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Vampires still fascinate viewers and media...

"He was a tall, cadaverous old man with white hair and eyebrows so bushy they almost created a unibrow. His fingers and ears formed points; his palms were hairy. The breath, rank.
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Stoker's "Dracula" wasn't the first book about vampires — John Polidori's "The Vampyre" from 1819 is given the credit for that — yet Stoker's book remains the definitive vampire novel even as hundreds of similar books continue to be released. The hunger for vampire stories is so intense today that these new books are quickly spawning film and television adaptations.
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With each visual interpretation, the face of the vampire is changing. No longer does he look like evil incarnated, but instead can take on the form of the good-looking guy down the block.
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"Moonlight": This 2008 CBS series starred Alex O'Loughlin as the detective vampire with pouches of blood in the fridge who loved a pretty mortal (Sophia Myles). It lasted only a season, but has a nice cult following..."
Vampires uncloaked, from ‘Nosferatu’ to ‘Twilight’, by Toni Ruberto - October 10, 2009 - The Buffalo News
Categories: Moonlight, Entertainment
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