Anno Dracula (1888) By 1888, Dracula has married the widowed
Queen Victoria, and rules as Prince Consort. Many notable fictional vampires have come out of hiding and gained new social status. But all is not going smoothly for the new regime:
Jack the Ripper stalks
Whitechapel, murdering vampire prostitutes. Charles Beauregard, a (non-vampire) agent of the Diogenes Club, is sent to track the murderer down, and finds himself enmeshed in a plot to free England from Dracula's rule. Unusually for the series, several of the borrowed characters in
Anno Dracula have no links to the period. To give just two examples: the heroine Geneviève Dieudonné is recycled from Newman's own
Warhammer novels (first appearing in 1989
Drachenfels, written under the name Jack Yeovil), and
Carl Kolchak has a brief
cameo as a reporter following the Ripper case. (Newman has said that if he had realised he would get so many sequels out of the premise, he would have saved Kolchak up for a story set in the character's native 1970s.) First published in October 1992,
Anno Dracula has won the Dracula Society's Children of the Night Award, the Lord Ruthven Assembly's Fiction Award, and the
International Horror Guild Award for Best Novel, and was short-listed for the
Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel.
The Encyclopedia of Fantasy classifies
Anno Dracula as "
recursive fantasy", and further describes the work as not "strictly
steampunk, but echoing in
gaslight romance terms steampunk's dense reworking of a 19th-century London". The 30th anniversary edition (Titan Books) includes a new novella,
Anno Dracula 1902: The Chances of Anything Coming from Mars.
Anno Dracula: The Bloody Red Baron (1917) Set during
World War I. The Graf von Dracula, after being expelled from the United Kingdom in 1897, spread his brand of unstable vampirism (and with it raging
lycanthropy) throughout the Russian Imperial Family. He now leads Germany and the Central Powers against the Entente, with vampires—now a part of everyday life—fighting (and dying) on both sides. The Red Baron of the title is the historical
ace fighter pilot Manfred von Richthofen, who in this altered history leads a squadron of monstrous flying vampires. First published in November 1995,
The Bloody Red Baron was shortlisted for the
Sidewise Award for Alternate History, Long Form.
Anno Dracula: Dracula Cha Cha Cha (or Judgment of Tears) (1959) Every vampire who is anybody is flocking to
Rome for Dracula's wedding, but there is a mysterious vampire killer on the loose. Events are complicated by the arrival of a British secret agent called Bond (but not
James Bond), on the trail of a Russian spymaster who never goes anywhere without his cat. The films of
Federico Fellini are an influence on the setting and atmosphere, and several of his characters appear in the novel. First published November 1998.
Anno Dracula: Johnny Alucard Set in the 1980s,
Johnny Alucard tells the tale of the titular vampire in America. The novel is a collection of reworked short stories and novellas written and published by Newman in a variety of ways in between 1998 and 2013, with some new material. It includes references to
Taxi Driver,
Ms. 45,
Spider-Man,
Blade,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
The Deathmaster,
Elvira,
The Light at the End,
Death Wish,
Convoy,
Vampirella,
Natural Born Killers,
Badlands,
Nocturna,
Cruising,
Vampire Junction,
The Addiction,
The Keep, and
The Lost Boys, as well as taking its title from a character in the film
Dracula AD 1972. Publication of
Johnny Alucard was extensively delayed, until its eventual release in September 2013.
"Coppola's Dracula" (1976) Francis Ford Coppola is making the film for which he will always be remembered—an adaptation of
Dracula starring
Marlon Brando as Dracula and
Martin Sheen as Jonathan Harker. (It is a variation of
Apocalypse Now, complete with all the famous quotes and mishaps during filming, albeit in
Romania instead of the
Philippines.) The film crew is befriended by a young-looking vampire, who leaves with them when they return to America. (online) ''Coppola's Dracula'' won the
International Horror Guild Award for Best Long Fiction, and was nominated for the
Bram Stoker Award for Best Long Fiction. First appeared in
The Mammoth Book of Dracula, 1997.
"Castle in the Desert" (1977) The story's first-person narrator, a private investigator, investigates the death of his ex-wife, found at the bottom of her swimming pool with an iron spike driven through her forehead, and the disappearance of her daughter, last seen falling in with a crowd of vampire cultists. (The private investigator, though not named in the story, is clearly
Raymond Chandler's
Philip Marlowe, and his ex-wife is the recurring character Linda Loring, whom Marlowe married in Chandler's unfinished final novel
Poodle Springs—after initially rejecting the idea because he knew it would not last.) (online)
"Andy Warhol's Dracula" (1978) New York. Johnny Pop, the young-looking vampire who came to America with Coppola's film crew, finds his place in his new homeland, on his way to becoming the next Dracula. He becomes rich (creating a drug ring that sells "drac", derived from vampire blood) and socially successful (befriending many successful locals, including
Andy Warhol), but risks losing it all when the many enemies he makes along the way join forces against him. (online)
"Who Dares Wins" (1980) April 30, 1980. The
Romanian Embassy in London has been taken over by "freedom fighters" who want
Transylvania to become a homeland for the
undead. As
Special Air Service troops mass for an assault, vampire/journalist Kate Reed is invited into the embassy to meet the leader of the terrorists. (The equivalent event in our history involved the
Iranian embassy: see
Iranian Embassy Siege.) (online) "Who Dares Wins" includes an appearance by
Richard Jeperson, the central character in one of Newman's other main sets of stories, the
Diogenes Club series.
"The Other Side of Midnight" (1981) Orson Welles receives funding from a mysterious source to film the ultimate version of
Dracula, and hires a private detective to find out why. (The title combines those of two of Welles' movies:
Chimes at Midnight and
The Other Side of the Wind, the latter of which was left uncompleted at Welles' death in 1985. Welles also appeared as a minor character in
Dracula Cha Cha Cha.) "The Other Side of Midnight" was shortlisted for the
Sidewise Award for Alternate History, Short Form.
"You Are the Wind Beneath My Wings" (1984) 1984. A covert mission using undead agents to unseat the
Ceaușescu regime in Romania.
"A Concert for Transylvania" (1990) First published as part of
Johnny Alucard.
Anno Dracula 1899 and Other Stories A collection of short stories, the last of which is set in the Anno Dracula universe. It was published on 1 February 2017. The final story of the collection is largely identical to the opening chapter of the novel
One Thousand Monsters.
Anno Dracula: One Thousand Monsters (1899) The fifth instalment in the series, set in Tokyo. A ship of vampires, led by Genevieve Dieudonne, Captain Kostaki, Sergeant Dravot and Princess Christina Light, are exiled from England, seek refuge in Japan, and are trapped in Yōkai Town, a ghetto where Tokyo's vampires are kept out of sight and out of mind.
Anno Dracula 1999 Daikaiju (1999) Like
One Thousand Monsters, this novel is set in Tokyo, where vampire schoolgirl Nezumi and other unusual guests arrive to "see in the new millennium" at a party in the town's old yōkai ghetto. ==Short stories and novellas==