Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Bram Stoker's Dracula Unearthed

Front Cover
39 Reviews
Desert Island Books, Jun 1, 1998 - Fiction - 512 pages

From inside the book

What people are saying - Write a review

User ratings

5 stars
7
4 stars
17
3 stars
8
2 stars
1
1 star
1

Review: Dracula (Oxford Bookworms: Stage 2)

User Review  - Yorika Oka - Goodreads

OXFORD Readers,level2 Time 4/16=82minutes seven word summary=Dracula-vampire-blood-coffin-garlic-cross-death 1.Do you know anything about Dracula? Yes, They like people's blood. 2.Do you like horror ... Read full review

Review: Dracula

User Review  - Dan Smith - Goodreads

It isn't a great work of literature but this is a book about which you can play the 'spin the psychodrama of the author' game: 1) Stoker was an Irishman born (1847) when the devastation of the great ... Read full review

All 39 reviews »

Related books

Contents

Note on the Text and on the Annotations
24
Name First Introduced
27
Jonathan Harkers Journal
30
Copyright

24 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1998)

Bram Stoker was born in Dublin, the son of a civil servant. Although a semi-invalid as a child, he went on the gain a reputation as a fine athlete at Trinity College, where he also excelled in mathematics and philosophy. Stoker worked as a civil servant and a journalist before becoming the personal secretary of the famous actor Henry Irving. He also wrote 15 works of fiction, only one of which is very memorable - Dracula (1897). This work, involving hypnotism, magic, the supernatural, and other elements of gothic fiction, went on to sell over one million copies and is still selling strongly today. So well known has his fictional character become that today it is possible to visit the castle of Count Dracula in the Transylvanian region of Romania, a country that Stoker never visited. Several film versions of the story, both serious and comic, have made Stoker's work a part of modern mythology. His novel The Lair of the White Worm (1911) has also been made into film. It and the novel The Lady of the Shroud are, like Dracula, fantastic tales of horror.

Bibliographic information