I played Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D) for years, Dungeon Mastered a long running campaign, and read quite a few novels in the various campaign settings. I never played Ravenloft, the game’s gothic horror/dark fantasy setting, and only the last few years even read any of the novels (all of which I have enjoyed). I had certainly heard of the ruler of Barovia in the lands overall called Ravenloft, Strahd Von Zarovich, the most famous vampire in AD&D and indeed one of the most famous named individual monsters as well. The adventure module set in his castle (also called Ravenloft) was infamous, rumored to be extremely difficult to even survive let alone win, and in my mind I had elevated Strahd to the level of Dracula as far as Big Bads in gothic horror and one of the most famous vampires in fiction.
As a Halloween read I picked this book, an autobiography of Strahd, framed by an opening chapter and an epilogue from the point of view of the setting’s main hero and especially vampire hunter, Dr. Rudolph Van Richten, having found and read Strahd’s journal while exploring Ravenloft during the day.
Maybe I didn’t know what to expect but it wasn’t this. It’s an autobiography of Strahd, starting well before he becomes a vampire, showing him as a warrior, how he comes into possession of Castle Ravenloft, details his friends and families before becoming a vampire. That I expected. One of the few personal details about Strahd I knew of was his pining for his lost love, the human woman Tatyana, and she certainly figures into the story. What I didn’t expect was how much the book humanized Strahd. You read about Strahd actually showing loyalty to those loyal to them when he was human; not being friends or visiting them to socialize, but not bringing harm to them and even kind of watching over them. You read how he continued to rule Barovia without being seen directly, and while tough, he was fair and not actually a bad ruler minus the occasional missing peasant (certainly a good ruler for the setting). He has power over bats and wolves, and multiple times shows them genuine affection. He even shows real care for his horses and when he has to make use of an unwitting human pawn, frequently let them live and go about their business. He even said something out loud funny at one point in the book, a passage intended to be humorous.
With its frequent use of magic spells, symbols, spellbooks, and magic items, it is definitely dark fantasy, not pure horror, and with magical battles definitely reminds the reader this is an AD&D story. I liked one battle especially that showed the power of holy symbols.
The story is both episodic, skipping large stretches of time after he becomes a vampire, but also, not, as central themes revisited are dealing with disloyalty to Strahd by those who betrayed him and murdered those in his service and among his family and Tatyana is a central thread too till the end.
Writing was decent, almost verging on YA but never bad. I do think two of the characters, most notably Strahd’s brother Sergei, could be a little one-dimensional and it was hard to differentiate between the various warriors in Strahd’s employ early in the book. Him becoming a vampire is surprisingly quick and vague. For all the lore that Strahd is incredibly evil, he really didn’t do a lot of evil in the book, as pretty much if you suffered in the book you were either with the murderers, got in the way of him and Tatyana, or were coming to kill Strahd because he was a vampire. I can’t say I blame Strahd for any of that. What we got was less “Strahd the Monster” and more “Strahd the Tragic Figure” which in the end, yeah, I guess perfect for a gothic setting.