Ulrika Magdova, heroine of Nathan Long's Vampire Trilogy, a young Kislevite noble woman, first appeared in William King’s Daemonslayer  (Games Workshop 2003), and should be familiar to all readers of the  Gotrek and Felix novels. Alive, she is brave, beautiful, and maddening,  especially for Felix. In death, she is still brave and beautiful but now  also ruthless and deadly.
The trilogy is now complete and ready for a summing up. Bloodborn (Games Workshop 2010), Bloodforged (Games Workshop 2011), and Bloodsworn (Game Workshop 2012) are together both a Bildungsroman and a Vampire tale, grounded in sword and sorcery. The Ulrika trilogy employs elements of horror, adventure, and the Bildungsroman to introduce us to a fascinating heroine.  Irrespective of the novels' vampire characters and setting or the fact they are a  Bildungsroman, a novel of education, they ultimately succeed as adventure tales set in a  horrific Gothic environment, where sword and sorcery rule the day.
The first novel, Bloodborn (Games Workshop 2010),  begins a few weeks after the events of William King’s Vampireslayer (Games Workshop 2004).  Ulrika’s abductor, Adolphus Krieger, dies at the hands of Snorri  Nosebiter, and Ulrika, a fledgling vampire, tormented by an insatiable  hunger and under the control of Gabriella, her mistress (figurative  mother), is deserted by her friends. Gotrek and Felix, knowing they  cannot help her, leave, as she struggles to come to grips with her  destiny. Long shows us her maturation from death to her bid for independence. As a newborn  (born of blood), she is, in every sense of the word, a child. At times  she is petulant, demanding, selfish, reckless, and stubborn; and,  throughout, her mistress, Gabriella, like a stern mother, has to rein  her in and instruct her to focus and be disciplined and sensible.  Ulrika and Gabriella are sent to the city of Nuln to investigate the  very public and brutal murders of several vampires. The exposure of  vampires in the midst of the city sets off panic in the streets and Long  minutely describes the city and its inhabitants’ fears as well as their  brutalities as days pass and the number of corpses increases. He also  describes the social castes of the city and the various organizations  that run it as well as the empire. Witch hunters follow the vampires and  ghouls spring from the cemeteries. Long even sends his characters into  the famous sewers of Nuln, the home of the skaven, to ferret out clues.
In Bloodforged, Long moves the action from Nuln to Praag,  Ulrika's starting point. Like a petulant teenager now, she rebels  against her Lahmian mother, Gabriella, and heads north, vowing to use  her supra-human strength to fight the creatures of the Ruinous Powers.  Her goal is to be a Vampire avenger, protecting the weaker humans, who  she feels a closer affinity to than the vampires that now control and  protect her. When she strikes out for home, she is seeking freedom,  family, and friendship. Mr. Long brilliantly captures the anger  and frustration of a young vampire (teenager), showing her virtually  tearing apart her safe home in Nuln in a youthful rage and fleeing her  sisters for her human home in Praag. Once there she makes contact with  Snorri Nosebiter and discovers that Gotrek and Felix have disappeared.  She also tracks down Max Schreiber, an ex-lover, only to discover that  he is has taken another lover. This discovery results in unnatural  paroxysm of jealousy, which demonstrates Ulrika's immaturity. "Quivers  of rage made Ulrika's arms shake, and her claws dug deep into the bark  of her branch. A growl started low in throat and she crouched forward  like a hunting cat. How dare he take another lover!" (Bloodborn p.111)
Without friends and family, Ulrika, now truly alone, takes up residence  in an abandoned and ruined bakery; however, because of her self-imposed  rule--she can only feed on villains--she finds herself hungry most of  the time. When she sees some abusive men, running a protections racket,  rob a poor blind singer she quickly acts to avenge the wrong. However,  in a scene, somewhat reminiscent of Aragorn's meeting with the Hobbits  in The Fellowship of the Ring, she is seen by another vampire, a  handsome and dashing male. This moment--this discovery by a male--acts  as the exciting point of the story's main plot lines: the life and death  struggle between the van Carstein vampires and the Lahmians, Ulrika's  inability to tell friend from foe, Ulrika's acceptance that she is a  vampire and no longer human, and Ulrika's sexual awakening.
Finally, in Bloodsworn,Ulrika has accepted her fate as a Vampire but this fact does not end her quest or her education. The world of Vampires is as nuanced as the human world and Ulrika must choose which group with whom to align. Like a troubled teenager, she has rebelled against the Lahmians, balking against their need to control her. She is torn between feelings of love and hate for her mistress, Countess Gabriella; whereas it was the von Carsteins, who initially entrapped her, turned her, and now threaten both the Empire's and the Lahmians' very existence. Her next move must be one of election: which Vampire group will she align herself. She must ask herself where she belongs in the world. Once again she is forced to evaluate the war against humans, her loyalty to her kind, and her own need for independence.
The three novels are exciting reads:  well-plotted, with fully-developed characters. Mr. Long carefully delineates the definitive movements in Ulrika's character; she  matures (very, very slowly) from a child-like creature in the first  novel to a figurative teenager in the second and to a young, somewhat erratic, independent adult in the final installment. Throughout, however, the novels remain true to their sword and sorcery roots: they are rollicking adventure tales that roll along  a fair clip like Saturday morning serials, never really pausing to examine the psychological  manifestations that occur simultaneously with the full-throttle action  of their full-bodied (and charismatic) protagonist.
Mr.  Long is the master of what  he calls sabrepunk; that is, an adventure tale similar to those  written by Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, Alexander Dumas, and Raphael  Sabatini. To quote Mr. Long's own definition: "Sabrepunk is  swashbuckling, street-wise sword and sorcery that draws from low  fantasy, hard-boiled pulp, cloak-and-dagger thrillers, and old-fashioned  romantic adventure. It is visceral and immediate. It is crude and sly.  It is red and black and break-neck. The doings of sorcerers and kings  may spark the action, but rarely are they the story themselves. Instead,  the tales are of hard men and dangerous women whose lives are mauled by  the whims of the powerful, and who must therefore draw swords and fight  in order to survive. There are heroes here, but no saints."
Ulrika is definitely one of those heroes. And, although the trilogy is complete, I cannot believe Ulrika is finished. At the end of Bloodsworn, Ulrika is a powerful warrior but that cannot be the end of her education. I can imagine a series of novels where Ulrika grows, matures, and rises through the ranks to become not only a powerful soldier but also a wise and cunning leader.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
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