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Dead Collections: A Novel

Isaac Fellman
4.2 / 5.0
Published: 2022 ISBN: 9780143136910

Description

Sol is a trans man living on the margins of life—quite literally. As a vampire, he spends his days sequestered in the climate-controlled archives of a history museum, obsessively cataloging the remnants of queer lives past. His existence is defined by isolation, a complex relationship with his own undead biology, and the daunting challenge of navigating a world that wasn't built for men like him, let alone immortals. Everything shifts when Elsie, a sharp-witted television archivist, enters his orbit. Elsie is grappling with her own professional and personal crises, yet she finds herself irresistibly drawn to Sol. Their connection defies simple categorization, blossoming into an intimate, messy, and deeply queer romance that complicates Sol’s carefully constructed solitary life. As their bond deepens, Sol is forced to confront the history he clings to and the terrifying, beautiful prospect of a future he never thought he could have. Dead Collections is a shimmering, genre-bending exploration of identity that transcends standard metaphors. Isaac Fellman crafts a narrative that is both acerbic and tender, offering a vulnerable look at what it means to claim your body, find your space, and fall in love amidst the ruins of the past.

Customer Reviews

Top 5 from Amazon
B
Brigid Keely
November 20, 2024
Verified Purchase

I wish I'd read this sooner

A friend of mine suggested I read this book quite a while ago. They know me and my taste well and I dutifully added this to my "bookmark to buy later" list and then forgot about it. Someone gave me a book about a book binder and an archivist working in a cthullian museum archive and I mentioned it to that friend along with the comment that it wasn't a great book and felt like someone trying to tug on the coat tails of "Magnus Archives." Said friend asked if I'd read "Dead Collections" yet, which is about a vampire archivist. It's about so much more than that. Sol is a vampire (and yes vampirism both is and is not a metaphor for other stigmatized stuff) and is a nerd who wrote fan fiction and is a former concert pianist and piano teacher and is a trans man and is Jewish and is... just... so deeply fundamentally human. And unlike a lot of books about archivists this feels at its core like it was written by someone with archival experience - Fellman is, in fact, an archivist. So. Sol is a trans man, and was purposely infected with vampirism in an attempt to avoid dying of tetanus. He isn't coping SUPER well. He's camped out in his basement office of the archive he works at, no work friends and no social friends either. He works and... he works. That's about it. Then a woman arrives with a bequest for the archive - the writings etc. of the fictional writer of several Star Trek and other SF shows who also helmed her own (fictional) queer space show. It's a show that had a…
B
Betsy lang
March 21, 2023
Verified Purchase

An intriguing world

It's hard to like a character like Sol during the narrative of the story- although the sol who is narrating is far more likeable. Sol in the beginning is trapped by circumstances both beyond his control and of his own making, and it was frustrating and scary to see his whole life just disintegrate around him, because of his inaction and the actions of one very unpleasant coworker. But as it falls apart you see and feel sol literally rebuild himself. And you see the man he was at his core arise. Some of the alternative formats- like the text messages, and screenplays, were hard for me to read, but I just increased the size and that helped.
J
Joe Drake
February 28, 2022
Verified Purchase

I Love This Book!!! A Must-Read

This book is phenomenal. I think the author has a really cool take on vampires that I haven't seen in other works before. I also think he does a great job with all the characters in the cast -- they're nuanced and complicated and interesting. I saw myself in them, I saw people I love in them, I saw people I didn't care for but maybe should've seen more of their humanity in them. If you like vampire stories, get this book. If you like books about queer people figuring out life, get this book. If you like books about archives (or libraries or museums or any other place with lots of old documents and items wrapped up in mystery), get this book. Isaac Fellman is a wonderful author and I can't wait to read whatever he writes next.
M
Mikel Norwitz
December 9, 2025

Cosey romance with horror tropes

Sweet, rather cosey romance involving a transmasc vampire and a human (living) woman. A bit too much explicit sex to qualify as YA, although it has a very YA vibe otherwise.
M
Mx. Phoebe's Viewpoint
November 5, 2025

Dead Collections is a trip into the basement that you have to take.

What I love most about Dead Collections is Isaac Fellman’s writing style. There is a cadence to it. You’re reading about things that go bump in the night but it is done with a self-effacing style. You don’t know whether to take Sol seriously or not and neither does Sol. This is so me. This story is about more than Sol finding bodies or getting rid of ghosts. It’s about each person’s journey to accepting their true selves. Each journey is different and how we support each other matters. This part of the tale gets told through Sol and Elsie’s love story. Dead Collections is a trip into the basement that you have to take. Spend time with Sol and Elise and the rest of the gang. Get to know their quirks and just enjoy.