The middle volume in the trilogy of the vampire diaries is
supposed to be the weakest of the three. If that is the case, then I
am determined to find the rest of Jeanne Kalogridis' trilogy.
“Children of the Vampire: The Diaries of the Family Dracul” is
a well-written, well-researched novel of a clan's descendents who
feel cursed by the family history. The reader is treated to diary
entries of various lengths from two brothers – Stefan and Abraham
Van Helsing – their mother Mary Windham Tsepesh Van Helsing (who is
not a descendant of the clan but married into it), and of an aunt and
uncle to the brothers – Zsuzsanna Tsepesh and Arkady Tsepesh.
(Tsepesh means impaler in Romanian.)
The story, set in the mid-1800s, follows Arkady as he tries to
protect his son from being enslaved by Vlad, who is still flitting
around in remarkably well-preserved form, considering he is 400 years
old. The brothers are swept up in the clan curse and away from their
medical practice when Stefan is abducted by his nasty yet glamorous
aunt Zsuzsanna.
Family secrets leak out all over the place, such as the truth of
the boys' identity.
It is Abraham who shoulders the responsibility of trying to weaken
Vlad by releasing victims of vampirism. By killing them in the
ritualistic way (that is, with a stake through the heart PLUS
beheading) their souls are released and can at last rest in peace. He
is trained and aided in this mission by a mysterious hermit-like monk
who lives in the middle of a forest. The hermit has a knowledge of
both herbs and spiritual warfare.
“Jeanne Kalogridis” is a pen name for J. M. Dillard, who is
probably better-known as a writer of several sci-fi novels in the
Star Trek genre. She also wrote the novelization of the cultish hit
movie Bulletproof Monk (2003). The other titles of the Dracula
trilogy are Covenant of the Vampire (the first volume) and Lord of
the Vampire (the final volume).
This middle volume has been
criticized for repeating some of the material in the first one and
setting the stage for the last one – but I feel that important new
characters appear, such as the hermit who aids Abraham in his
mission.
I like this novel! I would have been sorely disappointed if had
resembled most of the other vampire-themed media for the teen crowd.
And I am not interested in the Anne Rice vampire stories set in the
modern day, sorry about that. But I have seen most of the movies
about Dracula, and I like this novel because it is well-grounded in
the traditional story and background of the characters and legend.
Children of the Vampire: The Diaries of the Family Dracul,
Jeanne Kalogridis (aka J. M. Dillard), Delacorte Press (of Bantam
Doubleday Dell), New York, 1995, 301 pages.
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