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Books about goddesses, books about vampires, and books about film stars are common, but
Vamps: An Illustrated History of the Femme Fatale is a rare treat: it combines all those topics and more within a historical context for understanding our long-time fascination with the dangerous, alluring female. The story starts in prehistory with the worship of a mother goddess who was also the Lady of the Beasts, and spans the centuries from ancient Greek and medieval views of harmful women through the hysterics of the romantic period. The history of film vamps goes from Theda Bara in
A Fool There Was (1915) to Natasha Henstridge in the Species movies (1990s), and includes beautiful photographs of all the usual suspects--Greta Garbo, Gloria Swanson, Tallulah Bankhead, Louise Brooks, Maila Nurmi (a.k.a. Vampira), the two Morticias, and many others.
A coffee-table-size paperback, Vamps is also an eye-catching blend of well-researched (but lighthearted) writing and dramatic black-and-white illustrations on every page. Author Pam Keesey is already known for her knowledge of dark female characters, having edited other Cleis publications such as Women Who Run with the Werewolves: Tales of Blood, Lust and Metamorphosis and Dark Angels: Lesbian Vampire Stories. She draws on an impressive range of sources, including The Malleus Maleficarum, Robert Graves's The White Goddess, 1950s fetish magazines, and even Pat Robertson on the subject of feminism. The artwork samples ancient stone carvings, medieval engravings, and portraits of dangerous women by John Singer Sargeant and Edvard Munch, among others. Included are a bibliography, a filmography of stars, a videography of titles, and an index.
The only thing that seems off-base about this book is that a whole chapter is devoted to Sharon Stone. Maybe Keesey is a big fan. --Fiona Webster
Keesey's lavishly illustrated survey of screen sirens and bad girls traces "the image of the fatal woman, both sacred and profane." It provides historical context to make the case that the archetype of the femme fatale is the ancient goddess, "the ultimate expression of women's ancient power," which "was and is a sexual power." Keesey asserts that the femme fatale blossomed in the nineteenth-century vampire craze before becoming manifest in the screen "vamp." Whatever. The book is as concerned with pop-culture bad girls in general and what has made them irresistible. Keesey weaves legend and folklore into the fabric of her portrait of the vamp in pop culture in fine style. Both the feminists and the "goths" (who try to look like something out of a vampire flick) among film fans will find this resource to their liking.
Mike Tribby