June 19, 2010
Weiser Field Guide to Cryptozoology: Werewolves, Dragons, Skyfish, Lizard Men, and Other Fascinating Creatures Real and Mysterious

The Weiser Field Guide to Cryptozoology includes information, interviews, and stories about forty different cryptids seen in various places all over the world by credible eyewitnesses like policemen, rangers, and doctors. Readers will learn where and how to find flying humanoids, hairy humanoids, giants of all kinds including rabbits, bats and spiders, goblins, vampires, werewolves, demons, aliens and ghosts.

In the third book of our Weiser Field Guides, Bella online paranormal editor, Deena West Budd, surveys the still-emerging field of cryptozoology—a term coined in the 1950s by a French zoologist named Bernard Heuvelmans—the study of “hidden” or “unknown” animals not recognized in standard zoology. From traditional cryptids like Big Foot, the Abonimable Snowman and Nessie, to mythical cryptids like unicorns, vampires, dragons, and werewolves, to lesser-known cryptids like bunyips (waterhorses), Encantado (Dolphin Men of Brazil), thunderbirds, mothmen, and chupacabra, these creatures are very much alive, says Budd, if beyond the realm of normal perception.

The Weiser Field Guide to Cryptozoology includes a brief history of the field of cryptozoology and surveys all the creatures for which any credible amount of research exists. Budd gives readers tips on how to spot these creatures, as well as cautionary advice on how to interact with them. Two dozen line drawings rendered from eye witness descriptions accompany the text.


June 10, 2010
The Modern Vampire in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

A Little Less Ritual and a Little More Fun:The Modern Vampire in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Stacey Abbott).

Stacey Abbott takes us on a point-by-point interpretation of the iconography and mythology transported in “Buffy”, arguing for a new picture of the vampire that is less ritual and a lot more fun.

You can read and download the FULL TEXT ARTICLE (pdf) here.

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Filed under: vampire 
June 9, 2010
From the Order of the Dragon to Dracula. Origins of the name Dracula.

Constantin Rezachevici explores the basic misconceptions about the origin of the name “Dracula” in this interesting article.

Abstract
The name “Dracula” has witnessed periods of both brilliance and fame. It became famous in the second half of the fifteenth century through the actions of Vlad Tepes (Dracula), ruler of Wallachia (1448, 1456-1462, 1476).  It has continued to exist, although less known, through his legitimate descendants, the noble family Dracula of Sintesti and of Band, established in Transylvania between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries. Families that originated from Vlad’s marriage to a close relative of the Hungarian King Matias Corvin in February of 1462 can provide an explanation of the Szekely ancestry wrongly attributed to Vlad Tepes and his literary metamorphosis the vampire Count Dracula. As a result of the novel of Irish writer Bram Stoker, the name “Dracula” has obtained universal fame during the modern epoch (…)

Interested? Then download and read the Full Text Article (rtf).

About the Author
Constantin Rezachevici is chief researcher at the Nicolae Iorga National Institute of History, a member of the Romanian Academy, and Professor with the Faculty of History at the University of Bucharest. He is author of The History of the Neighbouring Countries and the Romanian People in the Middle Ages (1998).

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Filed under: vampire 
June 9, 2010
From the Yale Library (1906)!
billyjane:

Vampir no.1,1906 [thanks to ephemera assemblyman’s old post,featured here & here]

From the Yale Library (1906)!

billyjane:

Vampir no.1,1906 [thanks to ephemera assemblyman’s old post,featured here & here]

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Filed under: vampire 
June 5, 2010
Legends  of Blood: The Vampire in History and Myth (Wayne Bartlett and Flavia Idriceanu).

Legends of Blood: The Vampire in History and Myth (Wayne Bartlett and Flavia Idriceanu).

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June 5, 2010
looking at this picture of a bat, one can understand, how vampire stories get born.
via (picapixels:86fba7f.jpg)

looking at this picture of a bat, one can understand, how vampire stories get born.

via (picapixels:86fba7f.jpg)

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Filed under: vampire anatomy photo bat