Social Icons

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Written on

Vampires; <i>Sucking Blood Factor!</i>

Vampires has been quite a fascination for me when it comes to the Horror Genre, and it's quite obvious to me, being someone who grew up in the South East Asia, to notice the vast difference among the different types of Vampires available around the world. Definition of a Vampire, is a creature of the night, who either feeds on Blood, or some sort of essence.

Pontinanak Harum Sundal MalamSince I’m Asian, let’s play with the vampire originating from this parts of the world. In this parts of the world, among the Malays (Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore) vampires are known as the Kuntilanak, Languir, Pontianak, Matianak and Boentianak. There is also a big taboo in calling out their names over here, since, they can supposedly hear you and come when you call their names, we occasionally call them, “Ponti-baby”. Anak is translated as baby in English. I guess it's less scary that way.

So anyway… let’s deal with the origins of our vampires. It is a sad story actually, because they origin from women who died in childbirth, where they become the undead, seeking revenge and terrorizing villages. A Pontianak kills her victims by digging their sharp fingernails though their victims stomach, devouring their organs. They perform their revenge on male individuals by ripping out their sex organs with their bare hands. They tend to locate preys by sniffing out the clothes which are being left outside to dry. Langsuir is the most deadly of them all. Unlike Pontianaks, they appears as a very beautiful woman to devour their victims. She would possess and suck their blood from the inside, slowly killing their victims. She is said to be form when a woman who suffered from laboring sickness (meroyan) or what we would now called as post-natal depression, died and she turned into a Langsuir 40 days after her death. 

Then, there is the Chinese Vampires, which are commonly known as Jiang Shi, or the hoppingChinese Vampires Chinese ghost. They just hop around, killing living creatures to absorb their life essence from their victims. These vampires are form when their souls failed to leave their dead bodies, due to improper death, suicide or just a want to be a trickster, or the victims of pre-mature burial. Honestly, this is kind of the most funniest vampires I have ever known (not personally of course). They have eyes but they locate victims by smelling them. You could just be in front of them and by holding your breath, they can’t see you. Their eyes would be opening all wide but they can't see you. It just doesn’t compute, but that’s how it is. *lol*

As far as I know, there are hardly any books regarding Asian vampires. Unless if you are Russell  Lee, and Tamar Jalis. But even with them, they barely cover the subject as a main stream. I, as an author, tried but I ended up scared out of my wits before finishing it. *hehe* I guess that’s why in written form, it’s quite rare to find them over here. Visual stream however has covered this part of the genre over and over again.

3 Vampires originated from the west is kind of simple and ultimately strong characteristically,  living quite a lifestyle when it comes to portraying them. They are far more feature as gothic and the nature of romanticism appear dominant and that to me.. kind of lose its horror edge. They are far more alive and social rather than how the vampires from the East ‘lives’. The most famous of them all would be Dracula, originated from Transylvania (yes I look the darn spelling up! I can’t spell that place by myself, even if my life depends on it >.<). He is the product of Bram Stoker and the character himself is  also being connected to Vlad the Impaler, famously nicknamed as Vlad Vampire. The running history of how a vampire in the western civilization works is by another vampire infecting them with their vampire blood. There’s nothing really that scary about them. No creepy crawly factor at all for me. For me that is.


 Some Vampire Books:
Dracula in LoveBram Stoker's DraculaSookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set (Sookie Stackhouse/True Blood)






P/S: No! I am not featuring glittering vampires in this post. Period! It’s just not fair to us horror enthusiastics. I drew the line there in Vampirism!
Share this case:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails
 

Authors Featured

Abd Ghaffar Aris (1) Adam Mansbach (1) Aimee Carter (5) Alan Benjamin (1) Alethea Eason (1) Alex Flinn (2) Alice Sebold (1) Amy Reeds (1) Andrew Clements (1) Andrew Thompson (1) Arthur Golden (1) Brynn Paulin (1) Cait London (1) Carol Grace (1) Carrie Ryan (1) Cary McNeal (1) Cat Marsters (1) Cathy Glass (1) Cerise DeLand (1) Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1) Chris Marie Green (1) Claudia Gray (1) Clement Clarke Moore (1) Clive Barker (1) Clive Cussler (1) Connie Dieken (1) Daniel Handler (1) Darren Shan (5) Dav Pilkey (1) Dave Pelzer (1) Davis Brinton (1) Deborah Howe (1) Deborah J. Ross (1) Delphine Minoui (1) Desiree Holt (1) Dita Parker (1) Doreen Cronin (1) Dr Seuss (1) ED Baker (1) EL James (1) Elizabeth Smart (1) Ellen Rimbauer (1) Emma Thompson (1) Farrar Straus Giroux (1) Gail Carson Levine (1) Glen Cook (1) Greg Weisman (1) Hannah Shah (1) Hans Christian Andersen (1) Hazel Hutchins (2) Isabelle Drake (1) J.K Rowling (3) Jaid Black (1) James Howe (1) James Patterson (1) James Rowe (1) Jay Asher (2) Jeff Kinney (3) Jennifer Brown (1) Jessica Day George (1) Joan Holub (7) Jodi Picoult (2) Kami Garcia (4) Kate McMullan (1) Kathleen Kuiper (1) Katie Piper (2) Katina Abram (1) Kevin Hopps (1) Laurann Dohner (1) Laurell K Hamilton (1) Leigh Branham (1) Lemony Snicket (3) Lily O’Brien (2) Linda Hudson-Smith (1) Lisi Harrison (1) Louise Rennison (1) Maggie Stiefvater (1) Margaret Stohl (4) Margaret Wise Brown (1) Mario Acevedo (1) Marion Zimmer Bradley (1) Mary Downing Hahn (1) Mary Engelbright (1) Melanie Rawn (1) Michael Buckley (3) Michael Thomas Ford (1) Michele Albert (1) Mike Allred (1) Morgan Kaufman (1) Muhammad Miqdad (1) Nicholas Rennison (1) Nujood Ali (1) O Henry (1) Paige Tyler (1) Patrick Jennings (1) Paul McAuley (1) Peter Bentley (1) Peter Boxall (1) R. Garland Gray (1) Rachel Hawkins (2) Rachel R. Russell (2) Richard Bachman (1) Rick Riordan (14) Roald Dahl (1) Robert B. Parker (1) Russell Lee (1) Ruth J Morehead (1) Sarah Burleton (1) Sarah Graves (1) Shannon Hale (1) Sherrilyn Kenyon (1) Stephen King (3) Stephenie Meyer (1) Steve Berry (1) Susan Beth Pfeffer (3) Suzanne Collins (3) Suzanne Williams (4) Tamar Jalis (1) Todd Strasser (1) Tony DiTerlizzi (1) V.C. Andrews (5) William Panek (1) Yangsook Choi (1)

Sorting it all

* Other than Reading √ 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die √ 1001 Children's Books √ 101 Great Books Recommended for College-Bound Readers √ Man Booker Prize Winner √ Newbery Medal √ Nobel Laureates in Literature √ Pulitzer Prize Winners Novel/Fiction ♦ Creating a Reader 1: In the Mail 1: Mailbox Monday 1: Manic Monday 1: Monday Mayham 1: Musing Monday 1: What are you Reading on Mondays 2: Teaser Tuesday 2: Top Ten 2005 2007 2009 2010 2010 Challenges 2011 2011 Challenges 2012 2012 Challenges 3: A - Z Challenge 3: I Want Wednesday 3: Waiting on Wednesday 3: Wednesday Media Mix 3: Wishlist Wednesday 3: Wordless Wednesday 3: WWW Wednesday 30 Day Book Challenge 30 days Meme 4: Booking Through Thursday 4: TBR Thursday 4: Thursday 13 5: Friday Fill-Ins 5: Friday Finds 5: What's in Your Handbag? 7: Straight out of the Camera Sunday 7: Sunday Salon 7: Sunday Stealing 7: Unconscious Mutterings A Year in Picture Books 2011 About Reading Abuse Addicts Adult Afghanistan Africa Animal stories Animals AREs Arthurian Articles Asia Atheneum Author A Author B Author C Author D Author H Author J Author L Author M Author N Author O Author P Author R Author S Author V Author W Awareness Day Biography Bloggiesta Book Blogger Hop Book Blogger Recommendation Challenge 2011 Book List Book Pile BookFair Bookmarks Books taught me that... Brunei Business Chapter Books Children Chinese Christmas Chunky Tales Classics Comic Review Community Computer Contact Crafts Crafts and Hobbies Dark Humor Doa Dracula Drama dystopia eBook Egypt Mythology Eh? Emma Thompson Erotica Europe Event Fairy Tales Family Issue Family Saga Fantasy Fiction Food Frankenstein Free Giveaway Friday Hop Genres Gluttony Greek Mythology Habits Health and Beauty Horror Humor Inspirational iPhone Islam James Howe Journal Juvenile Kindle Legends List Literary Literary Blog Hop literature Lycans Magazines Malay Meme Memoir Middle Grade Misc Misc Brunei Motivation Movie Movie Adaptation Mystery Mythology New Author Challenge 2012 New Year Read-A-Thon News Newspapers Non-Fiction Organization Origami Orphan Out with a Bang Read-A-Thon Paranormal Period China Photos Picture book Pictures poster Quotes Ramadhan Rants Read it Read-A-Thon Reading Reading Habits Reading List Realistic Fiction Reference Relationships Reluctant Readers Resources Review Review by Title Review Policy rip Roman Mythology Romance School Science Fiction Seller Shifter Challenge 2011 short stories Social Issues Sony Reader Study Tips Stuff Supernatural Teens The Reader The TwentyEleven Challenge Thriller Tied-Ins: Movie Tied-Ins: TV To be Read To Be Read A-Z Tragedy Trailers Trivia True Crime TV Adaptation TV Review TV Series Vampires Vietnam Vlog Vocabulary What's in a Name Work ww2 WWI YA of the 80s and 90s Challenge Yemen Young Adult
I review for BookSneeze
Bookyards.com

~* Others *~

Children's Choice Book Awards

Powered by JacketFlap.com

.:: Listening to

A Beautiful Dark by Jocelyn Davies
Accidentals by Dakota Cassidy Across the Universe by Beth Revis Aftertime by Sophie Littlefield Alpha & Omega by Patricia Briggs Anita Blake by Laurell K. Hamilton Annabelle Lee by Stacey Jay Anna Dressed in Blood by Kendare Blake Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery Article 5 by Kristen Simmons Ashfall by Mike Mullin A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin Atlantis by Gena Showalter Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl Birthmarked by Caragh M. O'Brien Black Magician Trilogy by Trudi Canavan The Books of Bayern by Shannon Hale Carpathians by Christine Feehan Carrier Trilogy by Leigh Fallon Charlie Madigan by Kelly Gay The Charmed Life by Jenny B. Jones The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis Chronicles of Nick by Sherrilyn Kenyon Clockwork Empire by Steven Harper Codex Alera by Jim Butcher The Company of Angels by Stephanie Chong The Cousins' War by Philippa Gregory Covenant by Jennifer L. Armentrout The Crescent by Jordon Deen Dark-Hunter by Sherrilyn Kenyon Darkest Powers by Kelley Armstrong Darkness Rising by Kelley Armstrong Dark Sword by Donna Grant Delirium by Lauren Oliver Demon Cycle by Peter V. Brett Everlasting by Angie Frazier Everneath by Brodi Ashton The Faerie Ring by Kiki Hamilton Faeriewalker by Jenna Black Fairwick Chronicles by Juliet Dark Fairytale Retellings by Jackson Pearce Fairy Tales by Eloisa James The Ghost and the Goth by Stacey Kade Gods & Monsters by Kelly Keaton Heroes of Olympus by Rick Riordan Iron Fey by Julie Kagawa Matched by Ally Condie Maze Runner by James Dashner Medusa Girls by Tera Lynn Childs The Modern Faerie Tales by Holly Black The Morganville Vampires by Rachel Caine Morpheus Road by D.J. MacHale The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare My Fair Godmother by Janette Rallison Nikki Heat by Richard Castle Nine Kingdoms by Lynn Kurland The Nine Lives of Chloe King by Celia Thomson Numbers by Rachel Ward Paranormalcy by Kiersten White Parasol Protectorate by Gail Carriger Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan Personal Demons by Lisa Desrochers Sookie Stackhouse by Charlaine Harris The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins