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Knightshade - The Vampire Brothers

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Written in 1860 - almost 40 years before Bram Stoker's Dracula - Knightshade is one of three classic vampire stories (also available from Black Coat Press) penned by Paul Féval, along with Vampire City and The Vampire Countess. Educated men say that they are the tombs of two French noblemen, the Tenebre Brothers, who came with many others to help the voivode John Hunyadi defend Christendom against the Turks four hundred years ago. Men who are not educated affirm that for four centuries there has lain beneath these marble slabs an oupire and a vampire: one an eater of human flesh, the other a drinker of human blood. On many occasions, during the four hundred years, those graves have opened, to the terror and the horror of the surrounding country. Sometimes, two corpses were found beneath the stones, one tall and one short, which gave every indication of recent death: eyes open and shining, blood liquid in the veins, tongues moist and lips red.

126 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1860

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About the author

Paul Féval

904 books
Paul Féval can refer to Paul Féval père or Paul Féval fils

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Tulpa.
84 reviews8 followers
September 28, 2015
Like many early works of genre fiction, this one benefits from the oddness and audacity contained within. A short serialized fiction in which the two protagonists may or may not be vampires, con artists, neither or both telling a story about con artists telling a story about vampires. Funny and digressive, filled with impossibilities. Nonetheless, to focus on these narrative impossibilities is, as the titular Chevalier Tenebre said, the protestation of minds too narrow against truths too broad. Featured within is a narrative thinning of the fantastic, such that just before the end the vampires central to the story have been reduced to desperate and common thieves only for the last pages to reverse this, reinvesting the fantastic back into the world.
1 review
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October 31, 2024
Ch 72
“We reached out for heaven and found it stuffed with stern guards and shooting stars.”
Profile Image for Sean O'Hara.
Author 22 books98 followers
August 31, 2015
Man, would you look at that cover. Doesn't it look so surreal and creepy? Doesn't it just scream, "This book is frickin' weird!"? Doesn't it make you expect something like City of Lost Children or Dark City?

Yeah, well, you won't get it. The book is a caper story. The creepy stuff only appears briefly, in flashback, at the beginning and may not even be real, and then again as a twist at the end. In between, it's just the Parisian upper class at a party where the police believe a pair of thieves will strike, and the growing suspicions about who the thieves might be disguised as. SPOILER: It's exactly who you think it is.

It's not that this is a bad book (though it's not a great one either), but I would've enjoyed it a lot more if I'd gone in thinking it was an early precursor to Fantômas (which it surely is) instead of Dracula.
Author 26 books37 followers
May 11, 2013
Two evil, and scheming brothers, that are most likely cursed immortals and may be either vampires, ghosts or demons attempt to seduce, swindle and steal their way through French society in a variety of disguises.

Interesting ideas, but the heroes are all very flat and the Brothers just seem evil, for evil's sake.

For this to work, the villains needed to go up against heroes as strong as they are written.
Profile Image for Czarny Pies.
2,791 reviews1 follower
September 29, 2015
Ce livre contient une histoire de vol et meurtre assez bien ménée. En plus il y a un regard moqueur sur les milieux légitimistes du séconde empire et des interventions de vampire. Ce qui manqué à ce roman, c'est une raison valable de lire. Il est un d'une insignificance à vous couper le soufflé. Féval ne compte pas parmi les grands écrivains francais mais il est capable de faire mieux que celui-ci.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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