I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire

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I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire
I, Strahd, The Memoirs of a Vampire (D&D novel).jpg
Cover of the first edition
Author P. N. Elrod
Cover artist Clyde Caldwell
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Series Ravenloft series
Genre Fantasy novel
Published1993
Media typePrint
ISBN 0-7869-0175-6
Followed byI, Strahd: The War Against Azalin 

I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire is a 1993 fantasy horror novel by P. N. Elrod, set in the world of Ravenloft, and based on the Dungeons & Dragons game. Its plot centers on the army commander Strahd Von Zarovich who takes up residence in Ravenloft and then, consumed by envy and regret for lost youth, succumbs to the temptations of the dark arts. [1]

Contents

Plot

The novel is framed as a private journal discovered by the monster hunter Rudolph van Richten in the study of the vampire Strahd von Zarovich. In the immediate aftermath of Strahd's conquest of the land of Barovia, his second-in-command Alek Gwilym informs him that a covert assassin has infiltrated their camp. Though concerned, Strahd nonetheless leaves his camp with just his closest retainers to formally take possession of Barovia's central castle, which he renames "Ravenloft", in honor of his late mother, Queen Ravenia van Roeyen. At night, he tours the castle alone to bait out the assassin, who turns out to be a young officer named Illya Buchwold. Though wounded, Strahd manages to defeat him with the help of Alek and another young officer, Leo Dilisnya.

After settling down as the new lord of Barovia, Strahd is joined by his youngest brother Sergei, who was born after he had left on his conquest campaigns. Meeting Sergei for the first time makes Strahd yearn for his spent youth and fear his mortality. Soon thereafter, Sergei falls in love with a local peasant girl Tatyana, by whom Strahd is also immediately smitten. Jealous of Sergei and Tatyana's love, Strahd comes to believe that she rejects him because of their age difference and looks for a solution in dark magic. On the eve of Sergei and Tatyana's wedding, Strahd is visited by Death itself who offers him freedom from aging and Tatyana's love, which he accepts. When Alek witnesses this exchange, Strahd attacks and kills him, then drinks his blood on Death's orders. The next morning, he also murders Sergei and drinks his brother's blood to complete his transformation into an unaging vampire.

With his newfound vampiric powers, Strahd enchants Tatyana, making her forget Sergei and finally reciprocate his own advances. Before he can drink her blood, however, Leo Dilisnya, who has been the real assassin all along, launches a coup to take over Ravenloft and Barovia. With Strahd's spell over her broken, Tatyana jumps off the castle balcony to her death, while Strahd is shot by Leo's turncoats, who are unaware of his changed nature. Recovering quickly, Strahd counterattacks and kills the traitors, though Leo himself manages to escape. Strahd then sends his few surviving loyal guards away and locks himself in Ravenloft for a year, during which he searches in vain for Tatyana's body and learns to use his new powers, such as transforming into animals and raising corpses as undead servants. He then returns to ruling Barovia, which has been cut off from the rest of the world by impassable toxic mists on the night that Tatyana died.

Half a century after his transformation, Strahd visits Lady Lovina Wachter in the guise of "Lord Vasili von Holtz". Having survived Leo's coup as a child, Lovina has discovered that Leo has been hiding in a nearby monastery ever since. Despite the danger posed to him by the holy ground, Strahd enters the monastery in search of Leo, who lures him into a trap and almost kills him, having learned magic of his own in the intervening decades. Nevertheless, Strahd manages to outsmart him and walls up his corpse in the Wachter family crypt, where Leo soon rises as a vampire himself. To the delight of a vengeful Lady Lovina, he then dies a slow and agonizing second death, unable to satiate his hunger for the blood of the living.

Two years later, Strahd visits Lazlo Ulrich, the burgomaster of Berez, and meets his adopted daughter Marina, who is a spitting image of Tatyana and has no memories of her life before coming to Berez. Strahd quickly seduces her and begins visiting her every night to drink her blood, slowly turning her into a vampire equal to himself. However, Lazlo grows suspicious and kills Marina just before she can rise as undead, and is killed by Strahd in turn. Before he can recover Marina's body, however, it disappears, taken away by the magical mists. Over the next three centuries, Strahd encounters many women who look just like Tatyana and who inevitably die soon after meeting him, regardless of what he does. The memoir ends with Strahd growing weary of this curse and contemplating a prolonged slumber. Having found the information he sought, van Richten quickly flees the castle. Strahd, fully awake, lets him leave, then sits down to continue writing.

Characters

Reception

A reviewer from Publishers Weekly called the book "a chilling, dark fantasy" and comments: "While this volume follows Vampire of the Mists (by Christie Golden) and Knight of the Black Rose (by James Lowder), the narrative's events seem to pre-date those of Golden's story. Although certain events and characters are depicted differently in all three novels, this is not a failing, necessarily, if readers keep in mind that this book is part of TSR's Dungeons & Dragons gaming world, in which each session at the gameboard produces varying scenarios. Elrod's strong prose and excellent pacing are not diminished by being confined to the boundaries of a pre-established universe. Though this novel lacks the baroque sensuality of Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire or the streetwise humor of the author's own The Vampire Files, it is an exciting and original vampire tale." [2]

Gideon Kibblewhite reviewed I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire for Arcane magazine, rating it an 8 out of 10 overall. [1] He comments: "Brooding and eerie, punctuated by dreamlike bursts of violence, I Strahd is a full-bodied tale of unrequited love and insanity." [1] He stated that "The story, at first simmering with menace, boils over into a surreal blood-bath as we follow him into the shadows." [1] Kibblewhite continues: "The memoirs of a vampire... it's not a new idea, but this one is done so well. It allows us to fly with him and the bats, to run with the wolves, and to sleep in the tomb. Obviously at home with her subject, Elrod describes, with an uncanny touch for time and place, the ecstasy and horror of an eternal half-life." [1] He adds: "And in Strahd she has created a compelling figure. Intimately painted are his dusty sense of humour, his remote sense of honour, and his castle. He is as poisonous as the fog bordering his lands." [1] Kibblewhite concludes his review by considering the novel "Beautifully written, dark, and tragic; and thoroughly recommended to vampire hunters everywhere." [1]

Reviews

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kibblewhite, Gideon (December 1995). "The Great Library". Arcane (1). Future Publishing: 80.
  2. Steinberg, Sybil S. (August 16, 1993). "Fiction – I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire by P. N. Elrod", Publishers Weekly240 (33): 91. http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-56076-670-4
  3. "Science Fiction Chronicle 1993-08: Vol 14 Iss 11". DNA Publications. August 1993.
  4. "Title: I, Strahd".
  5. "Backstab Magazine (French) Issue 06".