Book Dragon Banter
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We're three aspiring authors: Sage, Katherine, and Zinzi Bree. Diving into the world of books, one chaotic conversation at a time.
Expect bookish deep-dives, trope talk, spicy opinions, and unfiltered banter. While fantasy is our first love, we’re not genre-exclusive, if it’s on a page, it’s on the table.
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Book Dragon Banter
Grave Matters: A Literary Monster Spooky Special
Monstrous Origin Stories: Analyzing Dracula, Frankenstein, and Werewolves | Book Dragon Banter Podcast
Welcome to the Book Dragon Banter podcast's spooky special! In this episode, hosts Zinzi Bree, Sage Moreaux, and Katherine Suzette dive into the monstrous origin stories of Dracula, Frankenstein, and werewolves. Discover surprising details about these classic monsters, their portrayal in literature, and how they've evolved in pop culture. Sage explores the allure of vampires, including Dracula, while Zinzi delves into the tragic tale of Frankenstein's creature. Katherine examines werewolf lore and its dark connections to human desires. Tune in for a thrilling discussion, plus book recommendations for readers interested in these iconic horror figures. Happy Halloween!
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For Write with me— Zinzi Bree, email: bookdragonbanterpod@gmail.com
Book Dragon Ink Retreats: https://www.bookdragoneditorial.com/ink-retreats
Upcoming Bookclub: The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang
Books Featured:
Dracula by Bram Stoker
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
The Man Wolf by Leitch Ritchie
The Werewolf of Paris by Guy Endore
The Howling by Gary Brandner
Books Mentioned:
Interview with a Vampire by Anne Rice
Vampire Diaries by L.J. Smith
Twilight by Stephanie Meyer
Mate by Ali Hazelwood
Bride by Ali Hazelwood
Mercy Thompson Series by Patricia Briggs
Sookie Stackhouse Series by Charlaine Harris
The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice
Recommended Books:
Interview with a Vampire by Anne Rice
The Coldest Girl in Cold Town by Holly Black
Bride by Ali Hazelwood
Pride and Prometheus by John Kessel
This Monstrous Thing by Mackenzi Lee
The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Kiersten White
FranKisStien by Jeanette Winterson
The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice
00:00 Introduction and Welcome
01:57 Diving into Dracula
17:35 Exploring Frankenstein
35:39 Female Empathy in Classic Horror
35:50 Frankenstein vs. Dracula: A Comparative Analysis
36:24 The Unsexy Nature of Frankenstein
38:13 Frankenstein and Beauty and the Beast: A Cozy Fantasy
39:22 Penny Dreadful's Take on Frankenstein
40:49 Exploring Werewolf Literature
42:28 The Dark Side of Werewolf Stories
50:39 Modern Werewolf and Vampire Fantasies
53:24 Book Recommendations for Monster Retellings
56:58 Final Thoughts and Upcoming Book Club
brain function function, brain, brains, brains. Welcome back to Book Dragon Banter podcast. We're so glad you're here. I'm Zinzi Bree My co-hosts are Sage Moreaux and Katherine Suzette. And our outfits for the most part are an attempt to, uh, clue you in on our books. Welcome, especially to our spooky special where we are diving into the monstrous origin stories of some of your favorite Halloween monsters. Go ahead and hit that subscribe button if you're new here and if you aren't and are returning, thank you so much for coming back,
Sage Moreaux:this podcast is rated explicit so that we can share our honest opinions and get into all the gory details So if you need to grab your headphones do so now
Zinzi Bree:spoilers ahead.
Sage Moreaux:when I say these books are over a hundred years old does that have anything like what Spoilers but come on
Zinzi Bree:Um,
Sage Moreaux:plus
Zinzi Bree:plus years to,
Sage Moreaux:these books People
Zinzi Bree:spoilers, but also if you haven't read the original and the only thing you know about them is pop culture. Then you don't know the real story.
Sage Moreaux:These books however are over a
Zinzi Bree:A noise.
Sage Moreaux:old some of these books that we'll be talking about so you will have had plenty of time to read them.
Zinzi Bree:The original idea is that we all wanted to, read a monster book for Halloween, and I thought it would be fun if we each picked a different one, a different classic monster origin story to dive into. One we hadn't read before. I had not read Frankenstein before. I have not read Dracula. I have not read the Man Wolf, the Wolf Man, any of the various versions Katherine found of the werewolf story. So we're gonna get into what you might not know about these books based on our pop culture understanding of these characters today. We're gonna start off with Sage. Who chose Dracula? Why'd you choose Dracula? Sage?
Sage Moreaux:So I'm lightweight obsessed with vampires. I would say vampires is really Where my interest trends I am I've read a lot of different kind of pop culture more modern vampire tales But definitely in my teenage years I discovered Interview With a Vampire by Ann Rice and read probably not every book in the series cause it she's wrote a lot but I really got into the Vampire Lestat Some of the books that came after that
Zinzi Bree:So that
Sage Moreaux:kind of kicked off my obsession with the weirdness of the undead and the kind of sexiness around vampires which I think is fascinating and strange And now is Totally modernized with things like Twilight which was not a great
Zinzi Bree:ion, in my opinion,
Sage Moreaux:but I have more to say about that
Zinzi Bree:vampire diaries
Sage Moreaux:Which is a book and now a TV show They've redone interview with a Vampire recently as a TV show There has been a ton of movies and stuff so it's
Zinzi Bree:Something that
Sage Moreaux:lives on in
Zinzi Bree:culture and
Sage Moreaux:really just interested in it
Zinzi Bree:I had read before
Sage Moreaux:a
Zinzi Bree:a long time ago,
Sage Moreaux:though and so I thought it would be really fun to revisit because when I was in college I was a film student and I Read Dracula and then watched a bunch of the original Dracula movies and some more modern retellings of it and did comparative analysis about that So it was fun to do it straight
Zinzi Bree:literary,
Sage Moreaux:this time
Zinzi Bree:do a revisit, a literary revisit. The best you can tell is Dracula the origin of vampires. Definitely not vampires are
Sage Moreaux:a long time cultural monstrous story. I
Zinzi Bree:Believe only recently
Sage Moreaux:recently in parts of Europe in the like seventies
Zinzi Bree:was it declared that were actually not
Sage Moreaux:So people
Zinzi Bree:have believed
Sage Moreaux:in vampires for a really long time as a real thing
Zinzi Bree:the globe
Sage Moreaux:There's vampire mythology
Zinzi Bree:Africa.
Sage Moreaux:to America pre colonized America
Zinzi Bree:And
Sage Moreaux:Europe and beyond
Zinzi Bree:however, in literary
Sage Moreaux:Dracula is one of the earliest novels but it's not the first The first was actually a short story called The
Zinzi Bree:vampire
Sage Moreaux:with
Zinzi Bree:and why
Sage Moreaux:in the spelling
Zinzi Bree:vampire
Sage Moreaux:based off a
Zinzi Bree:short story that
Sage Moreaux:Lord Byron
Zinzi Bree:told.
Sage Moreaux:in the infamous
Zinzi Bree:long
Sage Moreaux:story contest that he had with a few other writers that birthed Frankenstein
Zinzi Bree:so
Sage Moreaux:he
Zinzi Bree:told a story and then,
Sage Moreaux:then
Zinzi Bree:Another friend of their.
Sage Moreaux:theirs turned it into a short like a novella
Zinzi Bree:I believe
Sage Moreaux:basically clowning Lord Byron a little bit casting him as the vampire character A very smooth charming handsome aristocrat who went around and Charmed people and then sucked them dry mostly young women
Zinzi Bree:I think that was commentary
Sage Moreaux:on Lord Byron's life
Zinzi Bree:and I did read that.
Sage Moreaux:I did
Zinzi Bree:it,
Sage Moreaux:It's pretty short and it definitely I thought that cause in Dracula The character of Dracula isn't particularly handsome or sexually appealing and the story itself has a lot more to do with the nature of undead being undead and good versus evil and stuff like this whereas so much more modern
Zinzi Bree:Vampire. There's definitely been a big romantic trend where
Sage Moreaux:are super hot
Zinzi Bree:Vampire diaries, vampires are
Sage Moreaux:hot twilight The sparkly vi
Zinzi Bree:vampire
Sage Moreaux:supposed to be super hot He's always Bella talks endlessly about how beautiful he is Right And this idea I think a little bit has to do with eternal
Zinzi Bree:abuse, right?
Sage Moreaux:So you're eternally young
Zinzi Bree:But also in Dracula there is a part where
Sage Moreaux:one of the young women is being turned into a vampire
Zinzi Bree:died.
Sage Moreaux:and grows more and more beautiful
Zinzi Bree:So that,
Sage Moreaux:existed in Dracula
Zinzi Bree:the
Sage Moreaux:original story of the vampire was Physically
Zinzi Bree:attractive. So I thought that was interesting
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:that I didn't know.
Sage Moreaux:more of a like modern take on the story of it
Zinzi Bree:Social commentary the idea that a woman is more beautiful in death, not a fan of that.
Sage Moreaux:No I mean the men too
Zinzi Bree:there was
Sage Moreaux:was
Zinzi Bree:on women, it was definitely regular,
Sage Moreaux:Major sexism going
Zinzi Bree:Yeah,
Sage Moreaux:be forewarned it is
Zinzi Bree:over years old.
Sage Moreaux:written by a man
Zinzi Bree:Yeah. Customs have changed. Culture has changed significantly. With that being said, do you still think it's worth reading now? what does a modern reader get out of reading a book that culturally the pop culture has already moved on and has created new versions of it, that there isn't necessarily, the themes in the original version they might not even pick up on because religion has changed so much between then and now.
Sage Moreaux:Yes great question
Zinzi Bree:I would say so
Sage Moreaux:I'm
Zinzi Bree:a
Sage Moreaux:word nerd and a book nerd and I do enjoy classics I don't like Read a lot of classics but over my lifetime I have read a lot of classics
Zinzi Bree:i,
Sage Moreaux:try to read one every few years I would say that I think it is Worth rereading If you enjoy reading classics and if you like to see how books used to be written and understand where the
Zinzi Bree:idea of the vampire comes from.
Sage Moreaux:is
Zinzi Bree:like the origin of the modern vampire. He is the godfather. And a couple.
Sage Moreaux:of interesting differences
Zinzi Bree:Is
Sage Moreaux:Like
Zinzi Bree:that vampire
Sage Moreaux:short
Zinzi Bree:story.
Sage Moreaux:the
Zinzi Bree:Vampire was British.
Sage Moreaux:but in this
Zinzi Bree:Ivan to suck your blood.
Sage Moreaux:not Transylvanian
Zinzi Bree:Oh, really?
Sage Moreaux:believe he's they okay so my geography is not super great but they talk about him being Slavic maybe Transylvania is part of the Slavic area but so my personal family heritage is Czechoslovakian from the
Zinzi Bree:Public.
Sage Moreaux:Area so
Zinzi Bree:I was offended because
Sage Moreaux:there was lots of like insults about the slavics and because it they were particularly talking about the vampire but I
Zinzi Bree:Got,
Sage Moreaux:personally offended by that So heads up also like I said the sexism
Zinzi Bree:but if you can overlook
Sage Moreaux:things I do think it's really interesting to see Zi you mentioned There's a lot of religious elements to it vampires in Dracula are
Zinzi Bree:Unable to
Sage Moreaux:the sight of a cross which is not the case with modern vampires there is definitely a lot of talk about how by being reborn after death their soul is
Zinzi Bree:gone.
Sage Moreaux:They are no longer with God
Zinzi Bree:There are
Sage Moreaux:Religious
Zinzi Bree:many
Sage Moreaux:religious elements
Zinzi Bree:like
Sage Moreaux:The holy actually holy
Zinzi Bree:holy water,
Sage Moreaux:in Dracula But that's a classic one Dracula needs to sleep in his dirt from his
Zinzi Bree:own.
Sage Moreaux:which I thought was interesting
Zinzi Bree:Hmm.
Sage Moreaux:They do stake the vampires in order to kill them but it doesn't say through the heart
Zinzi Bree:The other thing that is interesting about va,
Sage Moreaux:The Original is it's all told in diary entries
Zinzi Bree:yeah it's an epistolary,
Sage Moreaux:many epistolary
Zinzi Bree:EPIs epistolary novel
Sage Moreaux:different
Zinzi Bree:character.
Sage Moreaux:So not being one of them like he is actually in the book very Little it is about Jonathan Harker who is a young lawyer who goes and does business dealings with Dracula and enabling accidentally enabling him to come overseas And then his wife Mina has a bunch of the narrative her diary entries There's Refield who is a madman and all of these characters write in their diaries and that's how the story is told And
Zinzi Bree:so there are
Sage Moreaux:books that I've
Zinzi Bree:books that I read.
Sage Moreaux:recently that are told in this style but it's not as common as it once
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:So it's interesting because it really brings you into this
Zinzi Bree:You
Sage Moreaux:you
Zinzi Bree:really get inside the ed, the characters, because it's in response. There's times where it's low because of that, like the action
Sage Moreaux:not as
Zinzi Bree:fast pace,
Sage Moreaux:it's definitely
Zinzi Bree:not.
Sage Moreaux:a horror novel in my mind
Zinzi Bree:a psychological thriller than it's like an action or horror novel.
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:I did
Sage Moreaux:re-hear
Zinzi Bree:it referenced
Sage Moreaux:as
Zinzi Bree:back in the time
Sage Moreaux:it was more of a like Technical thriller because it's referencing timetables and there's all these details around the scientific nature of things and the way that they need to deal
Zinzi Bree:with all of the,
Sage Moreaux:Hunting
Zinzi Bree:down the confidence.
Sage Moreaux:that have the dirt in them
Zinzi Bree:So for the time,
Sage Moreaux:it was a little more action paced than by today's standards certainly
Zinzi Bree:Going into pop culture has turned vampires into, we've got sparkly vampires. We've got they can't that they're afraid of garlic. They weren't run away from garlic. Is that in Dracula? they can't cross a threshold unless they've been given permission. Does that come from Dracula?
Sage Moreaux:yes
Zinzi Bree:So the garlic in the,
Sage Moreaux:the sparkly
Zinzi Bree:interesting.
Sage Moreaux:in Dracula
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:I highly recommend the audio book because there's different actor voices for the different And lots of accents It's really great There's Brahm Stoker's Dracula the movie
Zinzi Bree:which was
Sage Moreaux:Directed
Zinzi Bree:by,
Sage Moreaux:Ford Coppola and it was fantastic
Zinzi Bree:so in my mind, like you're rewatching this movie.
Sage Moreaux:is
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:Reeves It's Keanu Reeves It's Jonathan Harker It is Gary Oldman as Dracula who was extremely charismatic in that movie and had a lot more screen time than Dracula does in the book Winona Re is am Mina Harker
Zinzi Bree:In my head that's what they
Sage Moreaux:look like was I
Zinzi Bree:got all these A lists.
Sage Moreaux:it but I was like
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:I saw it a long time ago but I watched the trailer recently
Zinzi Bree:Okay.
Sage Moreaux:there was
Zinzi Bree:one line where the
Sage Moreaux:where the character just
Zinzi Bree:character
Sage Moreaux:and I was like oh it's Keanu Reeves
Zinzi Bree:Ah,
Sage Moreaux:it
Zinzi Bree:yep. But yeah I can't.
Sage Moreaux:really be invited in but he is constantly coming in at Windows He does crawl down the side of the building in a
Zinzi Bree:Kind of
Sage Moreaux:creepy almost Snake-like fashion Distended joints
Zinzi Bree:can he turn into a bat?
Sage Moreaux:can
Zinzi Bree:trans A
Sage Moreaux:Yeah
Zinzi Bree:or is it a
Sage Moreaux:a
Zinzi Bree:reference?
Sage Moreaux:to bats
Zinzi Bree:He like,
Sage Moreaux:communes
Zinzi Bree:hard to say,
Sage Moreaux:he is turning into them
Zinzi Bree:but
Sage Moreaux:he is re there is definitely wolves that he commands He commands there is mist that he commands the bats owls I think foxes are mentioned A
Zinzi Bree:lot of
Sage Moreaux:like nocturnal
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:to Dracula and
Zinzi Bree:there is overall.
Sage Moreaux:than the
Zinzi Bree:women,
Sage Moreaux:becoming
Zinzi Bree:beautiful and
Sage Moreaux:with
Zinzi Bree:luscious red lips,
Sage Moreaux:and like
Zinzi Bree:Very
Sage Moreaux:does do
Zinzi Bree:compelling.
Sage Moreaux:Dracula compels And he drains blood from his victims but then to turn them they drink his blood And there is one scene in particular where
Zinzi Bree:she first opened the door and
Sage Moreaux:Dracula's
Zinzi Bree:in the bedroom
Sage Moreaux:he
Zinzi Bree:had
Sage Moreaux:woman
Zinzi Bree:holding her and putting her head to his chest
Sage Moreaux:it's okay
Zinzi Bree:bit
Sage Moreaux:where there was an
Zinzi Bree:the
Sage Moreaux:of sex
Zinzi Bree:wasn't
Sage Moreaux:sexy but it was sensual
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:You could see it
Zinzi Bree:Where that
Sage Moreaux:come
Zinzi Bree:Started because every time they talk about it.
Sage Moreaux:like he has a kind of hawkish nose he's very austere and severe He's not described as handsome
Zinzi Bree:with the check, you're like, oh,
Sage Moreaux:power like the physical
Zinzi Bree:Power.
Sage Moreaux:of him
Zinzi Bree:Okay.
Sage Moreaux:Which I thought was interesting
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:continued through pop culture and
Zinzi Bree:but
Sage Moreaux:he does and he sleeps in a coffin by day Out at night but it does seem
Zinzi Bree:Some
Sage Moreaux:can turn into mist
Zinzi Bree:other,
Sage Moreaux:of the other vampires he turns into mist to get out of her coffin through a hole
Zinzi Bree:And is that nighttime or daytime?
Sage Moreaux:No
Zinzi Bree:No. Still
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:I don't, there's never talk about them burning in the sunlight.
Sage Moreaux:I don't know if
Zinzi Bree:And then when they
Sage Moreaux:are killed then they desiccate once they're
Zinzi Bree:so they become dry instead of wet.
Katherine Suzette:Hm.
Sage Moreaux:Yeah exactly
Zinzi Bree:Hmm
Sage Moreaux:to
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm. Ooh, Ash. Yeah. That's a much better, that's a really nice visual word for that. Because I'm, I think at the movies it's always like they, the fire, the sun light then burns them and sets'em on fire and then they, they burn away, which then would become ash. Do you feel like modern day novels, there's a pretty heavy, heavy emphasis on what the character arc. Do you feel like there's character arc in for the main characters in Dracula, or are they pretty, is are they flat? It's just plot.
Sage Moreaux:Definitely the
Zinzi Bree:Character.
Sage Moreaux:Dracula does not have a character
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:the villain and he is on page very little
Zinzi Bree:are.
Sage Moreaux:there are character arcs in the sense of becoming less innocent and I think that is interesting Jonathan Ker and Mina who are the young couple like they get married in the course of the novel
Zinzi Bree:they
Sage Moreaux:Go
Zinzi Bree:from being
Sage Moreaux:innocent
Zinzi Bree:to being.
Sage Moreaux:friends turned into vampires to seeing herself start to turn
Zinzi Bree:having this
Sage Moreaux:transformation
Zinzi Bree:of like people in the world to an understanding that people
Sage Moreaux:exists
Zinzi Bree:she constantly
Sage Moreaux:weeping
Zinzi Bree:about.
Sage Moreaux:She's a
Zinzi Bree:a pretty great character actually.
Sage Moreaux:Mina It's a lot of her diaries
Zinzi Bree:you froze.
Sage Moreaux:pretty strong
Zinzi Bree:What happened?
Sage Moreaux:the men are
Zinzi Bree:I hope you're recording on your end.
Sage Moreaux:all the time She's very smart she clearly has a of
Zinzi Bree:Katherine, are you using your phone as your camera?'cause if you're not, Send Sage a test text to let her know that she froze?
Sage Moreaux:infected with the vampire blood, she is talking about how unclean she is, and
Zinzi Bree:But
Sage Moreaux:horrified by
Zinzi Bree:I'll just
Sage Moreaux:of like the
Katherine Suzette:do it
Zinzi Bree:do it anyway.
Sage Moreaux:living within her body.
Zinzi Bree:what did you love about the book, if anything? And do you have any favorite lines to share? My favorite line
Sage Moreaux:did have to do with the blood lust and the way that that was shown. What I
Zinzi Bree:I
Sage Moreaux:about the book was really just how it made me think kind of more deeply about the nature of immortality. I think that this is what love
Zinzi Bree:about.
Sage Moreaux:vampire novels and vampire media. I think that I just am really fascinated by the shift in pop culture to, I mean, it doesn't surprise me because that seems to be a lot of the shift in things, but the shift towards like, romance involved with, with vampires and how I, I do think there's a little bit of the
Zinzi Bree:of the nature of the
Sage Moreaux:of the blood drinking that does lead to that being like a sexy element and can be
Zinzi Bree:sexual
Sage Moreaux:when written a
Zinzi Bree:certain kind of way.
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:I also,
Sage Moreaux:lot
Zinzi Bree:a lot of it helps
Sage Moreaux:with
Zinzi Bree:with
Sage Moreaux:death,
Zinzi Bree:filter
Sage Moreaux:the idea of eternal beauty.
Zinzi Bree:my favorite piece of twilight
Sage Moreaux:back in the
Zinzi Bree:day, I
Sage Moreaux:like this is not the case with Dracula, but Edward the Vampire and all of his vampire species
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:He sits there and creepily watches Bella asleep, but at
Zinzi Bree:at other times,
Sage Moreaux:learns to play the piano and he has all this time on his hands.'cause most of you know, all of humanity is asleep at, or you know, they're not always asleep at night, but human sleep big chunk of the time and he
Zinzi Bree:Doesn't have to.
Sage Moreaux:like, that sounds amazing.
Katherine Suzette:Yes
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:did not have to sleep, how many books would I have written in the amount of time?
Sage Moreaux:my
Zinzi Bree:How many or more books could I have read in the amount of time it takes me to sleep? Ugh, I'm with you. I envy the no need for sleep.
Sage Moreaux:Yeah, or would I just endlessly scroll on social media?
Zinzi Bree:I actually
Sage Moreaux:social media person, so hopefully not, but there's so much time waste, easy ways to waste time.
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:that
Zinzi Bree:If I got those extra hours,
Sage Moreaux:I would actually
Zinzi Bree:you'd be productive. Yeah. All right. We are going to move along to my book which my choice was Frankenstein
Katherine Suzette:Cynthia why did you choose Frankenstein
Zinzi Bree:I chose Frankenstein partly because it's been on my TBR as like a to read for forever, but also because some friends whose opinion I value have read it and put it as like one of their all time favorite books. And this particular person is, is someone that I've always felt has been very discerning about, about the quality of the things that they put as their favorites. So that already set a very high expectation for the kind of book that Frankenstein was gonna be. A lot of the book of Frankenstein is considered to be, have elements of autobiography in some of the characters and the way the, the relationships interact and the concern with death. I will admit, I fully expected when I picked it up to be reading. Mad scientists obsessed with science. Big scene around Frankenstein coming to life with lightning strikes because that's what we know from pop culture and from the movie interpretations. Right. And I also, in my understanding of Frankenstein, before reading the book, would have classified him as a zombie. And having read this, he's absolutely not a zombie. He's considered a golem, a flesh golem in this case, but he's a, he's a created being that is intelligent and it is separate from what is normally the zombie, undead monster that comes about through viruses and plagues and, the undead rising Frankenstein is made and it's very different. And, I was not expecting that I was, I was expecting him to, to still be dumb Frankenstein monster where he is still portrayed a lot of the time. So I was, the book was very different than I expected. It also starts similarly to Dracula where there's epistolary, there's a different character that Victor Frankenstein meets and tells his tale too. And that person is then recording the story and sending those letters to his sister in, in the course of the novel. So we're not even getting necessarily Victor Frankenstein's. Letters directly until later in the, in the book, it's, it clarifies that he like got to look over this this gentleman's notes and like correct things to make them more his version of the story. We do have a whole section where Frankenstein's monster, the creature, so he's in, in modern day, he's known as Frankenstein and he's never named, he's the creature in the book which is just awful for him.
Katherine Suzette:I wanna know how the monster is represented in pop culture And this
Zinzi Bree:This, especially because I was at club the other night
Katherine Suzette:and a young
Zinzi Bree:a young lady was talking about her
Katherine Suzette:Recent
Zinzi Bree:experience with
Katherine Suzette:and
Zinzi Bree:Stein and she thought that
Katherine Suzette:the monster
Zinzi Bree:was
Katherine Suzette:poorly misunderstood
Zinzi Bree:or
Katherine Suzette:poorly
Zinzi Bree:very poorly represented
Katherine Suzette:modern pop
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:She said
Zinzi Bree:Incredibly
Katherine Suzette:intelligent and almost
Zinzi Bree:almost poetic
Katherine Suzette:things like
Zinzi Bree:like that.
Katherine Suzette:wanna know a
Zinzi Bree:I wanna know a little bit more about how the monster
Katherine Suzette:in pop
Zinzi Bree:pop culture,
Katherine Suzette:the novel
Zinzi Bree:In pop culture, I mean you'll get several variations. You get the, you know, the marching around hands in front, doesn't know how to control their body. Mumbling. And that comes from the early movie depictions of Frankenstein when he is first made or born. if you think about something, you know, a baby when they're. Born. they don't know how to control their body. They don't know how to control their limbs. They don't know how to talk yet. Those are all things that they have to be learned. in the book, Victor Frankenstein rejects his monster because he is ugly before he even has a chance to recognize his intelligence or to value his intelligence. And so the creature, runs and hides and has this whole absolutely beautiful section where he marvels at sunlight. He marvels at Bird song. it's this whole beautiful poetic, loves the landscape section sees humans immediately loves them and is interested in them. And every time he interacts with them, where they get to see him is rejected, which then ends up. Turning him eventually monstrous. But he is very, he is very intelligent. He's very poetic. He ends up during the course of the story hiding in like a back of, kind of like a false wall in a cabin watching this family who has an immigrant come in that has to learn a new language. And so Frankenstein through this other person getting taught, is also learning the language of this family and learns. Yeah. Learns, they read through, or he actually ends up, being taught to learn through, observing that and then steals some books and reads Paradise Lost, which has some what's the word when the, some parallels like in parallel, in Paradise Lost, to Frankenstein. There's some of those that are pointed out and then like the monster even becomes. Philosophical. So he, it just, he's an incredibly intelligent character and as a modern day reader, like it's so frustrating to see him rejected, to see him not cared for because there we try to not well, but there is at least some understanding now of valuing intelligence and competence over beauty versus at the time of Frankenstein, beauty was akin to goodness. An ugly person was vilified just because they were ugly. And were considered irredeemable. So there's, yeah, there's a lot of difference in the depiction. I will also say the novel has the upper hand here because. You are getting Frankenstein's story in his words, there's a lot of the action that happens with his learning that is not easy to translate onto a screen in a way that makes him sympathetic. I'm hoping Guillermo del Toro. Yeah. He's got a new Frankenstein movie coming out in November that I'm really excited for because he, he gave the foreword in the particular, in one of the versions of Frankenstein that I was reading. And so I'm really hoping that version will show more of both Victor Frankenstein's, the creator's obsession and the creature's compassion and desire for connection. And how much. He became who he is and I mean, in the course of the story, he murders three people just to get his creator's attention. And that I'm hoping will be painted in the light that it is in the novel. More so than it being a, in the early movies, like he was a murderer because he was a murderer. One of the early versions that's super famous I got through the first half of it and turned it off because I got so mad. The scene where they get the creature's brain is there's two brains on a desk and one is labeled a normal brain and one is labeled a criminal brain. And the normal brain jar gets broken. And so the criminal brain is the one that supposedly ends up into the creature's body. So they're already setting up this moralistic decision of clearly there's a criminal brain in his body. He's gonna be murderous, he's gonna be a criminal. It doesn't explore that. The creature becoming who he is because of the choices of his creator and the creator's rejection. As part of the story, and a big theme in Frankenstein is what does the creator owe its creation?
Katherine Suzette:Ooh
Zinzi Bree:yeah. And, you know, what does the creation owe the creator? Which those are really interesting questions as you know, as a writer, as an artist, as a person who does create what do I own my book? What do I own my characters? What do they owe me once they're in the hands of the reader, anything? And so it was just, there was some, some extra things from that theme that I found really interesting to think about. Now also, especially with and I'm gonna pull out a quote that I wanna read that's actually from the foreword, of the copy of Frankenstein. Because something else that points out is the setting of Frankenstein is taking place during the Industrial Revolution. And we currently with the advent of AI becoming so popular and normalized,
Katherine Suzette:Oh
Zinzi Bree:I don't know that I wanna call it an intellectual revolution happening, but certainly the process of creation, especially in online spaces, is changing. So I found this, quote particularly relevant and wanted to read it, and it says. The social misfit, the alienated being, comes to full fruition with the industrial revolution and the overcrowded loneliness of the big cities. The birth of the monster coincides socially with these modern concerns. It comes to be at the exact moment at which machines of our own creation usurp our function and surpass our skill and speed, displacing us into an amenity. The death nail of craftmanship and thus of identity comes hand in hand with mass production of goods and the siphoning of the masses into identically constructed lodging to serve these machines like that's relevant. Then talking about mass production machines, but that's relevant. Now, thinking about AI now usurping our function, stealing our skills, surpassing them. In some cases when it's, you know, we're going to ask it a question of something that we don't know, This is what's fascinating to me about Frankenstein. A book that was written, over a hundred years ago, and why I think it's a classic and why it still has value to read today. Because it brings about these questions, it gives you something, to look at your own decisions as a creative person. And question what areas do you let the machine make decisions for you? What areas you do wanna craft yourself, what you owe your creation or what does the creation owe you? And I just thought all of that was really relevant and interesting to think about.
Sage Moreaux:Yeah,
Zinzi Bree:I love that
Katherine Suzette:it's like
Sage Moreaux:Frankenstein a long
Zinzi Bree:time ago, and I remember I.
Sage Moreaux:that aspect of it, so that's really interesting. I remembered a lot about him, searching for his humanity
Zinzi Bree:And
Sage Moreaux:made monster versus human, like what made you human
Zinzi Bree:the emotional
Sage Moreaux:that he possessed.
Zinzi Bree:Yeah. Which is why, one of the reasons I
Sage Moreaux:talked about as like the first sci-fi book is
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:of sci-fi is about nature,
Zinzi Bree:And that's,
Sage Moreaux:with the AI piece that you were just talking about, like what makes something. Human versus machine.
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:distinction lie for sci-fi,
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:yeah, his humanity versus his monstrousness.
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:So
Zinzi Bree:another reason it being one of the first true sci-fi is because the monster is made through science, it's not science that's explained in the course of the story. There isn't details or stuff like that. It's still very much in the background, but science is used, not magic, so not a fantasy. It's sci-fi story.
Sage Moreaux:are there any like books or modern retellings that you think do do a good job at handling that?
Zinzi Bree:So there, there are far more movie and film version retellings of the Frankenstein story than there are books. I'll talk about them during my book recommendations section at the end. I have a, a handful of them that I thought were really promising or intriguing in their premise.
Katherine Suzette:That's
Zinzi Bree:That's almost like an existential experience.
Katherine Suzette:that
Zinzi Bree:Go back to with
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:the creator versus the
Katherine Suzette:The There
Zinzi Bree:There.
Katherine Suzette:of humanity like sage said that sounds really good
Zinzi Bree:Okay. So that's definitely,
Katherine Suzette:my TBR now
Zinzi Bree:yeah. I will admit, there's a lot of the character Victor Frankenstein, I understand the, in historical context where the, they're trying to, you know, man is goodness and blah, blah, blah. That prick is a narcissist and I hate him. And he's not painted, like he has no self-awareness of, of being a narcissist, of thinking about himself throughout the entire story. There is a line that made me want to throw the book, and that is that he thinks. Setting up the scenario here for you. The creature has murdered his young brother and then hidden a necklace that was on the brother into the pocket of a servant of the, the Frankenstein family household, so that she will be blamed for the murder. She gets caught, doesn't know why she has this necklace is then put on trial. And Victor Frankenstein has a line where he goes,"no one could be more miserable than me." She is about to be killed for a murder she did not commit. And Victor can only think I am more miserable than her. There is also, so going back to some of the cultural stuff, there is A different line about Elizabeth, which is, a young woman that comes into his household and that Victor Frankenstein eventually marries. And his mother gives Elizabeth to him, like when she comes into the family. And then there's several lines about how Victor thinks of Elizabeth as his, she becomes an object that belongs to him. She's not a person on her own, she belongs to him. Which is, there's a difference. One of the books that I'm gonna recommend that's in my TBR that I want to read is, the Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein. And it's the Frankenstein from this girl's perspective of being brought into this family and basically having to her whole survival is wrapped around making Victor happy in the course of the original Frankenstein book. Victor's choices directly lead to Elizabeth being murdered by his creature on their wedding nights directly after the creature murdered a different friend because Victor did not create a companion. That's where, Frankenstein's bride, I think the kernel of the idea of Frankenstein's Bride comes from is'cause Frankenstein is so lonely and he recognizes that he's wretched and has done evil deeds and hopes that if he can have a companion, at least if he has a companion, he and that companion can go off into the wilderness, be together, not be alone. And Victor Frankenstein, the first time he thinks about the consequences of his actions in creating, the creature and taking some responsibility. He goes, no, I cannot make a companion creature. What if she turns out to be a murderer too? Then I'll have made two of these things that are abominations and then he rips apart the body that he had start to make, which enrages the creature and leads to this domino effect of, Two more murders happening. everything that happens is Victor's fault. And the length of time it takes for him to take responsibility for it is frustrating as a modern reader. But understandable, if part of the story's design is to show. How long it takes sometimes for humans mankind to take responsibility for their actions and to think or to try in the future, to think more broadly about what consequences come from their choices.
Sage Moreaux:is it told through his perspective at all?
Zinzi Bree:Victor Frankenstein has a meeting with the creature where Victor listens to the creature's story. He gets to tell his perspective, and then at the very end of the book. The narrator who's sending the letters back, whose name I'm forgetting at the moment also meets the creature and he rounds out the end of his tail and then says now that because Victor Frankenstein, who is not doctor by the way that's a movie thing, mad scientist. Then Victor Frankenstein dies at the end of the story. The monster comes in, mourns him, tells the end of his story, and then claims that he's going to go off and make a, a pire and burn himself to death.'cause that is the only way that he knows to end his misery. And I could not help reading the story and go, I grew up on Beauty and the Beast. Victor Frankenstein is Gaston who thinks he is all pureness and goodness, and the creature is the beast over here just completely vilified and misunderstood
Sage Moreaux:Mm-hmm.
Zinzi Bree:I could not help but have compassion for him, even though he commits murder three times. And I'm sitting there rooting for and feeling compassion for a murderer. And that felt very bizarre. But you can't help yourself in the course of this tale. And just from that cultural female empathetic, driven way I was raised, I'll put it that way.
Sage Moreaux:Frankenstein was
Zinzi Bree:was written by a woman.
Sage Moreaux:versus Dracula,
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:the parallels. It'll be interesting to see how the Wolf Man comes in. I'm noticing the differences between the two. Whereas Frank Frankenstein was you had
Zinzi Bree:had
Sage Moreaux:for
Zinzi Bree:for him.
Sage Moreaux:you said,
Zinzi Bree:said
Sage Moreaux:a murderer and yet you still felt for
Zinzi Bree:for him,
Sage Moreaux:so that's really interesting. Whereas Dracula, you did not feel. Any kind he's a monster. He is a kind of entitled wealthy monster who preys on young women.
Zinzi Bree:So different.
Sage Moreaux:different in that term, unless you
Zinzi Bree:Talk about sex version. Oh. I don't know that they're, like, the sexiest versions tend to be the bride of Frankenstein being sexy. Like she's put as innocent or sexy Frankenstein. Really isn't in, in pop culture or like the closest that I can think of is watching Warm Bodies, which is a zombie movie, but it's zombies that are still able to, when when love is involved, they're able to like, regain their mind and not obsess over brains and it helps to like cure their disease. But even that's not really sexy. That one is still comedy. I think there's maybe like one kissing in that. So there isn't, to my knowledge, there isn't really sexiness applied to the Frankenstein story. and I prefer it that way. I don't, Having read the Creature in Frankenstein. I recognize that he cared far more for care and compassion and love and kindness, and I don't know that, thoughts beyond that apply to the monster he was seeking companionship on the purist levels, not on the basis levels. But yeah, Frankenstein is not a sexy story. It hasn't devolved into having all of these different versions of it in fiction. It's really stayed as a monstrous tale in tv.
Katherine Suzette:Interesting
Zinzi Bree:And even, and even in those movies, IF feel like they focus on the monster and aren't telling the right story.
Katherine Suzette:I really wanna see the version now of Frankenstein but Beauty and the Beast
Zinzi Bree:I want somebody.
Katherine Suzette:so if you know the
Zinzi Bree:The book
Katherine Suzette:or you're
Zinzi Bree:you're writing it, let us know the,
Katherine Suzette:wanna read that
Zinzi Bree:The closest one might be, I'm thinking about how the makeup was done for the movie Beastly, which they had him be bald and he had like a bunch of stitches on his face. So like, that was the closest to maybe more of a Frankenstein appearance that I've seen the Beast have. But again, that's still a human being. He's not a, a created, being that then has to learn humanity, different story, but that would be a really interesting beauty and the beast. Maybe in that version of the story, beauty needs to be the creator. Maybe her dad is Victor Frankenstein and creates. A monster. And then beauty when her father rejects the creature your beauty character then chooses to show him compassion and they, fall in love over the course of, a story. That would be my version, my cozy fantasy version.
Sage Moreaux:Yeah,
Zinzi Bree:Yeah, that actually sounds really good. Okay.
Katherine Suzette:Really really wanna bring up now Penny dreadful Because
Zinzi Bree:yes,
Katherine Suzette:any
Zinzi Bree:if either of you have seen it,
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:I think that the monster, the future is
Katherine Suzette:represented more
Zinzi Bree:more closely to.
Katherine Suzette:version that I heard you talking about who just wanted care and compassion who just to To be wanted or
Zinzi Bree:Or,
Katherine Suzette:Not
Zinzi Bree:Not get, not even love, just
Katherine Suzette:cared for
Zinzi Bree:cared
Katherine Suzette:way
Zinzi Bree:for in some way,
Katherine Suzette:fake attention
Zinzi Bree:attention or something.
Katherine Suzette:And
Zinzi Bree:and
Katherine Suzette:version of
Zinzi Bree:version of
Katherine Suzette:he does end up Helping of ragtag evil fighters but
Zinzi Bree:but
Katherine Suzette:he is also
Zinzi Bree:also
Katherine Suzette:self-consumed
Zinzi Bree:and doesn't to take that
Katherine Suzette:falling in love with his second creature which is originally intended to be
Zinzi Bree:intended.
Katherine Suzette:of Frankenstein But she gets a mind of her own and wakes up to femininity what we would now think of as femininity But of course this is based in the 18 hundreds
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:it's a very
Zinzi Bree:it's very interesting.
Katherine Suzette:also
Zinzi Bree:They also have
Katherine Suzette:so many
Zinzi Bree:so many different horror stories.
Katherine Suzette:Fall Now I really wanna go watch it but I rewatched it like a month ago so
Zinzi Bree:Okay.
Katherine Suzette:we'll see
Zinzi Bree:Where's Penny? Dreadful on. You had talked about it so much over the past couple episodes. I'm like, all right, I have to find the show. I have to watch it. Katherine just talks about it nonstop. Where can I watch it? Is it on Netflix?
Katherine Suzette:It's on Netflix right now
Zinzi Bree:yeah, some other characters that I,
Katherine Suzette:think that the creators of that show definitely read a lot of classics and asked themselves how they can represent this
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:And yeah I do recommend that.
Zinzi Bree:So Katherine, did you read, is it the Wolf Man? Is it the man Wolf? And why did you choose werewolves as your monster of focus?
Katherine Suzette:Mostly because
Zinzi Bree:Mostly because I
Katherine Suzette:any of the original literature around werewolves So I was really curious
Zinzi Bree:curious about the,
Katherine Suzette:And I found out is that there a great
Zinzi Bree:great origin, There's clearly
Katherine Suzette:an
Zinzi Bree:a, oral tradition.
Katherine Suzette:in a lot of European areas
Zinzi Bree:of the three books I read
Katherine Suzette:for this are
Zinzi Bree:are
Katherine Suzette:from the early 18 hundreds the Man Wolf by Leach Richie and apparently this is an old British version and the author himself is Scottish
Zinzi Bree:tale
Katherine Suzette:includes a woman
Zinzi Bree:a woman that
Katherine Suzette:me some kind
Zinzi Bree:some kind of,
Katherine Suzette:lake
Zinzi Bree:or
Katherine Suzette:but she is like the turning point for the werewolf I think that she curses him or that's how he realizes that he is cursed something like that is when he sees her So there's something
Zinzi Bree:Something about,
Katherine Suzette:The woman
Zinzi Bree:a woman herself
Katherine Suzette:that
Zinzi Bree:that brings out the animal
Katherine Suzette:right the other book I read that was from the 18
Zinzi Bree:Hundred is
Katherine Suzette:Werewolf of
Zinzi Bree:werewolf.
Katherine Suzette:And that one
Zinzi Bree:And that was definitely
Katherine Suzette:more of
Zinzi Bree:more of the,
Katherine Suzette:Dracula the sense
Zinzi Bree:the sense that it was longer, a little bit less, or traditions
Katherine Suzette:rooted
Zinzi Bree:or
Katherine Suzette:fleshed out
Zinzi Bree:out as a.
Katherine Suzette:But
Zinzi Bree:But both
Katherine Suzette:those were
Zinzi Bree:of those were
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:The man was curse because
Katherine Suzette:he
Zinzi Bree:he had sexual
Katherine Suzette:had racial relationships outside of what he should have
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:All
Zinzi Bree:The third one I read was how
Katherine Suzette:is an American
Zinzi Bree:American officer,
Katherine Suzette:who wrote it in like 1977 Or
Zinzi Bree:or,
Katherine Suzette:Yeah
Zinzi Bree:yeah,
Katherine Suzette:And
Zinzi Bree:That's theory something,
Katherine Suzette:but
Zinzi Bree:but
Katherine Suzette:all three
Zinzi Bree:all three of them,
Katherine Suzette:became werewolves because of
Zinzi Bree:of
Katherine Suzette:way their infidelity outside of proper situations in which to
Zinzi Bree:situation to have sex,
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:parents never got married.
Katherine Suzette:he
Zinzi Bree:he was born out
Katherine Suzette:essentially the rape
Zinzi Bree:the.
Katherine Suzette:His mother was raped by a priest
Zinzi Bree:And then she became a
Katherine Suzette:recognized how
Zinzi Bree:how.
Katherine Suzette:that situation was She was just like oh yeah this thing happened
Zinzi Bree:And
Katherine Suzette:so
Zinzi Bree:so
Katherine Suzette:almost
Zinzi Bree:like
Katherine Suzette:in the rape the priest is blamed but then thereafter her
Zinzi Bree:her sexual activity is all
Katherine Suzette:on
Zinzi Bree:entirely on her.
Katherine Suzette:Processing for
Zinzi Bree:ation for her of what happened
Katherine Suzette:then
Zinzi Bree:then.
Katherine Suzette:the curse happens
Zinzi Bree:happened
Katherine Suzette:either the mom
Zinzi Bree:mom was raped or
Katherine Suzette:was
Zinzi Bree:she was,
Katherine Suzette:prolific after having been raped that she was
Zinzi Bree:she was
Katherine Suzette:bear
Zinzi Bree:to bear the,
Katherine Suzette:And he doesn't
Zinzi Bree:and he doesn't come,
Katherine Suzette:he does
Zinzi Bree:but she does have a lot of
Katherine Suzette:and loses time in the night and horrible things
Zinzi Bree:things.
Katherine Suzette:wake up to bad things having happened
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:And there comes a time when his stepfather who's actually
Zinzi Bree:actually,
Katherine Suzette:I won't go down
Zinzi Bree:I'll go down that line, but the stepfather actually
Katherine Suzette:him
Zinzi Bree:lock up in the house
Katherine Suzette:And this
Zinzi Bree:and
Katherine Suzette:the werewolf of Paris So this is in France somewhere which I'm not sure what it was called in the day of but there was some kind of war going on Prussians and something else
Zinzi Bree:anyway,
Katherine Suzette:so he
Zinzi Bree:so he gets
Katherine Suzette:He decides
Zinzi Bree:he decides to
Katherine Suzette:to Paris and be a He wants to go be a soldier in this war this regional war And on the way out of town he loses time again and ends up murdering his best friend on the side of the road
Zinzi Bree:The night before, the murder,
Katherine Suzette:or the night
Zinzi Bree:night after,
Katherine Suzette:but I
Zinzi Bree:but I think it was after he went, his mom,
Katherine Suzette:back
Zinzi Bree:he went back to his mom,
Katherine Suzette:and was upset about it And so she held him and
Zinzi Bree:him and everything.
Katherine Suzette:but then
Zinzi Bree:Then
Katherine Suzette:he loses time again And he wakes up and it's very clear that he had essentially had his way with his mom And
Zinzi Bree:then he what
Katherine Suzette:involved
Zinzi Bree:involved
Katherine Suzette:This bar maid
Zinzi Bree:guess
Katherine Suzette:They call it something else in the book but she's essentially
Zinzi Bree:essentially fine with having
Katherine Suzette:the name of the werewolf Sorry I never actually introduced the character His name is Bertrand so he's
Zinzi Bree:So he's totally in love and somehow that seems to
Katherine Suzette:hide the
Zinzi Bree:hide the rail,
Katherine Suzette:longer
Zinzi Bree:longer a problem.
Katherine Suzette:It
Zinzi Bree:He doesn't lose time,
Katherine Suzette:start
Zinzi Bree:doesn't start
Katherine Suzette:people and whatnot
Zinzi Bree:up
Katherine Suzette:he keeps the blood lust at bay
Zinzi Bree:by
Katherine Suzette:drawing
Zinzi Bree:drawing blood
Katherine Suzette:the girl he's in love with
Zinzi Bree:So
Katherine Suzette:comes a
Zinzi Bree:there comes a moment
Katherine Suzette:on
Zinzi Bree:later on down the line, his, Stepfather comes back
Katherine Suzette:and is like
Zinzi Bree:like, how are you
Katherine Suzette:have you
Zinzi Bree:how you not
Katherine Suzette:mess of yourself and all of the people around you But then he takes a really good look at her and she has essentially bites all over
Zinzi Bree:all over her.
Katherine Suzette:is
Zinzi Bree:So she's into
Katherine Suzette:helping him with his blood lust
Zinzi Bree:Es
Katherine Suzette:So I think
Zinzi Bree:so I think.
Katherine Suzette:but others are actually like So she has all of these scars from being cut and he just drinks her blood and that keeps the werewolf at bay Or keeps the bloodlust from taking
Zinzi Bree:Taking over.
Katherine Suzette:So it's this
Zinzi Bree:So it's this
Katherine Suzette:book full
Zinzi Bree:book full of all these
Katherine Suzette:definitely darker versions of what I would call sexual fantasies at play
Zinzi Bree:at play.
Katherine Suzette:And the
Zinzi Bree:And the werewolf is the result of all of,
Katherine Suzette:continues
Zinzi Bree:it comes out that
Katherine Suzette:particular book the Werewolf of Paris ends up in an asylum on drugs all of the time And because of that he gets delusional and ends up killing himself and another inmate at the same time who he Mistakenly believed was Sophie the girl he was in love with And Sophie earlier on had committed suicide cause she thought that Bertrand had just up and left her So it's very
Zinzi Bree:so it's very dark,
Katherine Suzette:very
Zinzi Bree:not really.
Katherine Suzette:It's
Zinzi Bree:Wow. Outta curiosity. Out of our three books do your protagonist survive at the end? My pro, the protagonist of my books do not. Victor Frankenstein dies. The Creature Dies, Elizabeth Frankenstein dies. The only guy who makes it outta this story is the narrator who's doing the letters and whose name I've already forgotten.
Sage Moreaux:Dracula
Katherine Suzette:I
Sage Moreaux:at the end.
Zinzi Bree:early on.
Sage Moreaux:of Mina's
Zinzi Bree:friends.
Sage Moreaux:was turned
Zinzi Bree:And they come to kill her.
Sage Moreaux:But that
Zinzi Bree:But that was,
Sage Moreaux:wrote a
Zinzi Bree:wrote a few letters.
Sage Moreaux:She wasn't a protagonist. All the other protagonists, Liv and like happily one
Zinzi Bree:One other one.
Sage Moreaux:He dies also. So all of the main characters who have diary entries survive and are like happy. They go on to live fulfilling lives.
Katherine Suzette:Interesting
Sage Moreaux:by the results of what happened to them and their
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:But they
Zinzi Bree:But they're,
Sage Moreaux:fine.
Zinzi Bree:It's a nice, cathartic adventure story at the end there.
Sage Moreaux:it's nice and warm.
Zinzi Bree:it's, that being that as a monster story, like Dracula is a monster story about the monster being revealed and then hunted and then killed, and success for the humans versus the monster stories that Katherine and I read. The creature is wrestling with humanity. And Victor is wrestling with being the, it does creating a monster. Make him the monster. Katherine for your, it sounds like for your werewolf books, like there's also that struggling with monster hood. what parts are human, what parts are monsters do I give in to the monster? Those are, they're all different angles. Upcoming app monster stories, but Sage, it definitely sounds like you have the most fun adventure version out of the,
Sage Moreaux:Yeah,
Zinzi Bree:of the three of us.
Sage Moreaux:versus evil, more than like questioning what does it mean to be human versus monster?
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Sage Moreaux:very clear cut.
Katherine Suzette:Yeah
Zinzi Bree:My,
Katherine Suzette:three of
Zinzi Bree:all three of my,
Katherine Suzette:a
Zinzi Bree:as a result
Katherine Suzette:way or another of sex that was unacceptable essentially
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:I thought
Zinzi Bree:That
Katherine Suzette:The
Zinzi Bree:was the first one I mentioned
Katherine Suzette:that we brought up
Zinzi Bree:we brought up
Katherine Suzette:He was
Zinzi Bree:he was first by the,
Katherine Suzette:and then
Zinzi Bree:and then
Katherine Suzette:off
Zinzi Bree:went off,
Katherine Suzette:but
Zinzi Bree:but it was
Katherine Suzette:because he was on his way to see his mistress and then his wife finds out and she steals his clothes from the bank
Zinzi Bree:the bank of
Katherine Suzette:the edge of the forest
Zinzi Bree:apparently
Katherine Suzette:you
Zinzi Bree:is how you,
Katherine Suzette:a wolf
Zinzi Bree:the werewolf and don't let them return anymore.
Katherine Suzette:And yeah so eventually somebody feels guilty about it and takes his clothes back
Zinzi Bree:That,
Katherine Suzette:it wasn't the wife
Zinzi Bree:yeah,
Sage Moreaux:So your books were
Zinzi Bree:were all about
Sage Moreaux:like
Zinzi Bree:like sex and
Sage Moreaux:becoming like this ba beast form because of sexual desire.
Katherine Suzette:Essentially Pretty in the werewolf of Paris I think it's the most interestingly portrayed version because it's all these things that they would think of back at that time as sexual deviancy and weird and dark things to desire And I'm not sure that I
Zinzi Bree:But today we definitely
Katherine Suzette:as kinks
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:yeah
Zinzi Bree:yeah.
Katherine Suzette:back in time
Zinzi Bree:the time,
Katherine Suzette:though
Zinzi Bree:even I say
Katherine Suzette:There was no diverse representation of sexual orientation in any of these books
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:women
Zinzi Bree:women,
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:but
Katherine Suzette:all
Zinzi Bree:all
Katherine Suzette:dumb
Zinzi Bree:dumb.
Katherine Suzette:mean or addicted to sex and dumb like that That's it except for in the howling
Zinzi Bree:And
Katherine Suzette:And I don't think she was
Zinzi Bree:I don't think she was much,
Katherine Suzette:better
Zinzi Bree:much better
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:resident
Katherine Suzette:But I do think that she it was 1977 so there was at least some feminism going
Zinzi Bree:going on.
Katherine Suzette:did his best
Zinzi Bree:We hope,
Katherine Suzette:Yeah
Zinzi Bree:given the time.
Katherine Suzette:Yeah
Zinzi Bree:it wasn't my favorite.
Katherine Suzette:it was
Zinzi Bree:That it was like the horror version
Katherine Suzette:I was looking for the monster
Zinzi Bree:that,
Katherine Suzette:are an element of horror
Zinzi Bree:and
Katherine Suzette:what I came up with That's what I found for that And I can see it but it felt like it was written in a Stephen King knockoff style and I think that
Zinzi Bree:I think
Katherine Suzette:of
Zinzi Bree:lot of
Katherine Suzette:have really enjoyed it
Zinzi Bree:there are
Katherine Suzette:on it now
Zinzi Bree:it now,
Katherine Suzette:it will never go down in history as my favorite
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm. So why do you think in, modern telling, there's an, there's like The Omega verse, which is like this whole realm of, isn't that mostly just like this whole werewolf pack, multiple books?
Katherine Suzette:did
Zinzi Bree:How did we get to where we are with the fantasy versions and Ali has Ali Hazelwood's mate, I think that one's a werewolf story too. That just came out. Haven't read it yet, but on my TBR
Katherine Suzette:bride and
Zinzi Bree:and I haven't read it yet.
Katherine Suzette:I want to
Zinzi Bree:I thought Bride was a vampire one and then Mate is Werewolf.
Katherine Suzette:oh
Zinzi Bree:Oh, okay.
Sage Moreaux:Vampire
Zinzi Bree:Werewolf.
Katherine Suzette:okay
Sage Moreaux:I
Zinzi Bree:I read,
Katherine Suzette:enough
Sage Moreaux:It's
Katherine Suzette:I wanna read em both
Zinzi Bree:yeah.
Katherine Suzette:Yeah cause she came out with a monster anthology with some other authors
Zinzi Bree:Yes, I read those. But I wanna know also about Fullman
Sage Moreaux:when
Zinzi Bree:when you talk about the
Sage Moreaux:If there's details that are similar or different.
Katherine Suzette:Not a single one of those three books talked about the moon in the sense that it had to be full for the curse to come over the werewolf it was always nighttime but it wasn't necessarily the full Moon
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:don't know where
Zinzi Bree:dunno,
Katherine Suzette:perhaps I should have done more research
Zinzi Bree:so
Katherine Suzette:out there
Zinzi Bree:I
Katherine Suzette:and help me with my research me where
Zinzi Bree:Tell me where the,
Katherine Suzette:Moon came from. An interesting version
Zinzi Bree:that
Katherine Suzette:think really shows the difference a lot between a paranormal fiction, fantasy, romance kind of book.
Zinzi Bree:and
Katherine Suzette:traditional world built fantasy books that we think of is Patricia Briggs series with the Mercy Thompson series.
Sage Moreaux:Mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:that one's
Zinzi Bree:That was really good.
Katherine Suzette:the
Zinzi Bree:the structure of the past.
Katherine Suzette:who gets what
Zinzi Bree:Guess what roles and why
Katherine Suzette:what
Zinzi Bree:what is about that character
Katherine Suzette:with them and their character that makes them the right person for that role. And
Zinzi Bree:and
Katherine Suzette:main
Zinzi Bree:actually,
Katherine Suzette:mercy is a coyote.
Zinzi Bree:Ooh, cool.
Katherine Suzette:Yeah.
Zinzi Bree:Yeah.
Katherine Suzette:there are many
Zinzi Bree:so many modern
Katherine Suzette:of the werewolves.
Zinzi Bree:mm-hmm.
Katherine Suzette:I don't see a lot of that transition. Just
Zinzi Bree:That's a lot.
Katherine Suzette:oral tradition with the werewolves turned into these few books that could find that seemed to be the initiation of either the horror genre or the werewolf stories in writing.
Sage Moreaux:Interesting how like, not so much Frankenstein, but vampires and werewolves have turned into these like, sexy versions
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:And there's like the Sooky Stackhouse novels, which are
Katherine Suzette:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:the True Blood series where you know, there's, there's vampire boyfriends, there's werewolf boyfriends. They're very hot in different kinds of ways. Twilight has the vampire verse werewolf thing
Zinzi Bree:Mm-hmm.
Sage Moreaux:about. but yet we don't, Frankenstein doesn't play in the same way
Zinzi Bree:I don't play.
Sage Moreaux:that's very interesting.
Katherine Suzette:move on to some book recommendations?
Zinzi Bree:So Sage, what are your Dracula retelling recommendations? Do you got some?
Sage Moreaux:Yeah, so
Zinzi Bree:so I have,
Sage Moreaux:I have three. So the
Zinzi Bree:First one
Sage Moreaux:definitely interview with the Vampire and the later books. I especially liked the Vampire List at, written by Ann Rice. Those were written, I think in the seventies and then later.
Zinzi Bree:of, I love that.
Sage Moreaux:of
Zinzi Bree:of,
Sage Moreaux:is unlike Dracula, it does put the vampire in the position of protagonist. Can you have empathy, humanity? And still be a, this creature. And
Zinzi Bree:and there's also.
Sage Moreaux:there is still a religious piece involved with it, so it hasn't gotten completely pulled out of its origin. So it's definitely like a stepping stone,
Zinzi Bree:And then my
Sage Moreaux:favorite vampire
Zinzi Bree:novel
Sage Moreaux:is
Zinzi Bree:is probably the
Sage Moreaux:Girl in Cold Town by Holly Black. It is a young adult novel. It is about a girl who possibly gets bitten by a vampire and has to go to Cold Town, where,
Zinzi Bree:all of the vampires.
Sage Moreaux:so they're kept in this like, kind of punk rock city. it's very fun, modern.
Zinzi Bree:Definitely
Sage Moreaux:like sexy vampire stuff in it and lots of gore also. So highly recommend that one. And then my
Zinzi Bree:last one.
Sage Moreaux:is if you were really into like Vampire Romance, that I do recommend Bride by Ali Hazelwood.
Zinzi Bree:Romance.
Sage Moreaux:it's a little different than any that I've read otherwise.
Zinzi Bree:Okay. My recommended reads off of Frankenstein. I have a handful here. One is called Pride and Prometheus by John Kessel. This is a Pride and prejudice meets Frankenstein retelling where Mary Bennett and Victor Frankenstein meets and form a romantic relationship. But then she also gets to meet the monster, the creature, and maybe that story ends differently than the original Frankenstein. And another one is this monstrous thing by Mackenzie Lee. This is a ya retelling, it's two brothers with a gas lamp setting. One of them dies and the other brother brings him back. But at the same time that's happening the Frankenstein book has just been released. And so the village or town that they live in are now on the hunt for the real Frankenstein thinking that this book is a true telling. Then there is the dark descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein, which I mentioned earlier in the episode by Kirsten White. This is Frankenstein from Elizabeth's perspective. That one's highest on my TBR of, I wanna go and read that. Although Pride and Prometheus is also on the TBR, because that just that I like my romance and that sounds like fun. Another one that came up that I wanna talk about is called Fran Kiss Stein. And it's Frankenstein spelled one word, but on the title of the cover, it looks like Fran Kiss Stein. And this is a long listed for the Booker Prize book that talks about transhumanism the AI queer love Sex Dolls, cryogenics futuristic. It's a futuristic thriller. So it's taken a bunch of the elements of the original Frankenstein and brought a modern touch to it. Interacting with a lot of the original themes. So that one's, that's also on my list. That one's probably a bit more, it sounds a bit more highbrow, but also a really good thinking read. That's got. Some sciency things in modern takes that might make it feel more relevant. All right. Those are, that's my book recommend. So read Frankenstein, but also maybe pick up one of these other books'cause they all are seem really interesting.
Katherine Suzette:All right. I can't wait to read some of those recommendations. They all sound
Zinzi Bree:Yeah,
Katherine Suzette:great you guys. I'm just gonna recommend the one, the Wolf Gift by Ann Rice because it is a very beautiful reinvention of becoming a werewolf might look like. And I really enjoy the characters.
Zinzi Bree:If you guys read
Katherine Suzette:them,
Zinzi Bree:them
Katherine Suzette:us know below.
Zinzi Bree:Yeah. Or if you've read them already and have opinions about them, please share.
Katherine Suzette:Yes.
Sage Moreaux:Or if you have other retellings that you recommend we add to our tbrs, please let us know.
Zinzi Bree:Absolutely. You can find us on social media. we are on TikTok, Insta, YouTube. Um, and you can email us. When not on here doing the podcast, I run write with me Zinzi Bree, which is a small, writing community that does co-writing on Zoom. If you'd be interested in that, shoot me an email. It's in the description box
Sage Moreaux:and if you enjoy listening to our podcast and you're a writer, we highly recommend that you come and check out our writing retreats through Book Dragon Inc. which you can find in the show notes. they are online writing retreats, so you can join us and write alongside with us live on Zoom.
Zinzi Bree:our next book club
Sage Moreaux:is Sword of Kegan by LM Wang. And it is such a great one.
Zinzi Bree:Oh my.
Sage Moreaux:wait to talk about it with you all.
Zinzi Bree:So if you haven't had a
Sage Moreaux:read this fantastic book, pick it up. So give yourself plenty of time. Read that and then come back and join us for our listen.
Katherine Suzette:Alright.
Zinzi Bree:we're dying for your support.
Katherine Suzette:Let us
Zinzi Bree:Let us know what you need.
Katherine Suzette:I hope
Zinzi Bree:I hope that you have.
Katherine Suzette:this episode. Thank you so much for tuning in.
Zinzi Bree:Thank you guys. Happy Halloween.
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