Vampire Hunter D Books in Order
About the Vampire Hunter D series
Series Premise
In the year 12,090 A.D., Earth is a ruined, post-apocalyptic wasteland following a devastating nuclear war and a subsequent rebellion that overthrew the vampire elite known as the Nobility (or "Aristocrats"). The Nobility—ancient, technologically advanced vampires who once ruled humanity—have largely retreated or declined, leaving a fractured world of scattered human settlements, mutants, monsters, and lingering high-tech ruins. Humans survive on the Frontier, a lawless, dangerous expanse of deserts, ruined cities, and strange biomes, constantly threatened by surviving vampires, bio-engineered horrors, and other supernatural or technological menaces. Into this world wanders D, a mysterious, dhampir (half-human, half-vampire) vampire hunter. Tall, pale, cloaked in black, with long black hair and a wide-brimmed hat, D is a stoic, near-silent warrior of unearthly beauty and skill. Armed with a longsword and aided by a sardonic, parasitic entity living in his left hand (a foul-mouthed, wise-cracking mouth that provides commentary, advice, and occasional power boosts), D travels the Frontier accepting jobs to hunt rogue Nobility or other threats. He is hired by desperate villagers, farmers, or nobles to slay vampires who prey on humans, often involving young women targeted as brides or victims. D's mixed heritage gives him vampiric strengths (superhuman speed/strength, regeneration, resistance to sunlight) without full weaknesses, but he is an outcast—feared and shunned by both humans and vampires. Each novel is a self-contained adventure: D arrives in a remote town or frontier outpost, confronts a powerful vampire lord or monster, protects innocents (usually a strong-willed heroine and her family), battles grotesque creatures and traps, and departs into the wasteland. Stories explore isolation, honor, the cost of immortality, humanity's resilience, and the blurred line between monster and savior.
Main Characters
> D (the Vampire Hunter): The stoic, enigmatic protagonist—dhampir son of the Sacred Ancestor (the first and most powerful vampire, implied to be a god-like figure). Pale, beautiful, long black hair, wide-brimmed hat, black cloak, longsword. Superhuman abilities, but tormented by his dual nature and isolation. Speaks little, acts decisively; his Left Hand (a parasitic entity with a foul mouth) provides cynical commentary, analysis, and power.
> Left Hand (Parasite): A grotesque mouth on D's left palm—sarcastic, vulgar, knowledgeable; acts as D's advisor, sensor, and occasional weapon.
> The Sacred Ancestor: D's mysterious father—ancient, god-like vampire; rarely appears but looms over the series as a shadowy force.
> Recurring/rotating heroines: Strong-willed women (farmers' daughters, nobles, warriors) who hire D or cross his path; often develop tragic or bittersweet attraction to him (e.g., Doris Lang in book 1).
> Villains: Vampire Nobles (elegant, cruel aristocrats), mutants, bio-monsters, mad scientists, or ancient horrors—often with tragic backstories or god-like power.
Setting
A far-future Earth (12,090 A.D.) after dual apocalypses: nuclear war that destroyed human civilization and a vampire uprising that enslaved survivors. The Nobility ruled for millennia with advanced technology (cyborgs, bio-engineering, flying fortresses, AI) before their decline, leaving a Frontier of scattered human settlements (frontier towns, farms, ruined cities) amid deserts, forests, mountains, and strange biomes. Technology is scavenged and decaying—laser guns, cybernetic implants, ancient machines—while supernatural elements (vampires, mutants, demons, Lovecraftian horrors) persist. The world is a weird west fused with dark fantasy and sci-fi horror: saloons with cyborg bartenders, castles powered by forgotten reactors, nomadic tribes, and endless wastelands under a blood-red sky.
Tone & Themes
Darkly atmospheric, gothic, pulpy, and melancholic—hard-boiled horror-western with poetic, almost operatic flair. Kikuchi's tone mixes noir cynicism with tragic beauty: D is aloof and fatalistic, the world is bleak and unforgiving, yet moments of quiet heroism, doomed romance, and fleeting human connection shine through. Violence is vivid and stylish (swordplay, gore, monstrous transformations), but the series is more elegiac than gratuitous—focusing on atmosphere, existential dread, and the loneliness of immortality. Humor is dry and sardonic (mostly from the Left Hand's insults), while romance is tragic and restrained. The prose is dense, descriptive, and dreamlike, evoking a sense of mythic inevitability—perfect for fans of gothic horror, spaghetti westerns, and Lovecraftian cosmic dread.
The Vampire Hunter D series is a haunting, stylish masterpiece of dark fantasy and post-apocalyptic horror—over 50 volumes of atmospheric, pulp-infused adventures that blend western grit, gothic tragedy, and cosmic dread. Hideyuki Kikuchi's visionary world-building and Yoshitaka Amano's breathtaking illustrations create an unforgettable saga of a lone dhampir hunter wandering a ruined Earth, battling monsters and his own nature. With its melancholic beauty, philosophical undertones, and relentless action, the series remains a cult classic for fans of genre-blending horror—timeless, mesmerizing, and profoundly lonely in the best way.
FAQ
30 books
No new book in the series is currently scheduled. The latest book, Gold Fiend, was published in July 2024.
Gold Fiend was published in July 2024.
The first book in the series is Vampire Hunter D, Volume 1, published in May 2005.
The series primarily falls into the Horror genre.
In the year 12,090 A.D., Earth is a ruined, post-apocalyptic wasteland following a devastating nuclear war and a subsequent rebellion that overthrew the vampire elite known as the Nobility (or "Aristocrats"). The Nobility—ancient, technologically advanced vampires who once ruled humanity—have largely retreated or declined, leaving a fractured world of scattered human settlements, mutants, monsters, and lingering high-tech ruins. Humans survive on the Frontier, a lawless, dangerous expanse of deserts, ruined cities, and strange biomes, constantly threatened by surviving vampires, bio-engineered horrors, and other supernatural or technological menaces. Into this world wanders D, a mysterious, dhampir (half-human, half-vampire) vampire hunter. Tall, pale, cloaked in black, with long black hair and a wide-brimmed hat, D is a stoic, near-silent warrior of unearthly beauty and skill. Armed with a longsword and aided by a sardonic, parasitic entity living in his left hand (a foul-mouthed, wise-cracking mouth that provides commentary, advice, and occasional power boosts), D travels the Frontier accepting jobs to hunt rogue Nobility or other threats. He is hired by desperate villagers, farmers, or nobles to slay vampires who prey on humans, often involving young women targeted as brides or victims. D's mixed heritage gives him vampiric strengths (superhuman speed/strength, regeneration, resistance to sunlight) without full weaknesses, but he is an outcast—feared and shunned by both humans and vampires. Each novel is a self-contained adventure: D arrives in a remote town or frontier outpost, confronts a powerful vampire lord or monster, protects innocents (usually a strong-willed heroine and her family), battles grotesque creatures and traps, and departs into the wasteland. Stories explore isolation, honor, the cost of immortality, humanity's resilience, and the blurred line between monster and savior.
The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.