Dracula with a suit n' tie job in accounts. Lestat with a nightshift gig at an auditing firm, Edward Cullen cooking the books for a handful of small businesses. How could you not want to read a book about a vampire accountant?
Drew Hayes deserves an Oscar, a nebula or some other award for both the title of this book- The Utterly Uninteresting and Unadventurous Tales of Fred, the Vampire Accountant - and for the concept that underpins it.
I come from a long line of accountants and the idea of one of my mild-mannered pencil-pusher ancestors actually being a bloodsucking prince of the night really brought the lols for me.
Protagonist Frederick Frankford Fletcher is a nerd. A geek. The last person to be picked for sports teams. A cardigan and loafer wearing accountant with few friends and a very, very boring life.
Then one night he wakes up dead, under a dumpster, and discovers he is no longer human- he is nosferatu, a drinker of blood, a creature of the darkness – he is vampyr. He is faster, stronger, possessed of keener senses and allergies to silver and the sun. He is an apex predator whose prey is everyone around him.
So, with his new immortality and predatory hungers he… goes home and continues his life as an accountant, working from a home office in his loafers and cardigan, doing dodgy accounts work for a local hospital in exchange for a supply of donated blood, and keeping out of the sun.
He isn’t tortured, or riven by existential questions, or by the fact that he now needs blood to survive. On the contrary, he’s pleased that he’ll now live long enough to see how his investments will pan out.
I loved this idea. It’s the perfect antidote to the Ann Rice model of tortured, sexy vampires that has spread across both books and movies, a model that Fred is very aware of not living up to (and one that the story references for humour value).
Hayes uses this concept pretty well, sending Fred to his high school reunion, where his old bullies are unaware that he is now of the immortal undead, and on a series of adventures through an underworld of vampires, magic and fey beings that exists alongside our own. Fred of course, grows both as a person, and as an undead predator, in ways both satisfying and amusing.
This is a light hearted, fun story, one that breezes by while you’re reading it- the sort of tasty reading snack that is perfect between heavier or longer books, almost a palate cleanser of a novel.
The story feels a little episodic at times, with unnecessary recaps at the beginnings of some of the chapters that made me wonder whether it was originally serialised on a blog or in a magazine, but it’s otherwise a fun and diverting story - just the trick if you’ve been mired in heavier reads.
Three and a half fresh blood bags out of five.