Authors
John William Polidori

John William Polidori

John William Polidori (1795-1821) was a British author and physician, best known as the creator of the genre that became known as "vampire fiction." Born in Westminster, Polidori received his medical degree from the University of Edinburgh at the age of nineteen. After becoming the personal physician of Lord Byron, the two of them traveled through Europe together and Polidori was paid 500 pounds to chronicle their travels in a diary that was published posthumously.In June of 1816, while on his road trip with Byron, Polidori found himself in Lake Geneva in the company of Mary Wollstonecraft, her future husband Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary's stepsister, Claire Clairmont when- on a dark and stormy night- Byron suggested they each attempt to write an original ghost story. Wollstonecraft would create a story that later became the basis for Frankenstein, while Polidori borrowed a character created by Byron to craft The Vampyre, the first vampire story published in English. (The story was, at first, erroneously credited to Lord Byron, much to the chagrin of both authors). While Polidori would publish a variety of different works, including medical papers, poems, plays and an additional novella, he would die very young - at twenty-five - after suffering from depression and financial ruin. "The Vampyre" remains his enduring work and Polidori will be remembered chiefly for founding this genre of horror fiction.