Just out of curiosity, is there any books you recommend that have a similar humorous/ dark tone as VC?

Hey! Book reccs! Always a good topic.

image

It’s tough for me to answer bc I think it depends on every individual reader’s sense of humor,… even within “humorous/ dark tone as VC” there is a range*. So I can’t say definitively that these reccs are in line with what you’re looking for necessarily, but you can use this list as a starting point.

*Lestat dancing w/ Claudia’s mom’s corpse: Some ppl find this moment dark and hilarious and other ppl think it’s just disgusting, so… there is a range. Personally I find it pretty amusing.

image

(There are some duplicates on this list, sorry about that, but I wanted to list them by recc’er.) (And I added ** next to those that @gothiccharmschool​ just recc’d in two recent posts which I will reblog momentarily for you.)

In no special order:

  • (Okay this is the first one bc it IS special, and the closest to the humor of VC I’ve seen in awhile) This is a mockumentary/movie but it sneaks onto the top of the list bc it is just SO good, courtesy of @theamazingdrunk for reminding me in a comment on an older rec post:​ WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS
  • **Salem’s Lot – Stephen King, personally, I find several Stephen King books to be darkly humorous, this one is a good one. I find humor in the Shining and Firestarter, too, but less so. 
  • Vittorio – don’t forget Vittorio. Not sure if you read this one. It’s also by Anne Rice and technically not a VC book, he has a different origin story and is not part of the VC vampire group.
  • Some short stories – @soyonscruels​ posted: those who dream only by night: the gothic short stories rec list – Not full-length books but still, short stories are good! There are 20 short stories listed, writers include @neil-gaiman​, Roald Dahl, Oscar Wilde, Edgar Allan Poe, each of whom I’ve found to have some level of humor along w/ dark tones.
  • More E. A. Poe is offered up here, from @keep-calm-and-heta-oni​, which includes little capsules about each.
  • @consultingcupcake​ said: “I really love the Cirque du Freak series, and **Lost Souls by Poppy Z Brite. Both have teenage protagonists
  • @fantasticfelicityfox​ said: The Historian is very good
  • @stitcheskitty​ said: Sookie Stackhouse novels
  • Movie and book (and a few anime) Recommendations here.

  • @riverofwhispers said: Carmilla is good
    Anita Blake and Sookie Stackhouse books, but only the early ones.
    the Rachel Morgan series but again starts out good gets weird later and it’s not about vampires so much as there are vampires in it.
  • @bluestockingcouture said: ‘The Angel’s Cut’, sequel to ‘The Vintner’s Luck’, is very atmospheric and well worth reading. Not quite as moving and intense, but there are some excellent new characters.
  • @sanguinivora said: Also, as to voice: IWTV opens in the late 1700’s/early 1800’s. Don’t know about either a southern American or French hinterlands-with-a-gloss-of-Parisian dialect, but for the grammar and vocabulary, one cannot go too far wrong looking to the novels of Jane Austen and Patrick O’Brian.
  • @dragontrainerdaenerys said: I just read Fevre Dream, George R.R Martin’s own vampire novel, and while I didn’t liked much his vampire mythology the main characters are charming! Besides, it’s set on the late 18XX and goes on the Mississipi River, so it has similar scenarios to IWTV!
  • @baroquebat said: Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, while futuristic, has a loooot of lovely gothic set pieces in the anime movie, plus its just gorgeous and has the rare treat of having a dhampir lead!

@annabellioncourt’s Recs, and these are mostly her descriptions, too, compiled from other recc posts:

  • The Bloody Chamber And Other Stories – Angela Carter
  • Carmilla Bunch of adaptations of this.
  • A Taste of Blood Wine –  Freda Warrinton, for romance and decadence.
  • **Blood Opera Sequence (or “Trilogy”?) –  Tanith Lee’s vampire series was out when Lestat was playing rockstar
  • Historian – Elizabeth Kostova, for its worldliness
  • **Fevre Dream (yes its spelled fevre) by George R. R. Martin (yes, its THAT Martin, and his take on vampires is Very Good.)
  • Sunshine by Robin McKinley
  • **The Delicate Dependency by Michael Talbot, also for romance and decadence. (the recently-published edition from Valancourt Books has a foreword by @gothiccharmschool!)
  • The Hunger by Whitley Scriber
  • **Dracula – Bram Stoker, for its stereotype-setting content
  • Lord Ruthven – Byronic vampire, Lestat doesn’t catch the irony of John Polidori’s mockery of the foppish, arrogant, and well…Lord-Byron-y vampire

>>>>Moar recs from @annabellioncourt​ under Spooky Book Recommendations

>>>>Moar recs from @gothiccharmschool: herehere, and in her #vampire books and #vampire novels tags. 

>>>>My #VC adjacent recs tag

Anyone is welcome to reblog/comment on this with other VC-adjacent book recs! 

@hyperbeeb (<– is very well-read and took one for the team to read Blood Vivicanti!), @gothiccharmschool, @fyeahgothicromance, @thebibliosphere, (@annabellioncourt, too, but you are technically off the hook as I’ve already posted your recs!), got any recs for books w/ similar humorous/ dark tone as VC? 

Happy happy birthday!

Merci beaucoup Auntie Jillian!  

image

I started following you here on tumblr a few years ago because I enjoyed what you reblogged, but what’s kept me following are your replies to asks, so kind and thoughtful, it’s clear that your advice comes from a lifetime of experience, a sense of dignity, and a generous disposition.

I didn’t have an Auntie Jillian when I was a baby bat, and I’m so glad that I can recommend today’s baby bats and elder bats and everyone in between to you, the Lady of the Manners, as a resource for all things goth: music, fashion, manners, culture, etc. *u*  

gothiccharmschool:

spookyloop:

rebel-without-a-cunt:

doctor-segmentium:

rebel-without-a-cunt:

gothiccharmschool:

spookyloop:

spookyloop:

Destroy the idea that goths can only like super-gothic-dark-things-hail-satan-and-misery in order to be considered ~tru~ goths. 

Wear pastels. Listen to pop. Watch rom coms. Get excited about sunshine.

Your non-gothy likes don’t cancel out your gothy likes, and there is no point in not being true to yourself and suppressing the things you enjoy in order to fit a stereotype!

What’s wrong with being authentic? The goth style was an extension of certain attitudes and sensibilities. Just because you wear pale makeup and get a nose piercing that doesn’t make you goth. It’s only superficial, an artifice. Subcultures have been bastardized to the point that they no longer have meaning for people. –

joecrossjr87

This misses the point entirely. This post was aimed at people who get bullied or discouraged by elitist attitudes of not fitting into the stereotypical goth box. There is nothing “authentic” about bullying people because they have traditionally un-gothy likes and choices in fashion, especially since the subculture is in the end built on music, not clothes.
Additionally, nowhere in the post has it been implied that people who do not wear pastels, do not listen to pop, don’t not enjoy rom coms or don’t like sunshine shouldn’t to be that way. There is nothing wrong with looking like the stereotype, reading Dracula by candle light while drinking absinthe and listening to Bauhaus with a black cat on your lap (or whatever it is that people think “authentic” goths do). If that’s your thing, go or it. But there is no reason to discourage people who want to be a part of the subculture by reinforcing the idea that one has to be all-dark-and-miserable to be goth and all other, “happy” likes need to suppressed in order to fit in. (I’m pretty sure lots of the original goths enjoyed pop, rom coms, summer, and colours as well.)

Goth might have derived from punk but it quickly became its own branch with no religious or political affiliations. The attitudes that carried over were basically gender (or the lack of thereof) expression, sexuality in fashion, and yes, colours, to name a few. Looking at pictures of goths in the 1980s, it is easy to see that there are tons of colour and colourful prints being used, it’s not just black leather, velvet and lace. Even a lot of tradgoth looks (that are supposed to be closest to the original looks) nowadays don’t perfectly match with the 80s look because styles evolve and people have their own takes on them.
And yes, pale make-up and a piercing doesn’t make one goth, just like wearing pastels doesn’t make you ungoth. Robert Smith is a goth icon but wears big jumpers and colourful prints. Andrew Eldritch is a goth icon but completely dismisses the affiliation with the subculture even though he checks everything on the stereotypical goth list. Siouxsie Sioux is a goth icon who wears fishnets with leather but also baggy, colourful print t-shirts. The list could go on. What is “authentic” varies hugely even during the subculture’s first years.
While fashion is the most noticeable part of goth, it is but one fraction of the entirety.

The subculture has no meaning for people who only see that one side of it, but for us who listen to the music, read the literature, enjoy the aesthetic, and just in general find beauty in the “dark”, it is very meaningful and provides us with a community.

Some goths have no money, some goths have no time, some goths have no energy, some goths have no opportunity, and some goths have no desire to have a “goth look” and they should all feel accepted in the subculture despite that.

Fashions change, subcultures branch out to microcultures, and so on. That is evolving and creating new things from the old, not bastardization. (One could argue about the use of the stereotypically gothic look as inspiration in mainstream fashion or the increased amount of gothic clothing labels cheapening the meaning of self expression and killing the DIY culture in the subculture, but that’s a whole different topic with loads of pros and cons.) No fashion is so holy it should stay untouched and be kept from evolving with time (how boring would that be) and the old styles are still alive and well, they have just gotten company from the new styles. If the subculture has been bastardized by anything, it’s people who think everyone in it need to act and look like an “authentic goth” 24/7/365 and go around giving grief to those who don’t meet their standards. That’s what this post was about. Not what is authentic and what isn’t, or what is the right or wrong way to be goth but the fact that as many goths as there are, there are that many ways to “do” goth and it is okay to like ungothy things because your non-gothy likes don’t cancel out your gothy likes, and there is no point in not being true to yourself and suppressing the things you enjoy in order to fit a stereotype!

Also, paging @gothiccharmschool in case an Eldergoth wants to give her two cents.

Sooooo I’m super-tired and perhaps a tiny bit incoherent right now (words? how do they work?!), but I absolutely had to chime in on this. 

  1. @spookyloop is absolutely correct. It is okay to like ungothy things. Liking ungothy things does not cancel out the gothy things you like. Goth Points aren’t real, neither is a Goth Card, and there is no Elder Goth Cabal waiting to pass judgment on people.
  2. Back In The Day [TM], the Goth Style [TM] was still not a uniform look! There were goths wearing colors! Or no makeup! Or sporting their natural hair color! Frolicking at the beach and in parks! Gleefully discussing whatever caught their interests, and smiling while they did so! But because there aren’t as many photos of those things floating around Teh Interwebs, not everyone is aware of that. 
  3. Anyone who claims that someone needs to be 100% Goth 24/7 is wrong. No one, not even Dave Vanian and Patricia Morrison, could manage to be 100% Goth at every moment.
  4. Goth contains multitudes. What one person considers beautiful or worthy of celebrating may be another person’s squick. AND THAT’S FINE.
  5. (Speaking of “may be another person’s squick” – if you are NOT a fan of extreme gore, crime scene photos, or images of violent, bloody trauma, do NOT visit the tumblr of joecrossjr87 . Trust me on this. That’s his thing, and that’s fine. But there are other folks who choose not to view such images, and I want them to be properly warned.) 

Am I seeing legit Goth Culture discourse on my dash? Like, are there PERG’s out there?? (Pastel Exclusionary/Exterminatory Radical Goths??)

on one hand I’m like “why” and on the other hand I’m like “a lot of Goth Rules™ associated with the established culture as it is today can and are often twisted into gross racist/transphobic/ableist/whathaveyou nonsense that really hurts people” 

so my verdict on this post? oh thank fuck someone is talking about this at length

I mean I’m sure like every subculture has nasty tendencies toward those it can’t be denied, it just seemed so surreal to read a post that was specifically about how the purity of people’s goth identity is policed. Like, are there intolerant ass radgoths out there making posts like “we cannot deny that pastel Goths have prep socialization…” ?

Sadly yes. During my time in the subculture (13 years or so now) I have personally been given a lot of grief about the fact that I openly like pop and my hair is plain and brown. I was literally not accepted in the group because my hair wasn’t black and I jam to Michael Jackson. I still some times get anon hate for it, as well as my glasses which is just odd. (I’m blind as a bat, surely that adds to my Goth Points [TM].)

When I started being on Tumblr I started noticing this on a bigger scale: babybats getting hate for their wardrobes not being full of label clothes, people not having great make-up skills, people not being white (goth is for everyone, people, you don’t have to be pale), people wearing colours other than black… There even used to be a blog called something like “This is not Goth” dedicated to reblogging people’s selfies if they didn’t meet the admin’s ~goth standards~. And when the pastelgoth look was trendy, people were attacking both the trend-following people and goths who preferred to wear pastels calling them names and automatically shunning them out.

Even if the posts outright attacking people aren’t as prominent anymore, these attitudes can be seen in a way a lot of alternative people talk about themselves. I see it most often in tags with people saying things like “I wish I could dye my hair/get a piercing/wear these clothes so I could call myself goth” or “I really like goth music and the aesthetic but I’m too happy to be goth”.

Long story short: I’ve come across those negative attitudes so often during my years in the subculture that I feel like it’s important to remind people (especially babybats) every now and then that being a goth does not mean having to reduce your personality to a one-dimensional stereotypical character.

As the Resident Eldergoth around here, let me tell you: while there has always been a nasty thread of gatekeeping and elitism in the subculture, it became more … noticeable? Loud? With the rise of social media. Because then the elitist gatekeeping types were able to point at other people’s pictures and try to enforce their arbitrary, exclusionary views.

Even if the posts outright attacking people aren’t as prominent anymore, these attitudes can be seen in a way a lot of alternative people talk about themselves. I see it most often in tags with people saying things like “I wish I could dye my hair/get a piercing/wear these clothes so I could call myself goth” or “I really like goth music and the aesthetic but I’m too happy to be goth”.

The majority of letters that I get, either at the Gothic Charm School site or any of my social media accounts, are ALL variations of this. People who are interested in goth, but feel that since they can’t tick off all of the bat-shaped boxes, they’re not goth enough and shouldn’t even try. Which is so, so far from the truth that it hurts.

Again: There are no Goth Points. There is no Goth Card to be stamped. There is no Elder Goth Cabal waiting to judge you on your gothness. If someone dares utter the phrase “A real goth” at you, laugh at them. Goth is especially for the misfits, the outcasts, the people who don’t fit in. 

Video

annabellioncourt:

gothiccharmschool:

I feel this video was more successful than the companion video, 40 Years of Women’s Goth Style. This one felt less costume-y, and more authentic.

Also, I predictably covet the shirt, coat, and cape from the 90s vampire look. My cliches, I embrace them.

I was hesitant, but yeah, this felt so much more natural than the women’s one did; save for the cyber punk and some of the make up on the death rock one, this is more of what I’ve actually witnessed (….though I’ve only been in the sub-culture a decade, and only aware of it for a little more than that)

image

(^Anne Rice book spotted in the Women’s Goth Style vid!)

Anne Rice Developing ‘Vampire Chronicles’ TV Series

gothiccharmschool:

I am cautiously optimistic? If they get the casting right (GO WITH AGE-APPROPRIATE UNKNOWNS, PLEASE!!), this could be great. I’ve said for ages that the Vampire Chronicles needed to be a series.

Anne Rice Developing ‘Vampire Chronicles’ TV Series

gothiccharmschool:

This tumblr will go back to posting photos of gothy eye candy and cute animals very soon, because *I* need things that make me feel better, and I’m sure the rest of you do too.

With that said: what can we do now?

  • Stand with those at risk. Suport PoC, GLBTQ folks, women, folks with disabilities, anyone who is “other” and is going to be a target. 
  • VOTE IN THE 2018 MIDTERMS. 33 Senate houses will be up, and all 235 seats in the House. We need to flip those.
  • Donate, if you can. Time, money, energy. Planned Parenthood, local food banks, local shelters for at-risk folks. 
  • Take care of yourselves. 

I love you. 

Gallery

gothiccharmschool:

That moment when you’re going through your Anne Rice hardbacks and discover that yes, that almost certainly is Anne Rice’s signature in the 1st edition of The Vampire Lestat that you managed to snag at a thrift store long ago. I’ll never know for sure, but they look really similar …

Gallery

loustat:

Anne is so cute and sweet.

YES WE WANT ACTION FIGURES PLZ *grabby hands*

She wants “mass produced and readily available action figures …that might pass for Lestat, so that anyone could have one for a few bucks” !!! Anne, do you know how much Barbies cost these days? More than “a few bucks” but still, I like where she’s going with this.

There was a post that went around about a month ago re: VC action figures, here are some of the responses on it:

[^from an i09 article]

@gothiccharmschool added:

I WANT A MOPING LOUIS FIGURE!

@cloudsinvenice added:

I WANT MOPING LOUIS ACTION FIGURE, THAT STILL COUNTS AS ACTION and he comes with a few dead rat accessories… and a few tattered books. Also:

  • Claudia w/ little gold scissors, mini-doll, and dagger-stabby action
  • Lestat w/ violet shades, multiple outfits sold separately
  • Santiago w/ scythe

@vampchronfic added:

  • Maharet and sets of different colored eyes.

@octoberreads added:

  • And a Lestat with a pull string that says “still whining 

@audacityinblack added:

  • A Daniel figure though…
  • Would come with tiny tape recorder, notebook, magically “emptying” bottles, and real clinging-to-Armand action.

@annabellioncourt added:

  • I mean, come on, not just the Hot Toys figures or the standard five inch figures, but the funko pops, and all those other novelty vinyl figures.

@phantomseptember added:

  • Imagine how many wardrobe extensions they could sell for a Lestat action figure!

@redversaillesrose added:

  • Nicki w/ violin. Hands sold separately. 

riverofwhispers:

lucifuge5:

tygermama:

gothiccharmschool:

What? WHAT? I don’t even know. But I’ll read it. Of course I will. 

this looks like it will be the finest crack in all the land and I can’t wait to read it!

Wow. I’m legit O_o about this.

@i-want-my-iwtv

THIS IS NOT A DRILL

I’m gonna read this book w/ a classy adult beverage within arm’s reach. But I have to say, after reading the excerpt, it could actually be a fun read. We don’t have to accept it as canon, just a fun read nonetheless. AU fanfic. 

My prediction, based on discussions outside of tumblr, is that it will be Amel narrating the story of Atlantis to Lestat for 75% of the book and then Lestat adventuring and finding the place itself for 25% of the book. WE SHALL SEE.

Hit the jump for the excerpt (which is linked above but I wanted to put it here under a cut for some kind of greedy collector reason idk TODAY IS A RED LETTER DAY.)

Proem

In my dreams, I saw a city fall into the sea. I heard the cries of thousands. It was a chorus as mighty as the wind and the waves, all those voices of the dying. I saw flames that outshone the lamps of heaven. And all the world was shaken.

I woke, in the dark, unable to leave the coffin in the vault in which I slept for fear that the setting sun would burn the young ones.

I held the root now of the great vampire vine on which I was once only another exotic blossom. And if I were cut, or bruised or burned, all the other vampires on the vine would know the pain.

Would the root itself suffer? The root thinks and feels and speaks when he wants to speak. And the root has always suffered. Only gradually had I come to realize it — how profound was the suffering of the root.

Without moving my lips, I asked him: “Amel, what was that city? Where did the dream come from?”

He gave me no answer. But I knew he was there. I could feel the warm pressure on the back of my neck that always meant he was there. He had not gone off along the many branches of the great vine to dream with another.

I saw the dying city again. I could have sworn I heard his voice crying out as the city was broken open.

“Amel, what does this mean? What is this city?”

We would lie together in the dark for an hour like this. Only then would it be safe for me to throw back the coffin lid and walk out of the crypt to see a sky beyond the windows full of safe and tiny stars. I have never taken much comfort from the stars, even though I’ve called us the children of the moon and the stars.

We are the vampires of the world, and I’ve called us many such names.

“Amel, answer me.”

Scent of satin, old wood. I like seasoned and venerable things, coffins padded for the sleep of the dead. And the close warm air around me. Why shouldn’t a vampire love such things? This is my marble vault, my place, my candles. This is the crypt beneath my castle, my home.

I thought I heard him sigh.

“Then you did see it, you did dream it too.”

“I don’t dream when you do!” he answered. He was cross. “I am not confined here while you sleep. I go where I want to go.” Was this true?

But he had seen it, and now I saw the city flashing bright again in the very midst of its destruction. Suddenly it was more terrible than I could bear. It was as if I saw the myriad souls of the dead released from their bodies rising in a vapor.

He was seeing it. I knew he was. And he had seen it when I dreamed of it.

After a while, he gave me the truth. I’d come to know the tone of his secret voice when he admitted the truth.

“I don’t know what it is,” he said. “I don’t know what it means.” His sigh again. “I don’t want to see it.”

The next night and the night after he was to say the same thing.

And when I look back on those dreams I wonder how long we might have gone on without ever knowing any of it.

Would we have been better off if we had never discovered the meaning of what we saw?

Would it have mattered?

Everything has changed for us, and yet nothing has changed at all, and the stars beyond the windows of my castle on the hill confide nothing. But then the stars never do, do they? It’s the doom of beings to read patterns in the stars, to give them names, to cherish their slowly shifting positions and clusters. But the stars never say a word.

He was telling the truth when he said he didn’t know. But the dream had struck a chord of fear in his heart. And the more I dreamed of that city falling into the sea, the more I was certain I heard his weeping.

In dreams and waking hours he and I were bound as no two others. I loved him and he loved me. And I knew then as I know now that love is the only defense we ever have against the cold meaninglessness around us — the Savage Garden with its cries and songs, and the sea, the eternal sea, ready as ever to swallow all the towers ever created by human beings to reach Heaven. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes for all things, endures all things, says the Apostle. “And the greatest of these is love….”

I believed it and I believe in the old commandment of the poet-saint who wrote hundreds of years after the Apostle: “Love and do what you will.”