The Night Eternal Explained

The Night Eternal
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Horror novel
Publisher:William Morrow and Company
Pub Date:October 25, 2011
Media Type:Print, audio
Pages:371
Isbn:0061558273
Preceded By:The Fall

The Night Eternal is a 2011 vampire horror novel by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan. It is the final novel in The Strain Trilogy beginning with The Strain and continuing with The Fall.

Plot

Two years have passed since the vampires, led by the Master, used atomic weapons to create a nuclear winter, which blocked the sun and allowed the vampires to move freely, except for a few hours a day. The vampires restructured society as a police state. The strongest and the most influential humans were exterminated and those who were spared were made slaves. The weak were forced into camps to harvest their blood.

A few survivors manage to resist the vampire occupation. Epidemiologist Dr Ephraim Goodweather grows distant from his friends. The Master, occupying the body of rock star Gabriel Bolivar, adopted Goodweather's son Zach as his protégé and is grooming the boy to be his next host body. Goodweather's lover, Dr Nora Martinez, left him for exterminator Vasiliy Fet. Following the death of his friend Abraham Setrakian, Fet struggles to decipher the Occido Lumen, a tome holding the key to defeating the Master. He is aided by Mr Quinlan, the vengeful half-vampire who was created when the Master infected his then-pregnant human mother.

Flashbacks to biblical times reveal the origins of the vampire race. The seven Ancients, including the Master, arose from Ozryel - the archangel of death. Ozryel was one of the three angels that God sent to destroy the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah for their wickedness. Ozryel was overpowered by blood lust while he destroyed the cities, being particularly enthralled by blood itself. When committing other atrocities necessary for cleansing the world he had not actually glimpsed blood before destroying these cities. Soon after, he betrayed and attacked Michael to drink his fellow archangel's blood. Appalled by Ozryel's actions, God punished him by having the other archangels cut his body into seven pieces and scattering them across the Earth. Over time, Ozryel's blood leaked from the burial sites and became sentient, spawning the Ancient Ones. The Master was the last to spawn, from Ozryel's throat.

Goodweather deciphers the Occido Lumen and determines that the Master originated on one of the Thousand Islands located in the St Lawrence River. The survivors detonate a nuclear weapon on the island, killing Goodweather, Zach, Mr Quinlan, and the Master. After the explosion, Nora and Vasily witness a reunion of the purified Ozryel with Gabriel and Michael, who had come to take Ozryel back to Heaven. The return was only made possible by Mr Quinlan, who brought the Ancients' ashes with him after following the instructions he read in the Lumen. After the Master's death, the remaining vampires disintegrate and the surviving humans are able to rebuild society.

Reception

Stephen King wrote: "Although there is a certain amount of dispensable hugger-mugger about vampires in Rome and archangels located in Sodom, the main attractions here is the resistance fighters' fierce dedication to their cause. Heroes of tragic dimension are rare in popular fiction, but Goodweather fills the void perfectly. [...] The action is non-stop and the fantasy element is anchored in enough satisfying detail to make it believable. [... ] There's something about seeing vampires massing for an attack in a Wendy's parking lot, an act making them more real."[1] The San Francisco Chronicles Alan Cheuse wrote: "The novel comes to us in a weird, loose style in which multiple view points proliferate, constantly shifting and re-forming the story, resembling nothing less than montage of fear-making moments that we love to hate."[2]

Adaptations

Comic books

Writer David Lapham and artist Mike Huddleston[3] adapted the novel into an 11-issue story arc for the eponymous comic-book series from Dark Horse Comics.[4]

IssueRelease DateTrade Paperback CollectionHardcover Collection
1August 20, 2014The Strain — Volume 5:
The Night Eternal
May 6, 2015
The Strain—Book Three
The Night Eternal
May 25, 2016
2September 17, 2014
3October 15, 2014
4November 19, 2014
5January 21, 2015
6February 18, 2015
7March 18, 2015The Strain — Volume 6:
The Night Eternal
December 2, 2015
8April 15, 2015
9May 20, 2015
10June 17, 2015
11July 15, 2015
12August 19, 2015

Television series

See main article: The Strain (TV series). Executive producer and showrunner Carlton Cuse adapted the novel into the 10-episode third and fourth season of the eponymous television series from FX.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Toro. Guillermo Del. Hogan. Chuck. The Night Eternal. Harper. English. 26 June 2012. 978-0061558276 .
  2. Web site: Cheuse. Alan. Alan Cheuse. 'The Night Eternal,' by Del Toro and Hogan: review. SFGate. 22 January 2013. 5 November 2011.
  3. Web site: Comic-Con 2011: Guillermo del Toro, Tom Morello, P.C. Cast Doing Dark Horse Comics This Fall. 21 July 2011 . Hollywood Reporter. 19 February 2013.
  4. Web site: New Dark Horse Comics by Guillermo del Toro, Tom Morello, P.C. Cast Comic-Con . Comics Alliance . 19 February 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111105180119/http://www.comicsalliance.com/2011/07/21/dark-horse-del-toro-morello-cast-comic-con/ . 5 November 2011 .