Dracula by Bram Stoker
January 9th, 2008
Dracula
Bram Stoker
402 p.
Penguin Red, 2006
(first published 1897 by Archibald Constable and Company)
For Decades ‘08.
Back cover blurb:
Count Dracula’s castle is a hellish world where night is day, pleasure is pain and the blood of the innocent is prized above all. Young Jonathan Harker approaches the gloomy gates with no idea of what he is about to face…
And back in England eerie incidents are unfolding as strange puncture marks appear on a young woman’s neck. Can Harker’s fiancĂ©e be saved? And where is the evil Dracula?
The blurb above is a bit misguiding, but seeing as almost anyone can tell you what the book is about, it doesn’tbother me much. It is an extremely good novel. Like a lot of people (probably), I have been exposed to the Dracula-story uncountable times; I’ve seen lots of different film versions and parodies and all sorts of things. My sister was a bit of a vampire-buff, but I never got around to read Dracula. Until now, of course. And it is brilliant, it really is. The found I almost found best was that the characters were so full of life. They were believable and felt as though they could have been real. Most characters in books from this century seem to be quite stiff and don’t show much emotion. These characters do. The men in it embrace each other and cry and show a lot of affection to each other. I love that. Van Helsing, the slightly mad but yet so brilliant professor in almost every subject, was the sort of character I wanted to give a real big hug because he seemed so sad. My favourite character, who seems to be changed a lot in most of the filmed version, is Dr. Seward, who is gently and noble and loyal, the kind of traits I wish I would have, but sadly don’t. Dr. Seward is also a bit of tech geek (yes, in that day and age), and it was fantastic to see how he longs for his phonograph (a kind of gramophone) when he has been forced to write by hand.
Dracula is narrated by several different characters, in the form of journal entries and letters. Unlike many novels of this kind, the reason why they write a journal is justified; every character seems to have a reason for setting down their thoughts. The characters read each other’s journals and together they form a beautiful entirety. There were two things I did not love about this novel. One of them was how Mina and Jonathan Harker were very wussy at times. If they had not been in love and married, I would not have any problem with them. The other problem was a little note at the end of the novel, telling us that everyone was happily married and they had children and all sorts of things. It felt a bit over-the-top. But then again (as my sister said) it is Victorian. And they were a little strange.
edit. I forgot about this as it wasn’t that annoying, but there was one more thing; the footnotes were missing. They were marked out and everything, but there were no footnotes. I guess it was a relief, because it takes so much time to turn to the back all the time.
Entry Filed under: Challenges, Classics, Decades '08, English, Fiction, Horror

1 Comment
Add your own1. Chain Reader | January 31st, 2008 at 1:50 am
I also read Dracula recently and was actually surprised that I liked it. I reviewed it on my blog, but I have no idea how to put the link in this comment!
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