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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the genre's best.
Humans are cattle. There is no other reality for vampire Edward Weyland. That is, until two wounding bullets at the hands of vampire huntress Katje de Groot leave him vulnerable to a greedy third-rate Satanist named Reese, and his existence is changed forever by a frantic, knee-jerk act of compassion by a sensitive teenager named Mark. Further affected by the love of a...
Published on July 24, 2003 by Kellyannl

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Unusual, but readable.
The premise of _The Vampire Tapestry_ is interesting enough, and makes the book worth reading - a presentation of the vampire not as a supernatural creature but instead some high-order product of evolution. I also appreciated the doing-away-with on Charnas' part of some the genre's more tired cliches such as nocturnalism and the self-pitying introspection that plagues...
Published on December 9, 1999 by pzcortez


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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the genre's best., July 24, 2003
By 
Kellyannl (Bronx, NY USA) - See all my reviews
Humans are cattle. There is no other reality for vampire Edward Weyland. That is, until two wounding bullets at the hands of vampire huntress Katje de Groot leave him vulnerable to a greedy third-rate Satanist named Reese, and his existence is changed forever by a frantic, knee-jerk act of compassion by a sensitive teenager named Mark. Further affected by the love of a disturbed psychiatrist named Floria and the friendship of a kindly but troubled professor named Irv, Weyland must discover if these three humans have given him a great gift - or a terrible curse...

This is a novel that doesn't allow you to leave your brain at the door. Charnas is delightfully subtle - there's no one big moment where you can point out that Weyland has changed, and it is sometimes a whole chapter later before you find out what effect the human "guest stars" have had on him, all of them affecting him in very different ways. And she never lets you forget what he is - this is not someone you would ever want to have a cup of tea with. This is probably the best depiction of the vampire as a predator, neither good nor evil. We remain rather detached from Weyland as he almost clinically self-examines himself.

Weyland's relationships with the humans he encounters are so different that each chapter varies wildly in tone. I personally found Mark's chapter the most powerful, with a wonderful picture of the terror and aching conscience of a truly good boy, and Floria's curiously anticlimatic considering her obvious significance. Everyone will have a favorite.

Though not quite perfect, a welcome addition to any vampire fiction collection.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A different kind of vampire, December 11, 2003
Unlike Anne Rice or even Bram Stoker's vampires, Suzy McKee Charnas' view of the vampire is more realistic and grounded. Her vampire is more akin to a scientific or evolutionary mutation. Dr. Edward Weyland is a professor at a prolific university, teaching and testing the effects of dream therapy; a clever disguise in order to lure test subjects in and victimize them for his own cravings for blood.

Instead of fangs, he has a stinger on his tongue and as for garlic, crosses, holy water and sunlight, they are, to him, laughable myths that have no bearing. He knows of no other like himself and has only vague memories of the centuries he lived before and no memory at all of his life (if there was one) before becoming what he is.

This is almost like an intimate character study of what a real vampire might be like and what he might go through. There are no slatherings of sexual overtones or manic violence; what little there is of both are done with a realistic detachment. If your looking for a break from the usual tale of the undead, then this should be right up your alley.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vampire Tapestry, December 24, 1999
By A Customer
By far one of the very best books I have ever read. I think Stephen King puts it best with the comment of "Unputdownable". It took me a little time to get into the story, the first 20 or 30 pages are a little slow, in my opinion. After that I had a hard time stoping. It was easy to read the 285 pages in a night. Suzy writes a revolutionary vampire novel, I found myself thinking 'Weyland' could be a real person some place in the world, vampire and all.The ending gives me a very satisfied feeling, and the entire book is a pleasure.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Unusual, but readable., December 9, 1999
The premise of _The Vampire Tapestry_ is interesting enough, and makes the book worth reading - a presentation of the vampire not as a supernatural creature but instead some high-order product of evolution. I also appreciated the doing-away-with on Charnas' part of some the genre's more tired cliches such as nocturnalism and the self-pitying introspection that plagues certain other popular vampire characters.

The book apparently grew out of a short story once published in _Omni_ magazine. Unfortunately, the work doesn't seem to shake of that feeling. The five chapters are rather disjointed in segue from one to the next. It feels less like a cohesive novel and more like an anthology centered around a single character.

Our vampire protagonist, Dr. Weyland, starts off as an intriguing enigma, but towards the climax of the book, it seems Weyland is more bored than anything. However, this malaise may have been intentional, and it does serve to explain his actions at the end of the story.

In the course of plot development, Weyland's confidence and amorality are slowly replaced with suggestions of human-like frailty and compassion. These characteristics are brought about by a series of encounters between Weyland and a psychiatrist. Having read this 1979 work for the first time in 1999, I found the author's underlying implication that psychotherapy can take care of any emotional problem to be a bit dated.

One final note; As a citizen of Albuquerque, I was initially drawn to this book because the back cover indicated that it was a vampire story set in New Mexico. In actuality, three of the five chapters take place in New York. If you're looking at purchasing this book for the southwestern setting, consider yourself warned.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Different Slant, June 28, 2000
By 
Wow! This book takes a very unusual and very well plotted path to the vampire tale. Reminds me in spots of Nancy Baker's work, but this is a better written book with some thought provoking insights into the things all creatures must do to co-exist, adapt and survive. The author brings in some interesting ideas about the relationships between hunter and prey, and the inevitability of change over time. Good read.

This is one to try if you are tired of Draula re-treads, and cape-and-fang skulkings.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A vampire walks among us, August 12, 2001
The Vampire Tapestry is the story of dream researcher and vampire Dr. Edward Weyland. This is a very unique vampire story. Unlike the horror stories we are use to, here we have a complicated creature without fangs or any of the other things we expect; but he still needs blood. The main character, the vampire, gets kidnapped and after escaping begins talking with a psychologist. He is not the stereotyped vampire at all and the author does not make him sad, pitiful, or sexual in any way. A very good read and something different. This type of vampire could actually exist...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE vampire novel., October 9, 2000
I treasure my copy of The Vampire Tapestry. People that I have lent it to always say, "You were right - it's amazing. It's so real. It could be a real person. The part where..." Alongside Mendal W. Johnson's Let's Go Play At The Adams', H.F.Saint's Memoirs Of An Invisible Man, and Erskine Childers' classic Riddle Of The Sands, The Vampire Tapestry stands as a totally believable narrative. Respectively you are thinking, "This really happened - these kids kidnapped and tortured the babysitter," and, "This guy really is invisible, and yes, it really would be that hard to survive," and, "Germany could have invaded England that way," and so too Dr Edward Wayland absolutely IS a living 20th century vampire, confronted with the very real problems of surviving in very changed times. Whenever I lend The Vampire Tapestry, or any of the other titles mentioned, I always lend a spare copy, with the stipulation that if the reader enjoys it they can keep it, provided they then track down a spare copy themselves, so they can then lend it under the same proviso. It's a good system that keeps some precious books in circulation - a little like the forest community in Farenheit 451 keeping their books alive. I can not recommend The Vampire Tapestry enough. (And it would have made a much better film than that other piece of rubbish!) Read it and become a convert.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a classic, June 17, 2003
A truly excellent book made up of three related novellas from the 'life' of Dr Edward Weyland. Entertaining, intelligent, flawless - HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. Surprisingly this author has also written a light vampire romance under the name 'Brand' - called 'The Ruby Tear' (which I have yet to read)...
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars hannibal lecter was an amateur, October 1, 2000
By 
dave maurer (savage, mn United States) - See all my reviews
first read about dr. weyland in omni magazine and always hoped there'd be more. weyland is vividly drawn - not a pouting, self-absorbed poofter like the other popular fiction vampires of late, but a lion in human clothes.

the differing moralities of weyland and those he comes into contact with say as much about human beings as they do about him. i'm currently reading 'hannibal', and it's amazing how much less sympathetic a character weyland is - yet one can't help admiring him from a safe distance, just as one does the lion in the zoo. highly recommended. i even like the episodic nature of the work - keeps it fresh.

ms. charnas, please tell us that a film of this remarkable character is being bargained for (imagine whom would play the lead) or - at the very least - treat us to weyland before his last awakening, or after his next. he is too good to leave cold, underground.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the classic books on vampires, May 10, 1999
Told from the vampire's point of view, this is a must read. A novel that you will not be able to put down. One of the classics!
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The Vampire Tapestry
The Vampire Tapestry by Suzy McKee Charnas (Mass Market Paperback - November 1, 1981)
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