Near the end of 1994, the editor of
Dhampire: Stillborn at
DC Comics,
Lou Stathis, asked
Nancy A. Collins to develop the originally commissioned
one-shot graphic novel into a monthly series. Over the next four to six weeks, Collins devised plot outlines for three or four
story arcs, each of which would be three or four issues in length. In 1997, pending a dismissal of a then-ongoing
legal dispute, Collins tentatively planned a follow-up titled
Dhampire: Heir Apparent which would've taken "the character & storyline into what (I hope) will be highly unexpected territory for readers". As of 2022, no new
Dhampire comic books have been published. The lack of any published sequels has been variably attributed to three problematic factors: the terminal health diagnosis of the project's editor, Lou Stathis; the
collapse of the comic book speculator market; and the legal issue concerning the title. Furthermore, Collins was unable to continue
Dhampire without DC Comics, as the company co-owned the copyright, though she did repurpose concepts from it in her
young adult fiction series
Vamps, specifically the idea of a vampire society divided between New Bloods and Old Bloods that are reigned over by a
synod as well as the half-vampire protagonist who must deny her human heritage in order to be accepted. ==See also==