Incredibly fascinating and an obvious labor of love for Giselle Liza Anatol, The Things That Fly in the Night is a survey of a vampiric heritage that more people need to know about!
My research field is firmly entrenched in the early 19th century Brits, which means my technical knowledge of the African diaspora is sketchy at best, and my familiarity with Caribbean folklore is largely non-existent. It wasn't until after watching one of Dr. Anatol's lectures on Youtube that I even had an inkling that there might be a Caribbean vampire, much less that she would be such a rich character with so many permutations and adaptations across the centuries.
By nature of the research beast, I was more intrigued by the early chapters of Things That Fly, because of the implications these 19th century versions of the soucouyant myth might have on my own work somewhere down the line, but Anatol's survey moves right up to present day genre-fiction and this long, largely ignored, history of black female vampires being used as literary embodiments of freedom, cruelty, strength, independence, maternity, Otherness, and a whole host of descriptors.
Beautifully and comprehensibly written, Things That Fly will be excellent for researchers curious about Caribbean folklore and the soucouyant figure, but is also approachable for lovers and writers of genre fiction who might be looking to expand the kinds of characters they're looking to write. I mean, skinless, burning, flying vampires? What on earth could be cooler than that?