Bram Stoker's Dracula, published in 1897, is a horror novel that tells the story of young protagonists in the world of vampirism and the thirst for power presented by the famous Dracula. Discover this literary classic that significantly influenced the world of entertainment. One of the most spectacular novels of the 19th century, Dracula Bram Stoker still frightens his readers today as he did more than a century ago. The story of Terror, such as The Metamorphosis and Frankenstein's, has become a modern myth and has been interpreted countless times on stage, radio, television, and film. xi Dracula Bram Stoker combined Central European folk tales of nosferatu, or the undead, with historical accounts of the prince of the fifteenth century, Vlad the Impaler, who allegedly impaled 100,000 victims and received the epithet Dracula (a derivative of the Romanian drac or "devil"). Critics have seen the vampirism of history as a Victorian literary sublimation of sexuality. A sequel to the 2009 original Dracula: The Un-Dead, based on the novelist's notes and excisions, was written by Dacre Stoker (author's great-grandson) and Ian Holt. It was set in London in 1912 and featured Bram Stoker as a character. You may want to know another novel genre like The Feather Pillow, which is also creepy. Bram Stoker's novel Dracula takes place with young real estate lawyer Jonathan Harker and his trip to Romania to complete negotiations with Count Dracula of Transylvania. Arriving at the mansion, he began to detail strange behaviors in the Count, such as his disappearances at night, lack of appetite, and reflection in the mirrors.
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