“So,what are you reading?”, asks my son-in-law.
“ABRAHAM LINCOLN, VAMPIRE HUNTER by Seth Grahame-Smith”, I replied.
“Bet that plays fast and loose with history”, he said.
Yes, I have to admit that part of the fun of ABRAHAM LINCOLN, VAMPIRE HUNTER was
separating well-know facts from the obviously fictional parts.
Grahame-Smith put such a subtle twist to the history that we have read
since grade school to make it almost convincing.
Lincoln
became a vampire hunter at the death of his beloved mother. He had
reason to believe that her death was caused by a disagreement between
his father and a suspicious man, who he found out was a vampire.
He
sharpened his axe and set out to rid the countryside of all of the
man’s fellow night creatures. Problem was that the vampires in America
had learned how to adjust to light; plus they were stronger, faster and
much older than he.
On
a trip to New Orleans, where he mistakes Edgar Allan Poe to be one of
the hated creatures, he finds that a large number of black slaves are
being sold to provide the blood at special feasts.Now he has a good
reason to start a war and free the slaves.
Grahame-Smith
tells all of this story with a light touch. The subject is vampires,
remember, so naturally there are some bloody scenes, but they fit into
the overall tone of the book.
The
historic characters are well done. When the author had to bend the
facts, he kept the people within our knowledge of them. Mary Todd
Lincoln had reason to become the tragic figure that history has painted
her. The Civil War is well researched, if a little weirdly. We get a
slightly different view of some of the famous battles and the generals
who were there.
The
clever illustrations are an outstanding part of the book. Again, most
of the pictures seem to be familiar to us… except now we know why that
axe is always close to Abe and why so many of the bad guys are wearing
dark glasses.
I really liked the ending to this book... I mean after the scene in Ford’s Theatre. It explains so many of the modern sightings of Abraham Lincoln.
I
was so tempted to include phrases like “ the book has a bite to it” or “
a book worth sinking your teeth into”, but they both had been used in
other reviews. Shame. Tim Burton is rumored to be one of the producers
of an upcoming movie version. It is hard to imagine a director/producer
better qualified to work with this material.
This was a fun read and now I will have to find a copy of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith since Jane Austen has always been one of my favorite authors.
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