PeterZ wrote:Randomiser wrote:To cut FriarBob and all the rest of us who missed it some slack, it really is one of those things which are blindingly obvious
in retrospect and with the right information, but not necessarily so beforehand. I recognised Fred Saberhagen as being a prolific older sf/fantasy writer, but had only ever read some Berserker stories and maybe seen the swords books somewhere, but I had no idea he had ever written Dracula stories. Like FB I always assume that dedications just reflect the author's personal relationships and don't pay them much attention.
FriarBob wrote:
True. It is probably only 'obvious' in retrospect. And I suppose I was guilty of a minor exaggeration... it's more like I don't do more than glance at the dedication....
Because this is Weber. If his nickname wasn't mad wizard it would be sneaky somethingoranother. When he's not dedicating something to Sharon or his kids, we should know there's a reason.
Oops.
I never read the short story, but knew about it before I read the book. The forward sort of confirmed how the book was going to go. Btw, I loved Saberhagen's Dracula series.
So did I, and Fred became a friend I was honored to know. If I could kill two birds with one stone in the dedication, so much the better, but the truth is that his Vlad inspired
my Vlad, although I think I've taken the concept in a rather . . . different direction. He's certainly a different
person, at any rate, and I think some of the people who were so pissed off about vampires in the first books are going to be thinking about things rather differently now that Chris and I have finally gotten Book 2 finished.
As I think I've explained elsewhere, the original short story was intended as a "one off" and its vampires were vampires in the classic sense, but more on Fred's model. When I did the novel, I realized there were going to be . . . compatibility issues, shall we say?
So I sat back and reconsidered what my "vampires" really were and came to a rather different conclusion.
And, yes, the fact that I invoked Fred's name in the introduction
was intended as a signal that this wasn't going to be what it might look like on the surface.