Product Details
Love in Vein

Love in Vein
By Poppy Z. Brite

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Product Description

An original collection of twenty stories--by a wide range of powerful authors--celebrates the intimate and seductive fantasies of vampiric erotica.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #309159 in Books
  • Published on: 1995-10-01
  • Released on: 1995-08-21
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 416 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Like scotch or very dry martinis, these 20 servings of "vampiric erotica" may be for many a resistible acquired taste. Those who do wind up enjoying this controversial new literature that goes "deeper than horror, beyond fear, to explore our darkest, most intimate hungers" may, however, find this anthology intoxicating. In it, the beast is beautiful, a situation probed by Charles de Lint, Gene Wolfe, and less-known others. Celebrating "unspeakable intimacies," the stories explore the subversive appeal of vampirism in all its manifestations as readers meet a color-blind veterinarian mysteriously--and, without regular refills, only temporarily--restored to a world of color by a strange elixir from a prostitute's third nipple; a vampire whose dying, mortal wife has nourished him for years by allowing him to hurt her, then draw her sensations of fear and pain from her for his own sustenance; and a pair of lesbians who literally copulate the father of one to death. Not as mainstream as Ann Rice, this anthology might be most comfortable in extensive and specialized horror collections. Whitney Scott

About the Author
Poppy Z. Brite was born on May 25, 1967, in New Orleans. She has worked as an artist's model, a mouse caretaker, a stripper, and (since 1991) a full-time writer. She has published three Novels, Lost Souls, Drawing Blood, and Exquisite Corpse, and a short story collection,Wormwood. Her work has appeared in numerous markets including Rage, Spin, and The Village Voice. She is the editor of the anthologies Love in Vein Iand II. In 1997, she published the biography Courtney Love: The Real Story. She is currently working on a new novel and readying her second collection of short stories for publication. Poppy Z. Brite lives in New Orleans with her husband Christopher, a chef and food writer.


Customer Reviews

So-So3
This isn't a great book. Some stories are really good, some are really bad. I decided to just go through and summarize since nobody
else did.

1) Do Not Hasten To Bid Me Adieu, by Norman Partridge:
This story continues the love story between Quincey and Lucy from Dracula. Lucy is dead though, you say? Well, that's okay. She
lives on blood and Quincey is full of it...

2) Geraldine, by Ian McDowell:
This is a pretty good story about a lesbian vampire and the bi-sexual woman that falls in love with her, Chris. Chris was molested
by her father and still has issues about and because of it. Geraldine has the power to take all of those painful memories away.

3) In The Green House, by Kate Koja and Barry Malzberg:
Like I said, there are some bad stories in here too. This is one of them. I skimmed through it and couldn't make sense of it, so I
didn't try to read the entire thing.

4) Cafe Endless: Spring Rain, by Nancy Holder:
This story is pretty good. It's about a sado-masochistic Japanese vampire. Not the best story in here though.

5) Empty Vessels, by David Silva:
This one's about a vampire who feeds on human emotions. He attacks a prostitute and drains her. Years later her son tracks him
down.

6) The Final Fete Of Abba Adi, by Jessica Amanda Salmonson:
I never could get past the descriptions of the triplets, but I did read one of the pages in the middle and would like to say that I don't
see how a dismembered corpse relates to vampires.

7) Cherry, by Christa Faust:
This is my second favorite story in this collection. Alex is a bi-sexual teenager who ran away from home and dresses as a girl to
work as a prostitute. He dreams about a vampire falling in love with him. One night as he is turning tricks a Mercedes with a
"vampire" pulls up and tells him to get in. Alex learns a lot that night....

8) White Chapel, by Douglas Clegg:
This one is weird. Not badly written, but weird. It was like the author was trying to pack too many things into such a tiny space.
He should have stuck to novels.

9) Delicious Antique Whore, by William Pugmire:
This story is the shortest in the collection. It is only about a page and one quarter page long. However it is very good. Found the
perfect mixture of terror of erotica. If only some other authors would take notes....

10) Triptych Di Amore, by Thomas Monteleone:
This is another one that was so bad and boring and long that I couldn't read it.

11) Queen Of The Night, by Gene Wolfe
This one might appeal to some people. I personally thought it was stupid. Something about a little boy living with ghosts or vampires
in a cemetery.

12) The Marriage, by Steve and Melanie Tem:
A vampire feeds off of his mortal wife's emotions. Now he has to find a new source becasue she is dying. I really don't like this
one.

13) In This Soul Of A Woman, by Charles de Lint:
This story was very good. It's about and exotice dancer who has no money and is about to lose her daughter becasue her
ex-husband's father saw her in the strip club where she worked. One night on the street she meets a vampire who wants to die and
leave her with all of the wealth the vampire accumulated. So the woman goes home with her, and they wait for dawn together.

14) The Alchemy Of The Throat, by Brian Hodge:
This is a mediocre story about a homosexual castratti singer. Hodge should have left the castrattis to Anne Rice. She knows what
to do with them.

15) Love Me Forever, by Mike Baker:
This vampire feeds on love. She always has violet eyes, but other than that she is able to change her shape. She preys on a trio of
friends, Chet, Mark and Peter. One kills himself, one wastes away and the other kills her.

16) ---And The Horses Hiss At Midnight, by A.R. Morlan:
The narrator and the tattooed girl from a carnival decide to go off and have sex after the carnival winds down for the night. The
narrator got more than he bargained for on the ride.

17) Elixir, by Elizabeth Engstrom:
A prostitute with a third nipple holds the secret to curing a veterinarian's color blindness.

18) The Gift Of Neptune, by Danielle Willis
This a very short story about a freakshow that has a vampire and a mermaid in it. They are both abused by the freak show owner
and eventually escape.

19) From Hunger, by Wayne Allen Sallee:
This was my favorite story. It's about two vampires, "one who knew too much about the world, and one who knew too little." The
one who knows too much is a sado-masochistic ex-cop and the one who knew too little is a "hatcheck girl who occasionally lets
men follow her home." This story is sad at the end and I thought is was a little bit romantic too.

20) A Slow Red Whisper of Sand, by Robert Devereaux:
This is a terrible story. It had too many characters and the two story lines never fit together. Plus Esme, the only character I
came to feel for, was killed by a vampire who played sex games with women names after rabbits. The women were named
Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cottontail, by the way.

Over all it is worth the seven bucks if you can find it at your local bookstore.

Not Erotic, but sorta disturbing3
Okay Now I have to say, I bought this book under the premise that this would be al sorts of sordid sexy erotic vampire stories. Instead I got a really nice anthology of all things vampires. Some sexy, others not so much. It covers your range of vampires from emotional feeding vamps, to blood suckers, to fetus eaters, to face eaters. See I don't technically count all of the characters within to be traditional vampires, but they do live off of the lives of others so I guess it works. Some of the stories are excellent, others are an authors attempt at cramming too much information into too few pages. I expected more of stories chosen by Poppy. Overall I was disappointed in this book. The stories are okay, but nothing really stuck with me except Nancy Holder's vision of Japan it's worth the price of the book. I'm getting around to the second edition and I'm hoping it's a bit more satisfying.

love in vein: not read in vain4
Poppy Z. Brite, one of the best new authors of dark fiction, has taken the time to gather some wonderful tales of vampiry together and bind them into a satisfying book. This baby has not collected dust on my shelf--nor will it on yours. Believe me, you'll want all of your friends to read it. Perhaps the best tale of the lot is Brian Hodge's "alchemy of the throat", a beautifully crafted story of a castrati's venture into a paridoxical world of terror and unmitigated joy. He is bought by an old man with a shady history and becomes his lover only to discover that (what else?) the guy's a vampire. Don't let this alarm you though--most of these stories aren't at all cheesy. There were only about two that i found truly tedious and pointless; the rest are gems. The cool part of the book is not the actual bloodsucking, but the variety of ways in which authors have chosen to express the concept of a vampire. It's not always Dracula or Lestat. Sometimes, it's someone or something who takes one's power away, one's life force. And that is something that we can all identify with. Read Brite's own works for further enjoyment--you won't be sorry.