalment of the Dracula Chronicles.  He kidnaps you and throws you in his dungeon.  Although, after seeing your blog post where you named him as your #1 on screen vampire (above Tom Cruise as Lestat, the two have a big rivalry…probably…) he relents and decides to allow you a few luxuries…3 books, 2 cds and 1 dvd…what would you choose?
When I started reading the question I thought I was well and truly f*cked.  Thankfully there was light at the end of the tunnel.



My 3 books would be.. Shibumi by Trevanian





Strumpet City by James Plunkett 






...and probably one of your books, Wiz. The Ritual is a book I really want to read.  It looks awesome.


(That's very kind of you, Shane.  At the risk of interrupting like that bloke with the glasses on "Pointless", one of the chapters is based on the Black Sabbath Black Sabbath cover. Anyway, back on with the show - Ed)




Only 2 cd’s? Ugh.. well my favourite album is Spectres by Blue Oyster Cult.  




The second would have to Deep Purple’s 1984 reunion album, Perfect Strangers.  It’s the best I’ve heard.  




1 dvd would have to be Legends Of The Fall. Edward Zwick is a master moviemaker and that, in my opinion, is the best movie of the very many I have seen.
Hollywood is calling….who would be your ideal choice of actors for the on-screen adaptions of The Dracula Chronicles?


I always imagined Benecio del Toro as my Dracula, but I’m leaning towards James Purefoy now.  Alice Krige would be Ilona Szilagy; Michael Wincott as Varkal; Joely Richardson as Ruxandra; Rutger Hauer as Mihnea and maybe Elizabeth Berkeley as Anya; Hugh Jackman as Jean Pelou; And Viggo Mortensen as Lucifer.
For the historic figures Sean Bean would have to be John Hunyadi; Derek Jacobi as Pope Paul V, David Thewliss as Henry VIII… oh there are far too many in truth…But the big movie producers are too scared to touch this.  They could never afford it.

Lucifer himself appears features in The Dracula Chronicles….I have a dog called Luci-fur….



Hmm well my Lucifer isn’t someone you could pet and live to tell anyone about it.  Saying that, he appears as a woman in the early books so some petting is possible, maybe.. Oh Hell, just rub away….






My other dog is called Sparkle (that’s what you get for letting a 3 year old name a dog).  Of course, ‘sparkle’ has much more connotations with another kind of Vampire these days, what do you make of the whole Twilight saga and their sparkling vampires?
Well I am not one to berate another’s work as I know the effort that goes into creating something worthwhile.  I am also aware of the angst between Stephen King and Ms Meyer.  

Saying that, I firmly believe vampires are creatures of darkness.  Mine certainly are.  I have to say I’m fed up of the whole teenage vampire thing.  


As a serious lover of the horror genre I feel these tales with vampire boyfriend/teenage girl really take a lot away from what vampires are supposed to represent.  


My vampires are dark, brutal monsters as they should be.  There is no sparkling in sunlight, no moody teenagers (or werewolves) and not a hair product in sight.  Actually werewolves with vampires annoys me even more.




You are a well-travelled man, Shane and you have also spent a lot of time in good old Wales, where do you consider home?

Yes I have lived and worked all over the world and spent about 17 years in all in Wales.  Home for me will always be a small fishing town in west Cork in the Republic of Ireland.. a beautiful spot called Castletownbere.





Shane, it has been a pleasure to have you on the show tonight. I, and all the Wizardwatchers, wish you all the very best in the future.

Emma, anytime. Loved it...and thanks!







Contact Shane here...
Amazon:



Website


Blog


Twitter

@ShaneKPONeill

Goodreads


Youtube


Facebook




______________________________________


Zoltan, Hound of Dracula 

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

An Interview with Dawn White


Dawn White
Why is it some of the nicest, friendliest people write some of the bloodiest, most horrible books? Tomes chockful of gore, evisceration, suppurating fungal pores, weeping sores, bleeding livers, screaming eyeballs, plasma-dripping fangs, cracking bone and mega-violent death?

I don't understand it.  It just doesn't seem right. So, what are these conspicuously angelic people like on the inside?  Sigmund Freud would have his couch full trying to sort this little dilemma out.

Case in point. Author Dawn White.  

Angelic smile and nice as a slice of strawberry cheesecake. Seriously mofo dark and bloody book, by all accounts.

Dawn is one of the many Crushed Hearts and Black Butterfly authors featured on the Wizard's Cauldron in the past quarter and she's as nice as can be, a real lady. Would flip her last dollar in the cloth cap of a stinking travelling minstrel in the Mall. 

Yet she admits she tries to write some of the darkest paranormal stuff on the Indielit market. 

And living in San Diego, in the sunshine and with the ever present whispers of the Pacific in the ether, cannot be a conducive environment for a paranormal book, but somehow, Dawn manages it. 

In an attempt to find out, I battled my way through the paralysing winter snow to get to the Wizphone while Dawn sunned herself on a secluded beach, Cartier fountain pen in her hand and a notepad by her side, jotting down dark and bloody ideas for her next book in "The Damned" series. 

Here's what she told the Wizard about what she's up to (when she's not fanning herself under a palm tree, that is!)

Hi Dawn!
Hi Wiz!

So, tell us a bit about yourself. 
Okay. I live in San Diego with my wonderful husband and three very busy little girls. I am originally from Upstate New York and look forward to seeing the weather changes when we move back in March. 

I’m an avid reader, editor, and dark paranormal author. I love meeting new people and always look forward to getting to know them.

Readers can learn a little more about you here, Dawn.
Yes they can, Wiz.


What's life like in San Diego? 
I am not from San Diego, my family and I are only here because my husband of twelve years is stationed here in the military. I miss the weather changes New York has to offer.

Santa Anita

That's a pity. Santa Anita races is on my bucket list of things to do. We could have talked about that instead of exploding heads.
Sorry Wiz! 

I'm squeamish, you know.
Hahahahahahaha. No you're not! I've seen the rest of your blog!

Okay, you got me. At least you'll have Belmont and Saratoga. So,tell us about your current publication.
The Damned series has kept me very busy as of late. I am on a speedy journey to finish the third book in the series for an April publication.



Tell us about Wingless and the Damned. I understand it sold really well.
It sold quite well. It was my first book I have ever published and I still get nervous every time someone says they are reading it.



Why did you become interested in the Paranormal?
I grew up with a love for literature. One of the first books I have ever read from cover to cover is Homer’s the Illiad. I loved it! 


Early lithograph of best selling
Hellenic scribbler, Homer

But my all time favorite books are Anne Rice’s. So vampires and things that go bump in the night have always been at the forefront of my mind while writing. 

I tried to read an Ann Rice book. I couldn't get into it at all.
Really? Too squeamish?

Not at all. It wasn't very scary. It seemed more like a chamber piece than a horror novel. There is a rich seam of snobbishness running through every paragraph, a sense of pretty unsubtle homoeroticism and, to be frank, some average writing. 
Oh!

Oh well, each to their own. Anyway, annoyed with the success of Wingless, a gaggle of envious Indies dress up as alluring Succubi and kidnap you on the way to the nail bar. You are thrown in a disused nuclear shelter near the New Chargers Stadium.  You find a care package in the corner next to the canned beans and the oxygen tanks. Three books, two CD's and a DVD hide there, underneath prepping manuals. What would you like them to be?

Yikes! I don’t think I would enjoy being kidnapped but the Three books would have to be the Blood and Light series by Rue Volley.

The two cd’s hmmm 

Let's try Apocalyptica and Metallica.





And the DVD I know it’s not very romantic but All Quiet on the Western Front! 



I love war movies, I don’t generally watch chick flicks but I love a great war movie. 

What's your favorite food and which writer/artist/musician would you like to share a meal with?
I would love to share a great cup of coffee with Rue Volley. Yes I know her and talk to her every day but she is the first Indie Author’s book that I have ever read. Now that I have a chance to speak to her every day it still hasn't sunk in that she is actually a friend.



What's next for Independent literature? Can Paranormal writing sustain public interest?
Paranormal Literature can and will always sustain the public. It will change but it should stay around for a while. I think at this moment as an indie author and a tiny blimp on the radar I myself am just trying to bring the paranormal bracket back to the way it’s supposed to be; Dark and bloody.

Dark and Bloody scene from a paranormal book somewhere

Cats or dogs?
Cats, but I also love big dogs…

Creeping ectoplasm scarily envelops Ted Bear, magnificent Newfy, in semi-haunted house in Paradise at Christmas. Mackenzie Knight and her paranormal ghost hunting friends have been informed.

What do fans of Dawn White have to look forward to in the coming year?
Book one Wingless and Damned and book two Wingless and Forsaken will be put into the same book. Which will release on January 30th

Book three of the series Wingless and Shattered will be out in April; putting the finishing touches on it this week. It’s sitting over 104k right now. ;)

The new projects

Thanks for coming round the Cauldron, Dawn and I wish you the best of luck!
Thanks bunches, Wiz.

Contact:






Wednesday, 26 December 2012

Sanguinary: The Review

In 2003, I was a member of a forum in America called The Nook. 

It was quite a social place at a time when social networking was just beginning. 

There, I met a librarian from Watford. 

She told me her name was Freya and wouldn't give her real name even in private messages, of which, over time, there were a great many. 

Toward the end of our interaction, I was beginning to get excited at the prospect of some local weekend action, when lo and behold, she invited me down to Watford.

Then she told me what she did at weekends.

Along with a posse of like minded others, she spent her nights dressing up as a vampire, sleeping in coffins and...
...drinking the blood of willing donors and/or supplies stolen from Watford General. 

She was very candid about it. And she thought I would enjoy it and she wanted my company.

And for my part, while fascinated, I declined the offer. Naturally, our friendship petered out.

As my life collapsed like a rack of dominos in the next eight years, I forgot this story, but when I encountered Emma Edwards and her bloody tome "Sanguinary", it came back to haunt me like a legion of demons breaking down my door for a quick word.


Emma Edwards

An Interview with Emma Edwards
Original Interview from July 2013

Synopsis: Set in Cardiff, mostly in a nightclub called Domain, among goths, emos, rockers, metalheads and similar outcasts, Emma writes a quite simple - yet strangely complex - morality tale.  

Angel, the symbolically named heroine of the piece (who is anything BUT an angel), is a cub reporter for the local rag and she is sent to investigate the nightclub following a spate of gruesome murders in which the corpse is found drained of blood. 

Desanguinated, in the parlance.

Angel, a dyed in the wool counter-culturalist, neo-goth, rock chick and sex crazed thrill seeker is considered by her editor to be the ideal choice infiltrate the club. 

He's heard rumours of Sanguinarians - human beings who drink the blood of willing others. 

Not vampires, but something like.

Angel takes the job and before long is watching the lead singer of hot Manson-style rock band Erebis strut his stuff. 

Muscular, chiselled, pale, tattooed, challenging, feminine, writhing, taboo-breaking, in your face, he cuts a fine figure on stage. She notices a gaggle of young girls gyrating to his every move and she realises she is similarly entranced.

After the show, in the spirit of good journalism, she offers to buy him a whisky. He accepts. His name is Ash. And Ash tells her quite openly that the whole band drink blood for kicks...and despite her job, despite her ethics, despite...

...she begins to fall in love with him.

That same night, another girl is found in Cardiff docks, pallid and very, very dead.
____

Sanguinary is well worth a read. I think its a very, very good book.




This conclusion might surprise you.

I'm not in my twenties. I'm male. I'm not a fan of vampire fiction. I've never been to a goth club. I've never met a goth or an emo, nor have I spoken to a man who habitually wears make up in twenty years.

Yet I had no difficulty reading Sanguinary.  

In fact for several hours afterwards, I went through it and thought about it in some detail. Engaging, challenging in parts, and completely absorbing, the novel kept my attention. 

It has many, many strengths. 

Strong characterisation which remains concrete from chapter to chapter, a solid sense of place and a deliberate restriction of environment (the club, Angels house, the vampire's "crypt"), ensured a feeling of creeping claustrophobia. 

Emma has clearly walked in the moccasins of the protagonist because the dialogue, in parts, crackles like a sparkler on bonfire night. 

She has an excellent ear for banter, natter, and the way people speak, yet avoids the trap of dialect and slang and the use of interlocutions. 

This ensures a rattling fast pace, a sense of transferability (it could take place anywhere), and character-led reading experience.

The anti-heroine, Angel, is sexy, captivating, vulnerable, a borderline alcoholic, constantly at war with her demons and under pressure from her scathingly pristine and successful family. She makes mistakes, sometimes bad ones. For example, her treatment of her plain, straight and loving ex-boyfriend after she falls for Ash is disgraceful and dilutes much of the sympathy bankroll the reader has saved for her. She drinks too much, she is caustic, cloying and vicious at times, but there is a goodness to her that comes across - even if you sometimes have to believe.

As a heroine, you root for her and that's not always what you would expect. Emma clearly knows her readers, particularly the relationship that develops between the reader's experience and the familiar character in society - she's the type of girl who would ignite the Galahad, the Lancelot, the Martel in every man she meets and, as she admits on three occasions, be immediately willing to spit her saviour into the gutter.


And then there's Ash. If you are male - and this is a book suitable for both male and female - you are going to have strong feelings about Ash. That can go both ways...

Again, this is to Emma's credit.

Emma was originally drawn into the vampire genre by the lead character in "The Lost Boys".

Arrogant, offhand, cocksure, uncaring, dissuasive and unconcerned, Ash is every inch the Lestat symbol,  the sexual predator, the fanged beast of the night that trembles the heart and inspires the fevered breast.  He is written as a symbol of many things: There isn't much of a metaphysical leap between Ash gyrating on stage in his leather trousers, and the chilling pale-skulled Nosferatu sneaking up on the willing virgin in her chambers.



Emma writes him strongly, possibly the strongest written character in the book, sketched with a fine eye for detail.  

There are Heathcliff elements of him - the orphan, abandoned child, the dark presence - as well as the very definite danger of the ultimate Bad Boy - but Emma shows us slivers of light, explaining his blood drinking as every inch a curse, a circumstance, a quirk of medical fate and that there are other sides to him. 

I'm told women generally love Ash - and he's as good a reason as any to buy the book, because together, Angel and Ash are dynamite.

Dynamite. I'm not kidding: I mean, say what?!

The book exudes sex. It positively bleeds it. 

Some flowers are so productive, even their stems are fragrant; their stamen emitting pollen, their buds weeping copious juices as if the act of germination would be its very last.

If Sanguinary were a flower, and sex was it's fragrance, this novel would be one of these flowers.

The book has an unbelievable amount of sex per page. I mean truck halting amounts. The lovestruck duo never, ever stop bonking. 

If you like sex writing, you will love this book. 

Some good ones too. The  sex scenes that satisfy Ash's dark desire for bloodletting - the enthralling moment when Ash feasts on Angel's blood by opening an artery on her thigh, for example, an act which echoes Dracula, Prince of Darkness - are genuinely breathtaking and are worth the price alone. 



Obviously, Bad Boy symbol Ash is a tattooed sexual behemoth whose very presence inspires a cacophonous certainty of orgasm in all his women. Yet, Anne Rice wrote Lestat and his clan as asexual at best and impotent at worst and Dracula himself never showed much interest in sex, so he has to be human after all. Brilliant irony in the age of the vampiristic supermen. 

Emma is making a wry, social comment here - the good guy-bad guy sex angle - and indeed, there are three or four entertaining subplots to this affect, particularly the three cornered relationship between Jay, the lovestruck guitarist and friend of Ash, the vampiric singer, and Angel herself.

It's not a perfect book. 

Sometimes, you wish Emma would get to the point, the watchwords of today being space and economy. There are too many characters in the book and you end up not caring about two or three of them; they take up space. The murder scenes, written as vignettes, didn't convince me and I remember thinking I wish Angel and Ash would go down the Taj Mahal for a Bombay Duck and a big pot of Chicken Balti instead of going to that bloody nightclub again, but none of this stopped me enjoying the book. Nitpicking for balance.

It's a lovely typeset paperback with a beautiful, clean font and the whole thing inspires you to hold it in your hand.  It's now sitting proudly on my bookshelf.

Emma is a big talent that much is obvious. She has what it takes and she writes in the right genre. Its an innovative take on a traditional theme and she's pulled off the job - for a first novel, that takes a lot of moxy. 

I've already got the second book. Imbrued, (also featured on the Wizard's Cauldron). There is a third on the way and she'll complete it, no doubt. I'll be featuring on this too.

I heartily (and bloodily) recommend this book.  
Well done, Emma. Thumbs up from the Wizard.
_______________________________________

Incidentally, if you're a Kindlehound

Amazon UK   = 76p

Amazon US  = $1.23

You'd be crackers to ignore that. I mean, in Ali's newsagent, a Mars Bar is 70p and you wouldn't think twice.

Get your fangs in, your cloak on and download this to Kindle. You won't regret it.

And of course, no feature on vampire related topics would be complete without...



...the king of vampires himself...Zoltan: Hound of Dracula.

Merry Christmas.