Varney, the Vampyre Vol. 1
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Thomas Peckett Prest
This is volume 1 of 3.
Originally published as a penny dreadful from 1845 until 1847, when it first appeared in book form, Varney the Vampyre is a forerunner to vampire stories such as Dracula, which it heavily influenced.
Flora Bannersworth is attacked in her own room in the middle of the night, and although her attacker is seemingly shot dead, the body is nowhere to be found. The discovery of two small bite marks on Flora's neck leads Mr Marchdale, an old friend of the family, to the conclusion that she was bitten by a vampire. While Flora recovers, her brother Henry and Mr Marchdale begin their hunt for the vampire. Their suspicions soon fall on the mysterious Sir Francis Varney, who has just bought an old abbey near Bannersworth Hall, and who bears an uncanny resemblance to Marmaduke Bannersworth, a long-dead ancestor of the family. (Summary by Annika Feilbach)
Note that the original text does not have chapters labeled 41-43. The chapters have been renumbered to be consecutive in this project. (21 hr 5 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
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You have to consider when a work is written. There was Polidori's Byronic vampire, some romantic poems, mostly in German or translated from the German into mediocre English verse. There was no dracula, much less the modern vampires of horror movies or paranormal romance. We also should remember this story was published in weekly installments over years. The subplots help engage readers short term--not everybody read every issue. In the end, you either embrace victorian melodrama and purple prose or you don't. This is literature for the masses in an age before tv--Dark Shadows for the 1850s
Starts with a bang. Ends with a dud!
gl1200phil
This is quite the conundrum. The first handful of chapters were great and kept me enthusiastically listening. Then, IMHO it started to drag. Being a "Penny Dreadful" the author is paid BY THE WORD and each chapter was printed, released, and sold individually in a serial form. I confess I listened to this months ago, but had decided at the time, I was going to do a review... My recollection isn't as sharp as it would be if I had done this in a timely manner... Being paid by the word, this really demonstrates why this is a poor way to pay a writer. There were chapters that seemed to have virtually no relation to the actual storyline of the main novel. The author had a novel way of using words as he saw fit, regardless of their actual meaning. You might notice other reviews mention 'mangling' the English language... In my opinion, assassinating might be more apropos! There were also some chapters that I would have to assume were written by an inferior hand or possibly by someone on a 'binge' of a mentally debilitating substance of one kind or another. I think the fact that there are supposedly no chapters 124 and 125 indicates that there was some 'bad filler'. I was intrigued by this novel and did a little research and there seemed to by some confusion as to who the actual author was. There was a writer, James Malcolm Rymer, who along with Prest, co-authored Sweeny Todd, the tale of the 'demon barber', and it is now thought that Rymer might have penned "Varney". "Varney the Vampire" is published as three separate volumes. I got to about the middle of the second volume when I couldn't bear it any more! If we look at the numbers, we see that 18,000 plus downloads for the first volume. 5,300 plus downloads for the second volume, and 1,800 downloads for the third and final volume, which roughly translates into two-thirds of the audience being lost at each succeeding volume. The hard part comes as to how to rate the first volume. I guess since the majority of the first volume kept my interest I guess I'll give it five stars, though I am tempted to vote four stars because the quality did start to deteriorate after the majority of the content was finished. I'm going to post this on the second volume also, since all of this applies. My rating for the second volume is going to be two stars since I lost interest and quit listening before the end. My advice is this: Download and enjoy the first volume. Pass on the rest, though I know many will want to continue. If you disagree, please write a review and straighten me out!
Varney the Vampire, Vol 1 Review
May Jones
The story is interesting but after 62 chapters is beginning to drag a bit. I'm starting to wonder what preternatural powers Varney is supposed to have? It appears he's NOT a vampire but, instead, a human acting like one and he is merely full of sideshow trickery and all word of mouth! His accomplice seems more "evil" than he is. This makes me wonder what can possibly be in a WHOLE TWO MORE VOLUMES? Is Varney a detective, in disguise, trying to catch ir round up a gang in murderes and bandits? I'll keep listening and hopefully not get bored and quit. Also, I'm not too keen on the narrators changing. Maybe one narrator per series would be more "relaxing" as some narrator voices are "annoying" and some accents are too thick.
Dreadful Penny
BoloResartus
I have to do this....grin I had heard of this tale but never found it until later years. After reading it I was amazed at the level of possibility in mangling english prose. Buried in the bizarre syntax is a passable vampire story but the true horror lies in way the author uses language. Eldritch terror cannot match the feelings conjured by this...enjoy
fabulous
Jeff in Boston
I really like this book. It basically is like a soap opera because it's written to be serialized so they're always introducing new things or characters and it has a narrator. The main character is a Varney, who is a vampire, but lives his life among the people.it is actually a very interesting story and I can't wait to read the rest.
Varney the Vampire
this is only volume one of three. so far this is the best vampire story I have listened to. forgive me Bram Stoker. I love Dracula but this is better.
censorship
offsetairplane
you censor words like damn and ithe so called blasphemysbut don't censor out the racist stuff? I'd rather you leave it all in or at least be consistent.
Please, I beseech you; don't use Librivox to practice speaking English... it's excruciating to listen to you. Other readers were wonderful.