Friday, January 25, 2008

Legend vs. Legend

After reading “I Am Legend”, I have noted many differences between the vampires in this book and the vampires of “Dracula”. Besides the obvious distinction of the transformation which I have already discussed as it is what makes “I Am Legend” controversial as to if it is a vampire story, there are other prominent differences as well.

The strengths of the vampires are slightly different. Dracula is very powerful; he is strong, can transform into various animals, etc. The vampires in “I Am Legend” have considerable physical strength, but that seems to be their only real advantage when hunting. Also, their strength doesn’t come from the bacteria as much as their minds telling them that as a vampire they are supposed to be strong.

Both vampires have more or less the same weaknesses. Dracula and the infected cannot stand garlic, crosses, mirrors, daylight, and the like. However, they suffer when faced with these objects for different reasons. Dracula can’t tolerate these objects because he is a supernatural being with certain limits. The infected of “I Am Legend” fear these objects (for the most part) from a psychological standpoint. They believe that they are vampires like Dracula and they will die if they come into contact with garlic or a cross.

There is an odd situation concerning the personalities of the vampires and their desire for blood. Dracula, as we know, is a cruel bloodthirsty monster willing to do whatever it takes to feed. The infected that are dead are the same way. However, the living infected are not in any way similar in personality to these two examples. They are able to live with the virus and they don’t need blood because they realize that they aren’t truly vampires in the sense that Dracula is.

Both vampires are killed in the same way as well. Dracula-type vampires can be killed with a stake through the heart or other very serious injury. The vampires in “I Am Legend” can be killed in this way, but Neville gives a scientific reason for why it works. The bacteria in the host can live with or without air. When they live without air, as it normally does, it causes the vampire-like behavior in the host. On the other hand when it lives with air, as it has to when a deep cut is made, it becomes parasitic and “it eats the host” (134).

I thought that “I Am Legend” was a very good book. The movie twisted most of the story, but it was also acceptable for entertainment purposes. It wasn’t quite the best pick for vampire information, but it was good to see a 1950’s view of vampires. For them, vampires were still scary, still a force to be reckoned with. I cannot wait to see what differences may lie in Anne Rice’s “Interview with the Vampire”.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Legendary Characteristics...or are they?


The personalities of the vampires that Neville originally knew can be compared to those of Stoker’s Dracula. These vampires are obsessed with blood. Every night, they try to coax Neville out of his house so they can feed. The female vampires make obscene sexual gestures to try to tempt him, like the female vampires in Stoker’s novel. However, there is more to the vampire infections than at first met the eye.

Unknown to Neville, there were many people who were infected with the virus, but did not show signs of the vampire infection. This is similar to when someone is a carrier of a genetic disease: the person has a gene for it, but they only show certain, less threatening, signs of the illness. Neville has been killing these people while they were asleep without knowing about this information. Many of these people have flocked together to start society again. They live their lives as they would have without the bacteria. This is completely different from the vampires of Dracula. These semi-vampires are able to live out life like they were really living, compared to Dracula whose life was consumed by what he had become.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Bacillus Vampiris


The cause of vampirism in this book is drastically different than that of other vampire books that I have read. In “I am Legend”, vampires are created when humans are infected with bacteria. Neville manages to train himself in the uses of microscopes and other scientific instruments. When he discovers that there really are bacteria in vampire blood, the dubs the bacteria bacillus vampiris.

Neville conducts experiments in order to try to understand the nature of this bacteria and how it works. He learns that when “conditions became unfavorable for life” (76), bacilli can create spores from themselves. These spores are possibly carried, by some means, to where the bacteria can thrive again. Then the spores become like the original bacteria. With this information, Neville realizes that the dust storms that frequently occurred must have been how vampirism spread so quickly. The dust storms must have carried the spores from the comatose vampires and infected other people.

As stated earlier, this method is completely unlike that of most other novels. Other novels, generally, have a vampire transformation when a human is bitten by a vampire. This process is what makes this book more science-fiction than fantasy and creates the thought, especially with the release of the movie, that this cannot possibly be a book about vampires.

Friday, January 4, 2008

The Infected


It may seem that the book is more about a virus than it is about vampires; however, I believe this interpretation stems from the recent film adaptation of the novel. While Neville does study the bacteria (not a virus…there’s a difference), he goes out during the day and kills infected people before they kill him. Considering that Neville treats the infected people as if they were vampires and not people suffering from a disease, I see no reason why this book cannot be used for my topic.

The people infected with the vampire bacteria exhibit symptoms similar to the vampires in Dracula. They show the same weaknesses: daylight, garlic, mirrors, crosses. Neville tries to make sense out of the symptoms and how they can all be related to the bacteria, but finds he has difficulty with some of them. He finds that the crosses are psychological and that, when held up to a vampire that was Jewish, it sometimes has no effect. However, when the same vampire is faced with a torah, they will have an adverse reaction. As time goes on, Neville discovers that many of the vampires’ weaknesses were derived from the mass panic that occurred as the virus spread. There was religious hysteria as people flocked to churches in order to try to save themselves from what appeared to be impending doom. The method in which he kills these people is like that of Dracula, with a stake through the heart. Every night, vampires come in droves to Neville’s home to try to coax him out for his blood.


The vampires portrayed in the novel are different from the movie counterparts. These vampires can speak and appear to retain memories from when they were human. One of the vampires that frequents Neville’s house constantly calls him by name because they were friends when he was human. I feel that there is more to what has happened than Neville knows about. There is something important that he doesn’t know (different from the movie!)