image of person or book cover 9015091583692652521.jpg
Image courtesy of publisher's website.
y separately published work icon Saltwater Vampires single work   novel   young adult  
Issue Details: First known date: 2010... 2010 Saltwater Vampires
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'For Jamie Mackie, summer holidays in the coastal town of Rocky Head mean surfing, making money, and good times at the local music festival. But this year, vampires are on the festival's line-up ... fulfilling a pact made on the wreck of the Batavia, four hundred years ago. If their plans succeed, nobody in Rocky Head will survive to see out the new year.' (From the publisher's website.)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Camberwell, Camberwell - Kew area, Melbourne - Inner South, Melbourne, Victoria,: Penguin , 2010 .
      image of person or book cover 9015091583692652521.jpg
      Image courtesy of publisher's website.
      Extent: 362p.
      Note/s:
      • Published August 30th 2010
      ISBN: 9780143011460 (pbk.)
    • c
      Australia,
      c
      :
      Little Wins Press ,
      2021 .
      image of person or book cover 7646285071558788121.jpg
      Image courtesy of publisher's website.
      Extent: 360p.p.
      Note/s:
      • Published 5 May 2021.
      ISBN: 9780645151404, 0645151408

Works about this Work

'In Need of Vitamin Sea': The Emergence of Australian Identity through the Eyes and Thirst of Kirsty Eager’s [Eagar’s] Vampires Phil Fitzsimmons , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Global Vampire : Essays on the Undead in Popular Culture Around the World 2019; (p. 177-186)
This essay seeks to unpack the nature and associated symbolic meanings of the vampires in Kirsty Eager's Saltwater Vampires (2010). Eager's text still remains a bestselling text for young adults in Australia, roughly corresponding to a time period in which it became increasingly clear that this country's meta-narrative was itself in a state of flux. As a vampire narrative its emphasis is naturally linked to "the symbolics of blood" is already located in a "liminal position" (Stephanou 2014, 5). However, this Young Adult fiction is even more so in that it also lies between several intersecting urtexts related to the Australian context and its underpinning history. In particular Eager has used the destruction of the Dutch East India trading vessel the Batavia, which ran aground off the coast of Western Australia on the fourth of June 1629 as an entree and mimetic foundation for her vampire narrative. As is often the case with historical narratives, and in particular vampire accounts, an initial destructive event then "fans forward, ... to become different moments of the one process of sensing" (Taussig 1992, 21). To further elaborate on this process and the context of this essay, "the connection between humans and vampires—whether constructed within fantasy, fiction, fandom or real-life emulation—is a symbiotic one, and one which is sustained by the umbilical cord of memory" (Bacon and Bronk 2013, 2). Wherever blood and memory are comingled in text, understanding the context is an imperative (Gilders, 2004). Therefore, as summarized in ensuing sections, in the Australian socio-historical and literary contexts the linking thread of actuality and memory is "the imperative of blood" (Brisbane 2009,400), of which the Batavia disaster is the first recorded instance.' (Introduction)
 
[Review] Saltwater Vampires David Murphy , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Reading Time : The Journal of the Children's Book Council of Australia , November vol. 54 no. 4 2010; (p. 41)

— Review of Saltwater Vampires Kirsty Eagar , 2010 single work novel
[Review] Saltwater Vampires Graeme Smith , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Fiction Focus : New Titles for Teenagers , vol. 24 no. 4 2010; (p. 46)

— Review of Saltwater Vampires Kirsty Eagar , 2010 single work novel
[Review] Saltwater Vampires Graeme Smith , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Fiction Focus : New Titles for Teenagers , vol. 24 no. 4 2010; (p. 46)

— Review of Saltwater Vampires Kirsty Eagar , 2010 single work novel
[Review] Saltwater Vampires David Murphy , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Reading Time : The Journal of the Children's Book Council of Australia , November vol. 54 no. 4 2010; (p. 41)

— Review of Saltwater Vampires Kirsty Eagar , 2010 single work novel
'In Need of Vitamin Sea': The Emergence of Australian Identity through the Eyes and Thirst of Kirsty Eager’s [Eagar’s] Vampires Phil Fitzsimmons , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Global Vampire : Essays on the Undead in Popular Culture Around the World 2019; (p. 177-186)
This essay seeks to unpack the nature and associated symbolic meanings of the vampires in Kirsty Eager's Saltwater Vampires (2010). Eager's text still remains a bestselling text for young adults in Australia, roughly corresponding to a time period in which it became increasingly clear that this country's meta-narrative was itself in a state of flux. As a vampire narrative its emphasis is naturally linked to "the symbolics of blood" is already located in a "liminal position" (Stephanou 2014, 5). However, this Young Adult fiction is even more so in that it also lies between several intersecting urtexts related to the Australian context and its underpinning history. In particular Eager has used the destruction of the Dutch East India trading vessel the Batavia, which ran aground off the coast of Western Australia on the fourth of June 1629 as an entree and mimetic foundation for her vampire narrative. As is often the case with historical narratives, and in particular vampire accounts, an initial destructive event then "fans forward, ... to become different moments of the one process of sensing" (Taussig 1992, 21). To further elaborate on this process and the context of this essay, "the connection between humans and vampires—whether constructed within fantasy, fiction, fandom or real-life emulation—is a symbiotic one, and one which is sustained by the umbilical cord of memory" (Bacon and Bronk 2013, 2). Wherever blood and memory are comingled in text, understanding the context is an imperative (Gilders, 2004). Therefore, as summarized in ensuing sections, in the Australian socio-historical and literary contexts the linking thread of actuality and memory is "the imperative of blood" (Brisbane 2009,400), of which the Batavia disaster is the first recorded instance.' (Introduction)
 
Last amended 12 Sep 2022 13:32:10
X