<Li> Other authors have given the myth a fantasy twist . In Philip José Farmer's 1965 novel Dare, Virginia and the other Lost Colonists are abducted by aliens and settled on a planet called Dare . In 1969, Steve Cannon wrote Groove, Bang and Jive Around, in which Virginia Dare is one of two stewardesses aboard the Statecraft One who engages in a wild orgy with Annette, the foxy adolescent girl from New Orleans, and Estavanico, "Little Stevie" to some, the flight engineer . Near the end, in the land of Oobladee, she is eventually magically transformed into a frail, old woman with a cane, who explains the reasons for which she was left to explore much darker horizons, sexually . Ultimately, she falls to the floor as a pile of ashes . Virginia Dare appears in Mark Chadbourn's fantasy sequence Kingdom of the Serpent, comprising the novels Jack of Ravens and The Burning Man with a third yet to be published . She is kidnapped along with the other Roanoke colonists and taken to the Celtic Otherworld, the home of all myth and legend . She plays a key role in the final volume of the trilogy . A woman named Virginia Dare appears in Gregory Keyes' fantasy novel The Briar King . Keyes uses several hints and word clues to indicate this character is meant to be the historical figure . In Volume I of Tales of the Slayer, a horror story collection set in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer universe, Virginia Dare appears as the vampire slayer "White Doe", an English girl adopted by the Croatoan Indians . She is turned into a white doe by a wizard of the tribe when she rejects his advances . Her true love, Seal of the Ocean, finds her but later kills her because he does not recognize her as a deer . </Li> <Li> She is the main villain in the short - lived television show FreakyLinks . Inspired by The X-Files and The Blair Witch Project, it follows a young man who takes over his twin brother's paranormal Web site, Freakylinks, after his death . It is later found that his brother's death was related to his investigations into the lost colony of Roanoke . It is implied that Virginia Dare was a demon who destroyed the colonists, either directly or indirectly . However, the show was canceled before the end of the first season, and the mystery was never resolved . </Li> <Li> In the 2007 made - for - TV movie on the SciFi Channel, Wraiths of Roanoke, Virginia Dare is the sole survivor after the colony is wiped out by Old Norse ghosts, or wraiths, who had died on the island centuries earlier but failed to achieve transit to Valhalla . In the movie the infant Virginia, whose innocence is needed by the wraiths, is used by her father to lure the wraiths onto a flaming raft set adrift for a Viking funeral . The last act of Ananias is to cast Virginia away from the raft in a wicker basket . She is found and adopted by the mainland Indians the next day . </Li> <Li> In The Necromancer, the fourth book in Michael Scott's "Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel" series, Virginia Dare was introduced as an immortal who disables her enemies with charms from a magic flute . It is later revealed in the story that her father is the one who carved the word "Croatoan" onto the fence post and part of the tree . </Li>

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