DraculaIt is perhaps one of the best known and most influential novels in all of literature: 1897's Dracula didn't merely inspire countless adaptations for stage and film, it invented an entire genre of horror: the vampire story, which continues to evolve today into wildly varied directions, from noir detective pastiches (the vampire as night-owl P.I.) to tween romances (the vampire as dreamy but distant boyfriend). Anyone who wants to know where it all began must read this 1897 work, still startling and still terrifying even today. The story of English solicitor Jonathan Harker and his strange new client, Transylvanian aristocrat Count Dracula, this is the classic work of Victorian gothic horror, the continuing eerie wellspring of many of our cultural fantasies and nightmares. Irish author ABRAHAM STOKER (1847-1912) worked for more than a quarter of a century as manager of the West End's Lyceum Theatre, which drew him into London's literary and artists circles; he was a friend of such luminaries as writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and painter James Abbott McNeill Whistler. Stoker is also the author of The Lair of the White Worm (1911), among other books. |
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Page ii
... For more information , please contact Cosimo at info@cosimobooks.com . Cover Design by www.popshopstudio.com ISBN : 978-1-60520-629-5 And then insensibly there came the strange change which I Jonathan Harker's Journal.
... For more information , please contact Cosimo at info@cosimobooks.com . Cover Design by www.popshopstudio.com ISBN : 978-1-60520-629-5 And then insensibly there came the strange change which I Jonathan Harker's Journal.
Page iii
Bram Stoker. And then insensibly there came the strange change which I had noticed in the night . Her breathing grew stertorous , the mouth opened , and the pale gums , drawn back , made the teeth look longer and sharper than ever . In a ...
Bram Stoker. And then insensibly there came the strange change which I had noticed in the night . Her breathing grew stertorous , the mouth opened , and the pale gums , drawn back , made the teeth look longer and sharper than ever . In a ...
Page 7
... strange relief the ghost - like clouds which amongst the Carpathians seem to wind ceaselessly through the valleys . Sometimes the hills were so steep that , despite our driver's haste , the horses could only go slowly . I wished to get ...
... strange relief the ghost - like clouds which amongst the Carpathians seem to wind ceaselessly through the valleys . Sometimes the hills were so steep that , despite our driver's haste , the horses could only go slowly . I wished to get ...
Page 8
... dead travel fast . " ) - with a The strange driver evidently heard the words , for he looked up gleaming smile . The passenger turned his face away , at the same time putting out his two fingers and crossing himself . “ 8 Bram Stoker.
... dead travel fast . " ) - with a The strange driver evidently heard the words , for he looked up gleaming smile . The passenger turned his face away , at the same time putting out his two fingers and crossing himself . “ 8 Bram Stoker.
Page 9
... strange chill , and a lonely feeling came over me ; but a cloak was thrown over my shoulders , and a rug across my knees , and the driver said in excellent German : - " The night is chill , mein Herr , and my master the Count bade me ...
... strange chill , and a lonely feeling came over me ; but a cloak was thrown over my shoulders , and a rug across my knees , and the driver said in excellent German : - " The night is chill , mein Herr , and my master the Count bade me ...
Contents
Letter Dr Seward to Hon Arthur Holmwood | 98 |
Lucy Westenras Diary | 109 |
Dr Sewards Diary | 230 |
Dr Sewards Diary | 259 |
Dr Sewards Phonograph Diary spoken by Van Helsing | 270 |
Dr Sewards Diary | 276 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham Van Helsing answered Arthur Arthur Holmwood asked began Bistritz blood Borgo Pass Bukovina castle close coming Count Count Dracula dark dead door Dracula dread eyes face fear feel felt friend John Galatz hand Harker Harker's Journal head hear heard heart Helsing Helsing's horses John Seward Jonathan keep knew last night letter lips looked Lord Godalming Lucy Westenra Lucy's Mina Murray mind morning never once passed pause Peter Hawkins poor dear poor Lucy Professor Professor Van Helsing Quincey Morris Renfield rest round seemed Seward Seward's Diary ship silence sleep Slovaks smile sort soul speak spoke stood strange sunset sweet tell terrible things thought throat to-day to-morrow to-night told took Transylvania turned Un-Dead Varna wait wake watch Westenra whilst Whitby window wolves word