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Tell Me All The Werewolf Tropes

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So I wrote a short story this summer and somehow one of my main characters turned into a werewolf. Super weird.

I saw "The Howling" at too young of an age and was (I thought) scarred for life. But then...

I've been doing my own reading and research, but I want to know what everyone's favorite and least favorite werewolf facts are. What's alluring, what's gross, what's too weird to be believable?


So far in my world:
He's pretty terrifying in werewolf form, not just an absurdly large, yet cuddly wolf (i.e. Twilight)
It's genetic
It doesn't have to be a full moon

Aconite (wolfsbane) is not appealing at all. (I'm also going full plant geek here.)


So tell me all your best werewolf facts, have fun with it.

Thanks!
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In some cultures, being a werewolf in life led to being a vampire after death (kind of an odd inversion of the vampires vs. werewolves conflict that is a trope unto itself)

The whole silver thing is a literary, or maybe even Hollywood, creation. Folkloric werewolves were just big evil wolves and could be hunted down like any other wild animal.

In folklore, werewolves were often sorcerors who transformed themselves into wolves to attack their neighbours and such. The idea of lycanthropy as a curse is another literary or cinematic trope (forget which).

I've always thought that if I ever do a werewolf story, I might actually do the sorceror turning themselves into a wolf thing. However, vampires have always been my thing moreso than werewolves.

Though Bram Stoker kind of fused the two by having Dracula turn into a wolf. (I think it was him. Can't think of any earlier sources.)
Devil's Advocate
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I ghost wrote an erotic warewolf short for a publisher in the US a few years back and my characters could change fully or in part at will. They could communicate telepathically through eye contact or touch, with fated pairs not limited by such proximity. Otherwise super strength and senses in both forms were also on the table. Wolfsbain and silver daggers were key to limiting their powers and killing them.

There was also a whole heap of cultural stuff in the world building, which made for a bit of fun to write.

That, and they love to fuck. Doggy style...
My latest story is a racy little piece about what happens when someone cute from work invites you over to watch Netflix and Chill.
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Quote by seeker4
In some cultures, being a werewolf in life led to being a vampire after death (kind of an odd inversion of the vampires vs. werewolves conflict that is a trope unto itself)

The whole silver thing is a literary, or maybe even Hollywood, creation. Folkloric werewolves were just big evil wolves and could be hunted down like any other wild animal.

In folklore, werewolves were often sorcerors who transformed themselves into wolves to attack their neighbours and such. The idea of lycanthropy as a curse is another literary or cinematic trope (forget which).

I've always thought that if I ever do a werewolf story, I might actually do the sorceror turning themselves into a wolf thing. However, vampires have always been my thing moreso than werewolves.

Though Bram Stoker kind of fused the two by having Dracula turn into a wolf. (I think it was him. Can't think of any earlier sources.)


The silver weakness was popularised by literature and Hollywood, but it does have a folkloric basis. A silver bullet was used to kill the Beast of Gévaudan in 1767, the Beast being a wolf, dog or something of the sort which killed around 100 people and had a big impact on the werewolf mythos.

Personally, I have a soft spot for the "witch/warlock changing their appearance" thing as well.
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As a suggestion, have a read of the World of Darkness Werewolf series.
They have different kinds of myths you can loot and they have an interesting approach to what it's like to be a wolf.
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Quote by Twisted_Skald
As a suggestion, have a read of the World of Darkness Werewolf series.
They have different kinds of myths you can loot and they have an interesting approach to what it's like to be a wolf.


Seconding this, although both their werewolf series include a lot of other baggage about spirits, cosmologies, other worlds etc as well which may not be what you're looking for.

(personally I like Werewolf: the Forsaken far more than its predecessor Werewolf: the Apocalypse, but either might be useful)
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Quote by Twisted_Skald
As a suggestion, have a read of the World of Darkness Werewolf series.
They have different kinds of myths you can loot and they have an interesting approach to what it's like to be a wolf.


Yeah, WoD has some interesting stuff. I owned but never ran the original Vampire : The Masquerade but in the end, it was not really my thing. The less well-known Nightlife, which leaned more splatterpunk than goth punk, was better in that regard but had an awful system.
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Quote by seeker4


Yeah, WoD has some interesting stuff. I owned but never ran the original Vampire : The Masquerade but in the end, it was not really my thing. The less well-known Nightlife, which leaned more splatterpunk than goth punk, was better in that regard but had an awful system.


The V:tM video game was pretty good, mind. Bloodlines that is, not the other one. Pen and paper wise I had more fun with old Mage and new Changeling, but of course they're very different games.
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Silver, specifically sterling (900 or better). Amethyst(s). Mistletoe--plant, water in which mistletoe leaves have been boiled, or concentrated oil. Lavender (living plant). Tea roses or rose petals in specific colours.

An evil eye amulet (mati, nazar, mal de ocho), preferably several and preferably blue, on a sterling silver bracelet or necklace--depending on the culture, sterling silver may be replaced with high karat gold (the one I wear, a bracelet, is very antique, and is 19k gold). Also, hamsa or the Hand of Fatima, sometimes incorporating an evil eye amulet, pretty much the same as the evil eye, with different cultures believing the hamsa to have different protective powers, depending on a million different things, ranging from colour and composition to orientation and protective prayers written on the hamsa.

"Haint blue", a Southern U.S. thing, and sort of a catch-all protection on your house, against "lost souls" (ghosts), demons, evil spirits, werewolves, vampires, and pretty much anything else lurking in the thick of the dark.

Oh, and the Cross of Lorraine. I do not know what protective powers that particular version of the cross imbues to the wearer, but my grandmother wore a small one as a pendant when she and a hundred-odd other Canadian nurses were hastily attached to the British battalion tasked with the liberation of Bergen-Belsen. She believed that the Cross of Lorraine gave strength to the wearer and sort of acted as protective halo, or something similar. I have it now, and still carry it, on occasion (and most definitely during the past 18 months, give or take a few months).
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Quote by AlisonAnn13
So I wrote a short story this summer and somehow one of my main characters turned into a werewolf. Super weird.

I saw "The Howling" at too young of an age and was (I thought) scarred for life. But then...

I've been doing my own reading and research, but I want to know what everyone's favorite and least favorite werewolf facts are. What's alluring, what's gross, what's too weird to be believable?


Never saw The Howling, but loved An American Werewolf in London and Wolfen (huh... all three came out the same year, according to IMDB. Didn't know that).

I find the "shifting at will" trope that's become commonplace in Shifter erotica and stuff like Underworld really detracts from the story. The pathos of not being in control makes the poor were-creature so much more likeable.

Last Halloween I poked fun at some of the were-tropes in "Kyle the Were-moose Gets Lucky"
The Right Rev of Lush
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Here are two very different 'werewolf' books some might find it worth checking out.

The Devourers, by Indra Gas, is a twist on Indian werewolf folklore that includes elements of cultures, gender issues, bi-sexuality, unconventional love, masculinity, and .

Naked Werewolf, a three-book series by, Molly Harris. These books are at the way far opposite end of the literary specturm -- would you believe Rom-Com? But Harris, a prolific and successful writer has produced well-crafted, entertaining escapist fiction.


And while not the main character in a novel, Terry Pratchett's 'Discworld' series has several installments featuring Sgt. Angua von Überwald's of the Night Watch.''The Fifth Elephant' set in her home turf and including other werewolves would be a good choice for a first read.

Just passing this along, FYI and FWIW.
.

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Lonely Werewolf Girl is the first of a trilogy by Scottish author Martin Miller about Kalix MacRinnalch, a laudanum-addicted, socially-anxious, anorexic, bipolar werewolf

2 competition winning stories, 1 Famous story, a smattering of Editor's Picks, a handful of Recommended Reads and one Clitorides award are scattered amongst my stories.

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The Right Rev of Lush
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Susie, she said: Lonely Werewolf Girl is the first of a trilogy by Scottish author Martin Miller about Kalix MacRinnalch, a laudanum-addicted, socially-anxious, anorexic, bipolar werewolf.

Me, I typed: Waht's not to love? smile

Thanks, Susie. Think I'll have to check on that series.

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RUMPLATIONS: AwesomeHonky Tonk and Cyber Bar
Home of the Lush "IN" crowd: indecent, intoxicated, and insolvent
a place to gossip, share news, talk sports, pimp a story, piss & moan, or just grab a drink. Check it out.

Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwords. -- ROBERT HEINLEIN
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I always enjoyed the transformation scene in "An American Werewolf in London" where you can hear bones breaking and refusing, and I've always thought that that should be explored more in fiction. The whole 'reoragnising your anatomy' thing.

Though I can see why it wouldn't be erotic.