Are Vampires Dead?

For years, vampires were so popular they demanded a genre of their own. They turned all the vampire books into movies and television shows. Then they added a few more for good measure. Yes, the market became saturated. And of course, when something’s been done 100 times before, it’s safe to assume there’s no new way to do it, no fresh spin that can be taken.

Is this true?

Well, if you ask me, I don’t think it matters if it’s true or not. Why? Because even if vampires can be done in a new way, no one’s going to know about it if they won’t look past the word “vampire” to find out. Any uniqueness is irrelevant because it will never see the light of day.

So this means the vampire genre is dead, right? There’s a lot of people marching around with their picket signs saying, “Vampires are old hat” and “I refuse to read a book with vampires in it”. Let’s just say it’s become fashionable to hate vampires. I’m not even sure if everyone who hates vampires hates them. I’m sure some do. I’m sure some are sick of them. I’m also sure some just want to fit in with everyone else on the “I hate vampires” bandwagon. I would also wager that some of these people never liked vampire-fiction/media in the first place.

Then, of course, you have the authors who hate vampires, but then they also hate any genre that is popular other than their own. Twilight becomes popular, and writers have vampire novels. Hunger Games become popular, and writers hate dystopian. This is something I never understood. It seems to me that so vehemently hating a popular book is a bit like hating the general public.

LET ME BE CLEAR: I am not talking about the dislike of the book itself. It’s perfectly okay to hate a book everyone loves. I’m talking when writers make it their mission to bash those books and the genre, rendering it garbage compared to the works of  their genre. Go to any writer board and look at their opinion on any presently popular book. You will see people who only read Mysteries, for example, “reading” Twilight (you know, saying they couldn’t get past the first page because their writing was SO horrendous), and then complaining how horrible the book is. Well, if you only read mysteries, what was the motivation in picking up a teen paranormal romance novel in the first place? There’s being a dissenting voice, and then there’s just being bitter.

The irony in all of this is who I think actually has something worth saying in the discussion in the life or death of the vampire genre: the people who have always read it. The ones who read it before it was popular and continue to read it even when it’s not. Of course, no one is really paying attention to them. You know the reason those people often say they stopped reading the genre? I’ll give you a hint: it’s not because nothing “original” was being offered anymore. The reason they aren’t reading vampires anymore is because it’s strayed too far from what vampires originally represented.

And yet the main reason given that the vampire genre is dead? “It’s all been done before.” . . . says the people who don’t read the genre and are just sick of seeing that genre do well instead of the genre they like best ;)

The idea of any genre “dying” is one I can’t agree with. Just because a genre is no longer “the hottest genre out there” or “the genre with the most bestselling books” doesn’t mean the fans of the genre are gone or that they will stop reading the genre. There are people who read “popular fiction” (which could be any given genre at any given time) and then there are people who read what they like, which may include many genres or may just be one, whether that genre is popular or not.

Since the vampire genre was recently popular and has been replaced by other more fashionable genres, we hear a lot of people saying “Vampires are Dead.” How fitting! But the real problem is they haven’t been dead enough lately! That aside, a genre no longer being popular is no reason for someone who enjoys reading it not to read it anymore; and I can guarantee that is not the reason fans of the genre stopped reading it. If you ask them, it was the popularity of the genre that was killing the genre, not the death of the popularity.

And hey, maybe you like the new style of vampires. That’s the great thing about being able to think for yourself! Personally, I like both. i like the monstrous kind that are driven by their carnality and I like the poor ole brooding vampire saps who try desperately to cling to their last shreds of humanity. I even welcome the ones in between.

When I was a kid, Mystery was a really popular genre. It’s not the fashionable genre this year, but it’s still “alive”. Genres don’t die. Only their popularity does. The popularity of some genres is even sometimes reborn again and again . . . kind of like . . .

Yeah. Kind of like Vampires.

So, is the Vampire Genre dead? I say it’s not. Besides, everyone knows vampires are immortal :)

What do you think? Do vampires still have a place in fiction? Do you still read books with vampires? What is it you would like to see in the vampire genre right now?

Cruor

Cruor—the Earth Elementals of this world—mirror vampires in many ways: they are immortals who die by sunlight, decapitation, or staking. Quite traditional indeed. No sparkles need apply.Their blood can heal injury and disease, and they can influence of humans by erasing or creating thoughts in their minds. Cruor are extremely fast and strong, but they are not the fastest Elementals.

The intention of the Cruor was to purify the darkness in this world by eliminating it and by creating other Cruor to help them. Instead, some Cruor harbored darkness of their own, and soon this darkness became more of a keystone than an anomaly.

The original Cruor were humans who were buried alive, then resurrected by the Universe to hunt the darkness that walked the earth. Over time, however, a new weakness was discovered: Narcissus. Narcissus—or, daffodil—is a plant known to ward off Cruor, as it weakens them immensely. This discovery was made many years ago, around the time the Universe first created Earth Elementals. Humans were leaving flowers on graves to cover the scent of decay, and this prevented the rise of the undead, leaving the Cruor who already walked the earth to rely on their ability to turn a human through the poison in their fangs.

Despite their traditional roots, however, there’s a lot more to the dark and deceitful role of the Cruor. They were sent here to serve the mortal world, but their aim has become to force the mortal world to serve them. Soon, what was once mere paranormal fantasy will become reality for all of humanity within the Forever Girl world.

The Forever Girl World Overview

The Universe

Many, many years ago, our Universe used its power of creation to make Earth, and the Earth was an art to watch on and manipulate and intrigue. It was through this creation that the Universe realized they could create life that could sustain itself. The trees would grow without the Universe commanding it to be so. The wind would blow, the waves would roll, the earth would crack and shift.

But with this new world came a weakness. The Universe’s energy was depleting faster than it could replenish, and it feared soon it would fade out of existence. It was then the Universe create Humans, and so designed them that they would be an energy, and the Universe could draw from their positive energy each day and while the Universe fed on this energy these humans would sleep.

Some of the humans, however, had within them a darkness. The Universe could not thrive on their energy, and so sleep did not come so easily for them. In their restlessness, they caused destruction among their lands and cities and towns, and with each life source that one human killed off, the Universe began to feel more of a threat on their source of life.

And so came about the creation of the Cruor, as the Universe was one that could only create and not destroy. The Cruor, who would later become known by the modern man or woman as vampires, represent the element of Earth.

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About the Series

A Genre All It’s Own

The Forever Girl, by Rebecca Hamilton, is a Paranormal Fantasy Novel of the Occult that will appeal to lovers of Paranormal Romance, Urban Fantasy, Paranormal Mystery, stories about Vampires, Witches, Ghosts, Shapeshifters, Dark Faeries, Grim Reapers, Paranormal Horror, and Contemporary and Historical Fiction.

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