dotinthesky: (Default)
Dot in the Sky ([personal profile] dotinthesky) wrote2010-02-07 10:37 pm

Blood Dreams

Fevre Dream

George R.R. Martin, Fevre Dream, 1982
Forget the Twilight Saga. Forget The Vampire Diaries. Forget the mediocre books by Charlaine Harris and the TV series, True Blood, spawned from them. What you really need is a trip back in time to 1857 with the help of George R.R. Martin; sail down the Mississippi in the legendary steamship Fevre Dream and feast your eyes on the world that briefly grew on the river’s banks. The Fevre Dream’s captain (and our hero) is a three-hundred pound man covered in hair and warts, famously known as the ugliest man alive. If you can overlook that, you might earn a loyal friend who will fight for you against any trouble along the way – especially if the trouble involves pale creatures that only come out at night and feast on human blood. Exactly those creatures you’ve found so lacking in modern vampire series.

Sure, there will be one or two bumps along the way – those rapids that jolt the reader and leave him queasy (in particular, a certain banquet scene on the Fevre Dream with a nasty surprise at its end). But as with any other sure-handed thriller or horror story, you know your destination will soon be in view and as you step on firm land you’ll carry the journey in your heart – for better or worse – as you walk away. And when you reach home, you’ll make sure the doors and windows are locked before you say a prayer and fall asleep on your pillow covering a double-barreled shotgun.

[identity profile] commonpeople.livejournal.com 2010-02-09 05:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I think in other circumstances, or with other people, who would have told them to fuck off. But York seduced his soul with money to create his dream steamboat - at a point when his company was near collapse - so I think that must have played a big part in him giving York the benefit of the doubt. Also, I think the way he took to poetry by way of York's introduction shows that they were more similar than they realised - and perhaps it was that coincidental similarity in personality gave power to their friendship.