I’m not 100% certain what specific item you’re pointing to with the phrase 'a guide thicker than blood', so I’d ask a quick clarifying question before locking in a publisher. From where I sit, there are two common reading directions: one is the vampire/tabletop route (which often points to White Wolf or Onyx Path Publishing because of their chunky 'Vampire: The Masquerade' sourcebooks), and the other is the comics/manga route where publishers like Dark Horse, Kodansha, or Viz might release large anthology-style guides or artbooks with vampire themes. If the guide is an RPG sourcebook filled with clan histories, White Wolf/Onyx Path is the stronger bet; if it’s a graphic anthology or deluxe artbook, look toward Dark Horse or a large manga publisher.
If you can share a line from the cover, an ISBN, or where you saw the mention (a forum, a bookstore, a review), I can point you to the exact publisher pretty quickly. Meanwhile, try searching the phrase in quotes on Google Books or WorldCat and filter by publisher — that usually surfaces the right edition fast. Which direction do you think it came from — tabletop RPG or comics? I’m curious to chase this down with you.
I love this kind of cheeky phrasing — it sounds like someone’s talking about vampire lore or a meaty game supplement. When I first saw 'a guide thicker than blood' in a forum, my brain immediately jumped to the vampire tabletop scene, because those books literally feel like family trees printed on cardstock. If you're talking about a big, lore-dense guide that leans into bloodlines and clans, my top guess would be White Wolf (and its later incarnation, Onyx Path Publishing). They put out enormous tomes for 'Vampire: The Masquerade' — think 'Book of Nod', the various 'Clanbook' titles, and the splatbooks that compile centuries of in-game mythos. Those books are often thicker than the poetry collections I keep on my shelf, and they practically drip with family drama and backstory.
I’m picturing a scenario where someone called a campaign guide or lore compendium 'thicker than blood' as a cheeky nod to that family-ties trope, and White Wolf is the natural home for that. They specialize in dark, gothic-punk worldbuilding, with layered sourcebooks that go so deep you can run entire chronicle arcs off a single chapter. If the guide you saw is newer, Onyx Path handled a lot of the reprints and expanded editions after the original company’s changes, so they’re another likely publisher. Also, if the phrasing was about comics or prose rather than RPGs, Dark Horse and IDW have released thick vampire compendia too — but the vibe of your line screams tabletop to me.
If you want, tell me where you heard the phrase or paste a cover image link, and I’ll narrow it down. I’ve spent late nights pawing through used RPG stacks at conventions and I’m always happy to play detective for a particularly juicy book title — plus I love the excuse to dig out my battered copy of 'Book of Nod' and relive the chaos of reading clan politics in a dimly lit cafe.
2025-08-28 12:13:32
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When the riddle popped up in a forum thread I was lurking on, I grinned and thought of my grandmother’s kitchen.
To me, the most literal and cozy take is that the guide thicker than blood was written by Grandma — the person whose recipes and notes are smudged with years of use. Those family cookbooks are full of amendments, margin scribbles, and secret tips; the gravy line is literally thicker than blood in many of her dishes. I’ve got a spiral-bound thing at home with handwritten measurements that make no sense to anyone else but bind our family tighter than any genealogy chart.
So if you ask who wrote a guide thicker than blood, I’d say someone who taught through hands-on practice and shared ritual: a grandparent, an aunt, that neighbor who passed on the sauce, the person whose instructions shaped how we gather and remember.
I’ve dug through my mental bookshelf and a few habit-driven Google-search tricks, but I don’t have a single definitive publication date for 'Thicker Than Blood' (or 'A Guide: Thicker Than Blood' if that’s the exact phrasing) off the top of my head. I’m the sort of person who hoards oddball guides and tie-in books, though, so I can walk you through how I’d pin this down quickly — and why you’ll sometimes see more than one “first published” date when you look.
If you can, the fastest route is to give me one small detail: the author’s name, a publisher, or where you first heard about it. Without that, here’s what I normally do as a reader who’s also part-time obsessive bibliophile: first I check the book’s copyright page (physical copy) or the metadata on Google Books/Amazon for the exact publication year and edition. For older or rare guides, WorldCat and the Library of Congress catalogue are lifesavers — they’ll often list the first edition and show library holdings worldwide. Goodreads can help too, but be cautious there because user input sometimes blurs editions.
If you don’t have the book in hand, try these quick steps I use from my phone: search the full title in quotes on Google ("'Thicker Than Blood'"), then add possible authors or the word "guide" if you suspect it’s a companion book. If that yields multiple hits, follow up with site-specific searches like site:archive.org or site:worldcat.org to see scanned copies or library records. On Amazon/Google Books, click into "Look inside" or the book details — publishers usually list original publication year and ISBN. For academic-style or indie guides, check the publisher’s website; small presses often keep neat archives. If it’s a fan-made or self-published guide, dates can be messy — sometimes the ebook date is different from the POD or print run.
Just as a heads-up from having hunted down weird tie-in materials before: "first published" can mean different things — first print run, first edition, or first time it appeared online as a PDF. If the guide is tied to a larger franchise or fandom, you might find a fan wiki that logs release dates in granularity. If it’s a short zine or convention guide, community posts or Etsy/shop listings sometimes carry the original year too.
If you want, toss me whatever little detail you have (author, a line from the blurb, or where you saw the title) and I’ll try to narrow it down into a concrete year and a citation-style source. I love this kind of detective work — it’s oddly satisfying to pin down a publication history, and I’ll happily keep digging with you until we find the first date that truly counts to you. What clue can you throw my way first?