American Vampire
American Vampire is an American comic book series created by writer Scott Snyder[1] and drawn by artist Rafael Albuquerque. It is published by DC Comics under its Vertigo imprint. With the announcement that Vertigo would be closing down by 2020, writer Scott Snyder clarified that American Vampire would continue under the newly-created DC Black Label imprint.[2]
American Vampire | |
---|---|
Cover of American Vampire #1. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Vertigo (DC Comics) |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | Gothic Western, Weird West |
Publication date | March 2010 |
No. of issues | 34 11 (ongoing) Second Cycle Also 13 issues in mini-series, one-shots, and anthologies |
Main character(s) | Pearl Jones Skinner Sweet |
Creative team | |
Created by | Scott Snyder Rafael Albuquerque |
Written by | Scott Snyder (#1–present) Stephen King (#1–5) |
Artist(s) | Rafael Albuquerque Mateus Santolouco |
Colorist(s) | Dave McCaig |
Collected editions | |
Hardcover | ISBN 978-1-4012-2830-9 |
The series imagines vampires as a population made up of many different secret species, and charts moments of vampire evolution and inter-species conflict throughout history. The focus of the series is a new American bloodline of vampires, born in the American West in the late 19th century. The first of this new species is a notorious outlaw named Skinner Sweet, who wakes from death, after being infected, to find he has become a new kind of vampire, something stronger and faster than what came before, impervious to sunlight, with a new set of strengths and weaknesses. The series goes on to track his movements through various decades of American history—along with the movements of his first and only known progeny: Pearl Jones, a young woman working as a struggling actress in the 1920s silent film industry when she is attacked by a coven of European vampires hiding in Hollywood. Sweet saves her (uncharacteristically) by giving her his blood, thereby turning her into an American vampire like him, at which point she seeks revenge on the classic vampires who attacked her in life. The complicated and charged relationship Jones has with Sweet is another focus of the series.
The first five issues featured two stories—one by Snyder and the other by Stephen King, both drawn by Rafael Albuquerque.[3][4] With the sixth issue, Scott Snyder took over as sole writer.[5] The original series ran from 2010-2013 and lasted 34 issues. A second series called American Vampire: Second Cycle ran from 2014-2015 and lasted 11 issues.
American Vampire spun off two mini-series. The first, "Survival of the Fittest", illustrated by Sean Murphy focuses on the cases files of the V.M.S., the vampire hunting organization of the series. The second, "Lord of Nightmares", illustrated by Dustin Nguyen further focuses on the mythology presented by Survival of the Fittest. In June 2013, a one shot co-written by Snyder and Albuquerque (who also illustrates the 64-page issue), entitled "Long Road to Hell" which features vampire hunter Travis Kidd, was released. Two American Vampire anthologies have also been released, the first in 2013 and the second in 2016.
Plot
The series explores notions of vampire evolution and traces the bloodline of a new kind of vampire,[6] an American species, with new powers and characteristics, through various decades of American history.[7]
The first story arc (issues #1–5) features two story arcs. The first takes place in 1925 from the point of view of an aspiring actress in L.A. who becomes the second American Vampire and works to get her revenge on those who turned her. The second is of a writer at a book conference due to the reediting of his book, Bad Blood. Here, the author claims that his work- which has been long considered a fictional western/terror story- is actually based on true events which he has either witnessed or has collected reliable information on.
Issue #1
Big Break
The first part takes place in July 1925 and introduces Pearl Jones, an aspiring young actress who is narrating the action as, apparently, a freshly murdered corpse. Pearl is apparently telling how she saw her first motion picture when she was eight and it started her on a career into the movies. At the moment, however, Pearl has been thrown by a hooded figure on top of a pile of other attractive young starlets in a ditch in the desert, thirty miles east outside of Los Angeles. However, right before the scene change, Pearl very weakly murmurs that she is still alive.
Cut to three days before with Pearl and her friend and roommate, Hattie Hargrove, where she is finishing the story she was telling in the first panels. The two are working as extras and soon begin chatting about the acting industry and the opportunity to work with an established Hollywood star, Mr. Chase Hamilton. Later, Pearl and Hattie are arriving their boarding house when they encounter an as-of-then unnamed squatter basking in the sunlight. Apparently, this is the third day in a row he has returned. Pearl says to Hattie she will call the police if she finds him squatting again. Pearl is shown to be working as cigarette girl in a speak easy to afford extra money. Afterwards as she heads out at dawn to a third job she has, she meets up with a friend, Henry Preston, who also works there as a musician, playing guitar in the band. The two discuss each other's lives, with Henry revealing he was once a "Gentleman Wayfarer" (or as Pearl calls it, "a Hobo") and Pearl revealing she has a tattoo of a sunflower on her back she had gotten on a drunken dare from Hattie and got it because her father used to grow them on his farm. Henry then asks Pearl to join him at the beach on the Fourth of July, which she agrees to if he will tell her more "spicy" stories about his travelling days. Later, back at the set of the Chase Hamilton film, Pearl assists in getting the lighting right for a scene and Mr. Hamilton himself asks Pearl to join him at an industry party at the home of a Mr. B.D. Bloch, a very famous movie producer, who is also doing their movie.
Back at home, Pearl and Hattie get ready for the event and the squatter sits by the pool. We then see his face for the first time as a handsome man in his mid-thirties with blue eyes and long blonde hair. He then gives her a warning about the people she is partying with, mentioning he's "old acquaintances" with Bloch, is apparently in town to finish some "business" with him, and that Bloch and his European friends are not the type of people she wants to be around. Pearl ignores him and she and Hattie head to the party, with the squatter mentioning that she'll be kicking herself in the morning. The second they arrive at the party, they marvel at the mansion and the congregation of stars there (though Pearl states it's strange that for a big-time producer, Bloch doesn't have any memorabilia). Hattie then mentions that Pearl really inspires her because Pearl does not give up on her dreams, while Pearl says that she thinks everyday about getting a ticket and going back home, but then mentions that she manages to keep from doing that by remembering good things that have happened, like meeting Hattie and the sights and sounds of L.A. The two then separate and Chase ushers Pearl away from the party and into a private room. There she finds Bloch and expects be introduced as an up-and-coming actress. Instead, she finds Bloch with several other men staring at her menacingly. They reveal themselves as vampires and pounce on Pearl.
Bad Blood
The second story opens with author Will Bunting retelling the story of the novel he had written. He starts his story with Jim Book in the town of Sidewinder, Colorado in 1880, having just caught the notorious criminal Skinner Sweet (who is shown to be the very same squatter from the first arc) after the outlaw had been on a thieving and murdering rampage through the west. They are riding on a train that takes them through the boom town situated around the profitable and dry goldmines that dotted the west. Book has been working for the Pinkerton Agency with Deputy Felix Camillo to bring Skinner in for the edification of worried foreign investors. One of the investors is named Percy, a man with a singular allergy to the sun. Working under him is a man named Finch who is a middle man facilitating the investments made by Percy and his partners. Bunting is also shown to be along for the ride as a journalist writing a story about the capture.
In return for a peppermint stick, Skinner tells Book about the robbery that led to his capture and where he hid the money that Sweet and his gang took off of Percy, during which it's shown he'd killed a three-year-old boy in the shootout of the bank he and his gang were robbing. Using the peppermint stick to pick the locks on his chains, Skinner escapes and takes Felix hostage. Unknown to Book, Skinner's gang is waiting outside to ambush the train as it heads into the mountains. As Skinner threatens to kill Camillo, his waiting gang springs their trap, blowing the train off the track and giving Skinner the chance to escape. Book catches up with Skinner before he can get away and as the two of them struggle, Sweet informs Book that he has murdered the lawman's fiancée, Ella Langum, with a bottle of poisoned wine he made seem like it was from Book.
Book flies into a rage and a gun fight ensues ending with Book bleeding on the ground. Skinner turns to see Percy challenging him with no gun and Skinner Sweet and his gang gun the man down. However, Percy does not stay dead, but rather rises up, barring his vampiric fangs and attacking Skinner by tearing into his throat. Skinner shoots Percy in the face, but not before Percy lands a fatal blow. However, some of Percy's blood finds its way into Skinner's eyes. Percy walks away a bit worse for wear, but still alive and healing rapidly as Skinner's gang runs away into the sunrise. Unfortunately, he is unaware that Skinner has been infected with a vampiric strain, nor does he know that Bunting had secretly watched the whole thing from a hiding place behind a rock. Book, Bunting, Camillo, and Finch all walk away from the wrecked train unaware that Skinner is on the precipice of rising from the dead as the first American vampire. Bunting then states that that night, he started writing what would become his highly successful novel, "Bad Blood." He also mentions Skinner's story was just beginning.
Issue #2
Morning Star
The second issue starts back in 1925 with Henry and Hattie finding Pearl missing when they go to check on her (also, we learn from a broadcast from Pearl's turned on radio that "Bad Blood" has been turned into a serial which is on its second episode, thereby breaking the fourth wall). The two of them head out to find her and discover to their horror a pale, bloody and nearly nude Pearl wandering alone in the desert. They take her to the hospital and the doctors inform Hattie and Henry that she's on the brink of death from blood loss and covered in animal bites, urging them to alert her family. This news devastates them and Hattie even begs for them to take her blood for transfusion, which the doctors state wouldn't help as her body's already shutting down. Later that evening, as Fourth of July fireworks go off outside, Pearl and Hattie's squatter -now known to be Skinner Sweet- climbs in through the window into Pearl's hospital room, declares his disgust at Bloch and, just before Pearl dies, gives her some of his blood by kissing her with a bloody lip on an opened eye. Pearl then has a nightmare of her as a girl playing in her father's sunflowers before seeing her father with a scythe who states he was looking for her before revealing large fangs and yellow eyes and hisses at her. Pearl then wakes up in the morgue. Disoriented and afraid by all the dead bodies (one of which is labeled "Jack Torrance," most likely as a shout-out to co-writer Stephen King whose novel, "The Shining's" main character shared the name) and flees home where she finds Skinner Sweet waiting for her. Skinner tells her she is a vampire and that Bloch and his coven are a part of a different and older breed, that Skinner's breed is powered by sunlight, and promptly leaves Pearl to her vengeance. After Skinner leaves Pearl finds that he has left a gift for her in the closet in the form of a tied up Chase Hamilton. Eventually after recalling the details Pearl butchers Hamilton and leaves his drained corpse in his dressing room.
Deep Water
Back in the 1880s the author Will Bunting continues the story of Skinner Sweet and James Book. We find Skinner Sweet in the ground and James Book in a coma with Felix Camillo watching over him. When Book wakes up Felix tells him that Ella, Book's wife, has died from the poison that Skinner sent her. Book promptly finds Skinner's grave and pisses on it, unfortunately Skinner is shown to be not so dead.
Later Percy meets with his coven of European vampires to talk about Skinner Sweet. The vampires believe that Percy might have made a mistake by letting his blood infect Skinner Sweet, since this created a new breed to threaten their supremacy. They plan to eliminate the threat by flooding the town Skinner's buried in, believing he shares their weakness of being unable to rise underwater.
Meanwhile, James Book, Felix Camillo, and Will Bunting ride towards Felix's father, as the elder Camillo is responsible for Skinner's apprehension and they believe his gang will seek revenge. After visiting his Wife Ella's Grave Book and his crew head to stop Skinner's gang, while Skinner now a vampire dines on rats in his grave. At this point the town where Skinner is buried is flooded, while Book hunts down Skinner's gang, shooting arresting or hanging each and every one of them until he can stomach it no longer.
The years pass and by 1886 Felix is married, has a pregnant wife, and has given up his violent ways...mostly. In 1888 Will Bunting finishes his book "Bad Blood" and gives it to James Book to read, and in 1890 Felix's wife gives birth to Abilena, but dies during the process. Meanwhile, at Skinner's watery grave a couple of ambitious treasure hunters venture down into the deep to find artifacts connected to the famous killer.
Rough Cut
Double Exposure
Set in Los Angeles, providing a brief account of the meeting between Hattie and Pearl, and then Hattie's later betrayal of Pearl in the service of the vampiric Old World movie moguls. Hattie appears down on her luck as she rewards Pearl's kindness to her (she ignored a filched donut) with cinema tickets. This BFF motif makes the rest of the action in this section particularly poignant as Pearl is lured out on a moonless night to "rescue" Hattie. In reality, Hattie literally stabs her in the back as part of a deal to make Hattie a starlet. Bloch's intention is to imprison Pearl to discover the vulnerabilities of the American strain. She escapes with the help of her paramour, Henry, who lets her feed on him. As the issue closes, Henry expresses a wish to join Pearl in her battle (he is ex USMC), and stay with her through thick and thin.
One Drop of Blood
Devil in the Sand
The second story arc (issues #6–9) follows the chief of police, a man named Cashel McCogan, of Las Vegas in 1936. Taking the name Jim Smoke, Skinner Sweet has set himself up as one of the infant city of Las Vegas' up and coming mobsters. He owns a bordello that McCogan and the FBI interrogate him in while on the hunt for who (or what) has been killing local business men.
Ghost War
The third story arc takes place in the 1940s, during World War II. (There is also a mini-series featuring Felicia Book that takes place during this era). Under the orders of The Vassals of the Morning Star, Henry joins a mission to investigate a vampire threat in the Pacific, with an appearance from Skinner.
The Beast in the Cave
Occurs back in the 19th century before Skinner was a criminal and Book became a lawman.
Skinner Sweet and Jim Book are revealed to be adolescent friends living on the Book family farm. Skinner's family has recently been murdered and their livelihood a mint farm has been burned to the ground. The boys develop a friendship and Book recognizes that there's no one Book feels safer with than Skinner. There's an allusion to the Yankee forces having burned down Skinner's ancestral farm, While the two boys are playing the find a rattle snake burrow and Skinner pulls the snake out bare handed. Later, Young James book returns to the snake's burrow and sets it ablaze. Later, in 1871, Skinner and Book are "Indian fighters" in the US Military, and are part of an attack on a group of Apaches.
The Apaches have come to this particular place because their leader is searching for Mimiteh, goddess of death. The leader is the scar-faced Apache, Hole in the Sky, who believes that Mimiteh is the key to annihilating the white man and returning the plains to the Apache's hands.
Corporal Skinner Sweet believes that the Apache are preparing an ambush, when he and Corporal Book capture a young Apache and Skinner slices off his ears for information, his worries are ambiguously confirmed. Back at the cave Hole in the sky finds Mimiteh. When Hole in the Sky begs Mimiteh to attack the white man she is revealed to be the original American Vampire.
Mimteh tries to reason with Hole in the Sky by telling him how she became a vampire. She tells him about how her French husband Ettienne sold her to two European travelers, whom she leads through the Northern wilderness like Sacajawea. She finds them slaughtering a bear, revealing themselves as vampires. They chase her down and maul her badly. However the Lewis and Clark vampires were unaware that two hunters were tracking them, and right after Mimiteh was bled dry the hunters slaughtered the vampires. Mimiteh survives because of her immunity to wood and her ability to feed on sunlight as an American bred Nosferatu, and she rises and travels home, but Ettienne is long gone so she returns to her tribe.
Mimiteh is overcome by vampiric hunger upon arrival, and slaughters every man, woman, and child in the tribe. Feeling remorse she seals herself into the mountain cave. Unfortunately Hole in the sky ignores Mimiteh's story and attacks her with a hatchet and consumes her blood.
Back at the camp Skinner recognizes the danger and attempts to track down the Apache on his own, planning to catch them off-guard. He ignites the brush around the camp in the hopes of burning them to death. The next morning Lieutenant Hawley finds Skinner missing and takes Book into custody. He charges Book with desertion and demands to know Skinner's' whereabouts. Eventually Book finds himself facing a firing squad, while Hole in the Sky has returned to face his troops and show them his transformation into a powerful, horrific beast. He rallies the troops and they prepare to attack but right before they do Mimiteh returns and attacks.
Right before Hawley can carry out Book's execution Skinner arrives, guns drawn. Skinner walks over confidently and reminds Hawley's men of the danger of the Apache on the mountain. The men hesitate and when they do Hawley draws on Skinner but Skinner is a faster shot. When asked why he's murdered the Lieutenant, Skinner replies that he's promoted himself while sucking on a peppermint stick. Skinner leaves Book tied to a tree after informing Book of his plan turn the natives, men, women, and children, alive.
Mimiteh blames the Apache for interrupting her solitude and attacks them. When Skinner arrives the Apache have been slaughtered. Book finally breaks free and catches up with Skinner, expecting to find his friend killing Apaches, but finds Skinner by bodies that have been butchered and not burned. When Book admits that Skinner was right about the number of Apaches waiting ambush Skinner implies he had been guessing all along.
Death Race
A short arc set in the 1950s that focuses on a young vampire hunter named Travis Kidd. Travis has been tracking a group of vampires, including Skinner, to the suburbs where he believes they have been holing up.
Publication history
This series publication began on March 17, 2010.[8][9] with the release of American Vampire #1. This is the first comic which features original Stephen King scripting who was contracted to the initial five issues.
Issues
First Cycle
Issue | Date | Arc | Story | Art | Color | Cover |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | March 17, 2010 | Big Break | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Jim Lee (variant) |
Bad Blood | Stephen King | |||||
#2 | April 21, 2010 | Morning Star | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque
Bernie Wrightson & Dave McCaig (variant) | ||
Deep Water | Stephen King | |||||
#3 | May 19, 2010 | Rough Cut | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque
Andy Kubert & Brad Anderson (variant) | ||
Blood Vengeance | Stephen King | |||||
#4 | June 23, 2010 | Double Exposure | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque
J.H. Williams III (variant) | ||
One Drop of Blood | Stephen King | |||||
#5 | July 28, 2010 | Curtain Call | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque
Paul Pope (variant) | ||
If Thy Right Hand Offend Thee, Cut It Off | Stephen King | |||||
#6 | September 9, 2010 | The Devil in the Sand | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Rafael Grampá (variant) |
#7 | October 6, 2010 | Rafael Albuquerque | ||||
#8 | November 10, 2010 | |||||
#9 | December 2, 2010 | Rafael Albuquerque
Mateus Santolouco | ||||
#10 | December 22, 2010 | The Way Out | Scott Snyder | Mateus Santolouco | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#11 | January 26, 2011 | |||||
#12 | February 23, 2011 | Strange Frontier | Scott Snyder | Danijel Zezelj | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#13 | March 30, 2011 | Ghost War | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Sean Gordon Murphy (variant) |
#14 | April 27, 2011 | Rafael Albuquerque | ||||
#15 | May 25, 2011 | |||||
#16 | June 29, 2011 | |||||
#17 | July 27, 2011 | |||||
#18 | August 24, 2011 | |||||
#19 | September 28, 2011 | The Beast in the Cave | Scott Snyder | Jordi Bernet | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#20 | November 2, 2011 | |||||
#21 | December 14, 2011 | |||||
#22 | December 28, 2011 | Death Race | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#23 | January 25, 2012 | |||||
#24 | February 22, 2012 | |||||
#25 | March 28, 2012 | |||||
#26 | April 25, 2012 | The Nocturnes | Scott Snyder | Roger Cruz | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#27 | May 30, 2012 | Riccardo Burchielli | ||||
#28 | June 27, 2012 | The Blacklist | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Greg Capullo & Fco Plascencia (variant) |
#29 | July 25, 2012 | Rafael Albuquerque
Dave Johnson (variant) | ||||
#30 | August 29, 2012 | Rafael Albuquerque
Francesco Francavilla (variant) | ||||
#31 | September 26, 2012 | Rafael Albuquerque
Jock (variant) | ||||
#32 | October 31, 2012 | Rafael Albuquerque
Dustin Nguyen (variant) | ||||
#33 | November 28, 2012 | Rafael Albuquerque | ||||
#34 | January 2, 2013 | The Gray Trader | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
Second Cycle
Issue | Date | Arc | Story | Art | Color | Cover |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | March 19, 2014 | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Jae Lee (variant) | |
#2 | April 16, 2014 | Rafael Albuquerque | ||||
#3 | May 21, 2014 | |||||
#4 | July 9, 2014 | |||||
#5 | October 1, 2014 | The Miner's Journal | Matias Bergara | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#6 | February 4, 2015 | Dark Moon | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
#7 | April 15, 2015 | |||||
#8 | July 1, 2015 | |||||
#9 | August 5, 2015 | |||||
#10 | September 30, 2015 | |||||
#11 | November 25, 2015 |
Others
Title | Issue | Date | Story | Art | Color | Cover | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
American Vampire:
Survival of the Fittest |
#1 | June 8, 2011 | Scott Snyder | Sean Murphy | Dave Stewart | Sean Murphy & Dave Stewart
Cliff Wu Chiang (variant) | |
#2 | July 13, 2011 | Sean Murphy & Dave Stewart | |||||
#3 | August 10, 2011 | ||||||
#4 | September 14, 2011 | ||||||
#5 | October 12, 2011 | ||||||
American Vampire:
Lord of Nightmares |
#1 | June 13, 2012 | Scott Snyder | Dustin Nguyen | John Kalisz | Dustin Nguyen | |
#2 | July 11, 2012 | ||||||
#3 | August 8, 2012 | ||||||
#4 | September 12, 2012 | ||||||
#5 | October 17, 2012 | ||||||
American Vampire:
The Long Road to Hell |
#1 | June 12, 2013 | Scott Snyder
Rafael Albuquerque |
Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque
Tony Moore (variant) | |
American Vampire Anthology | #1 | August 28, 2013 | The Man Comes Around, Part 1 | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque |
Lost Colony | Jason Aaron | Declan Shalvey | Jordie Bellaire | ||||
Bleeding Kansas | Rafael Albuquerque | Ivo Milazzo | |||||
Canadian Vampire | Jeff Lemire | Ray Fawkes | |||||
Greed | Becky Cloonan | Jordie Bellaire | |||||
The Producers | Francesco Francavilla | ||||||
Essence of Life | Gail Simone | Tula Lotay | |||||
Last Night | Fábio Moon
Gabriel Bá |
Dave McCaig | |||||
Portland, 1940 | Greg Rucka | J.P. Leon | |||||
The Man Comes Around, Part 2 | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | |||||
#2 | September 7, 2016 | Opening Shot | Scott Snyder | Rafael Albuquerque | Dave McCaig | Rafael Albuquerque | |
Teahouse | Joelle Jones | Cristopher Mitten | Quinton Winter | ||||
Bride | Marguerite Bennet | Mirka Andolfo | Arif Prianto | ||||
The Bleeding Nun | Clay McLeon Chapman | Richard Isanove | |||||
The Cut | Steve Orlando | Artyom Trakhanov | Veronica Gandini | ||||
Traveling Companion | Elliot Kalan | Andrea Mutti | Giulia Brusco | ||||
When The Cold Wind Blows | Shawn Aldridge | Szymon Kudranski | |||||
England’s Dreaming | Kieron Gillen | Leila del Duca | Trish Mulvihill | ||||
Devil’s Own Luck | Rafael Albuquerque | Renato Guedes | |||||
Brother’s Keeper | Scott Snyder | Afua Richardson | Antonio Fabela | ||||
Collected editions
Volume | Published | Collects | Pages | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 29, 2010 (HC)
October 5, 2011 (TPB) |
|
200 | HC: 9781401228309
TPB: 9781401229740 |
2 | May 25, 2011 (HC)
May 2, 2012 (TPB) |
|
160 | HC: 9781401230692
TPB: 9781401230708 |
3 | February 1, 2012 (HC)
September 26, 2012 (TPB) |
|
288 | HC: 9781781160251
TPB: 9781401233341 |
4 | September 26, 2012 (HC)
September 4, 2013 (TPB) |
|
208 | HC: 9781401237189
TPB: 9781401237196 |
5 | March 27, 2013 (HC)
March 26, 2014 (TPB) |
|
280 | HC: 9781401237707
TPB: 9781401237714 |
6 | March 26, 2014 (HC)
November 26, 2014 (TPB) |
|
144 | HC: 9781401247089
TPB: 9781401249298 |
7 | January 14, 2015 (HC)
November 11, 2015 (TPB) |
|
144 | HC: 9781401248826
TPB: 9781401254322 |
8 | February 17, 2016 (HC)
July 20, 2016 (TPB) |
|
144 | HC: 9781401254339
TPB: 9781401262587 |
9 | TBA (HC) |
|
TBA | HC: 9781401259655 |
Omnibus editions
Volume | Published | Collects | Pages | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | October 31, 2018 (HC) |
|
984 | HC: 9781401284831 |
Characters
- Skinner Sweet – An outlaw who lived in the Wild West. He was turned into a vampire when the blood from Percy, a vampire banker, fell into his eye during a fight while he was escaping from being hanged. After being trapped into a coffin sunken sixty-six feet under water, he escaped and hunted the vampires who tried to kill him. In 1936, Sweet has relocated to Las Vegas, where he opened a brothel, using the name Jim Smoke. Later Skinner finds himself swept up into WWII as he hunts down a threat to his possible (?) with Pearl.
- Pearl Jones – An aspiring actress in the 1920s who was ambushed by a group of vampires led by a vampire director named B.D. Bloch during one of his parties. She was left for dead at a pit in the desert, but was saved by Sweet when he dropped his blood on her eye, turning her into a vampire. She has relocated to Arrowhead, California, using the surname of her husband, Henry Preston, while she is hiding from the other vampires.
- Hattie Hargrove – Hattie is Pearl's ambitious and slightly put upon roommate in Hollywood, sharing an apartment with the main character before Pearl is murdered by vampires and transformed by Skinner Sweet.
- Henry Preston – Pearl Jones' husband, he's a jazz musician who decided to help Pearl to enact her revenge against the vampires who almost killed her. Prior to arriving in Hollywood and working as a resident guitarist at a speak easy where Pearl worked, Henry was a journeymen Guitar player. He isn't intimidated by Pearl's vampirism, but sometimes he feels some sadness by the fact that while he's getting older, Pearl isn't.
- Mr. B.D. Bloch – A European vampire masquerading as a Hollywood Mogul
- James "Jim" Book – A detective who worked for Pinkerton Agency, he hunted and arrested Skinner Sweet, who turned him into a vampire in retaliation. Before being consumed by his vampiric instincts, he extracts a promise from Abilena, she is to kill him in exchange for fathering her child that same night.
- Abilena Camillo/Book – Daughter of Felix Camillo, her mother died at birth. She is James Book's god-daughter, though she professes an unrequited love for him once she grows up. After his death, she takes his surname and together with her daughter Felicia Book hunts Skinner Sweet for an organization called The Vassals of the Morning Star.
- Felix Camillo – Father of Abilena Camillo/Book Deputy to James Book, and Grandfather of Felicia.
- Will Bunting – the Writer of bad blood and witness to the birth of Skinner Sweet as the first documented American Vampire
- Percy – Leader of a cabal of vampires taking advantage of western expansion, and the maker of Skinner Sweet.
- Finch – Human servant of Percy and the Vampire cabal and employer of James Book.
- Mimiteh – A Young Apache woman who was the first actual American vampire though her exploits were lost to history.
- Felicia Book – Fathered by James Book and his god-daughter Abilena on the night he dies. She is a member of The Vassals of the Morning Star, an organization which hunts vampires. She seems to have unique abilities due to her father's vampirism, though the extent of her abilities is yet to be seen.
- Jack Straw – Another member of the Vassals of the Morning Star, Straw was partnered with Felicia Book while investigating vampire activity in Las Vegas.
- Cashel "Cash" McCogan – As Chief of the Las Vegas Police Department, Cash became involved with Jack Straw and Felicia Book while investigating the grisly murders of several persons responsible for the construction of the Hoover Dam (then called the Boulder Dam).
- Calvin Poole – Met Henry Preston during the Ghost War story arc. Accidentally turned into a vampire after a bottle of Pearl's Blood broke and infected him.
Notes
- McMillan, Graeme (November 10, 2009). "American Vampire's Snyder Introduces Our Secret Toothy Cousins". io9. Archived from the original on 14 November 2009. Retrieved December 18, 2009.
- {{cite web |first=Scott |last=Snyder |url=https://twitter.com/Ssnyder1835/status/1142112335466827777 |publisher=Twitter |date=June 21,2019|accessdate=June 22, 2019
- "American Vampire Trailer; King and Snyder Talk Scary, Not Sparkly, Vamps". Dread Central.
- Cowsill, Alan; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "2000s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 340. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
The first five double-sized issues consisted of two stories, illustrated by Rafael Albuquerque. Scott Snyder wrote each issue's lead feature, and Stephen King wrote the back-up tales.
CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link) - Vaneta Rogers. "Scott Snyder Prepares to Go it Alone on AMERICAN VAMPIRE". NEWSarama.
- Geddes, John (October 30, 2009). "Stephen King and Scott Snyder give Vampire an evolutionary twist". USA Today. Retrieved December 18, 2009.
- "Comics: I Don't Fucking Sparkle: Interview with Scott Snyder, Creator of American Vampire". Archived from the original on 2012-10-09. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
- Phegley, Kiel (October 26, 2009). "Scott Snyder & Stephen King Launch American Vampire". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on 3 December 2009. Retrieved December 18, 2009.
- Rogers, Vaneta (October 26, 2009). "STEPHEN KING Brings an American Vampire Tale to Vertigo". Newsarama. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2009.
References
External links
- American Vampire at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)