Werewolf stories, it turns out, shouldn’t hunt in packs.There’s no surprise since it’s pretty clear that one of the characters is a shapeshifter and it’s pretty obvious which one.Six, or maybe seven, of the eight stories concern werewolves while one outlier has a vampire menace.Some of the stories in the book are clever, but most follow the same trajectory: attacks are made, the villagers suspect something, one of them turns out to be a werewolf.Time for the next story.I noticed a long time ago that unlike vampires and Frankenstein’s monster, the werewolf doesn’t have the definitive novelistic origin.Others wrote vampire tales before Bram Stoker’s Dracula, but that telling set the stage for those that followed.The olive green cover suggests Barnabas Collins, but in reality is more in Quentin’s territory.
Interestingly, The Dark Dominion, like occasional collections before and after, doesn’t list an editor.Modern books use the stature of volume editors to reinforce that what’s contained within has quality.Otherwise who knows whether someone with good taste has picked the stories by authors you’ve never heard of and wrapped them together in a package meant to move?That’s not to say that some of the stories aren’t good.A couple are quite clever.One is a translation of a medieval German tract.Another comes from medieval Ireland.The remainder are stories from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.Perhaps it’s the burden of an editor to wonder what the selection criteria might have been.What’s entirely obvious, however, is that making something look similar to a recognized book series still has the power to sell.