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Would buy from the seller again.+++++++ The item arrived in a timely manner and the product was just as the seller had described it.
It is a great book. This is a great book and gives a lot of the clues that some vampire writers use in their own novels. This classic is a must read for any Vampire fan. I like how well writen it is and how much suspense it has.
His landlord won't talk about the Count or his castle - but, just before he leaves, his landlady begs him not to go, (She's especially concerned that it's St George's Eve when - at midnight - "all evil things in the world will have full sway"). (The book has barely started before the gentlemanly Harker comments : "the women looked pretty, except when you got near them"). Bistritz is the nearest town to his destination, Castle Dracula.spends the night in an inn there, planning to complete his journey the following day by stagecoach. Naturally, he pays no heed - but takes the crucifix she offers him.
The book kicks off with the journal entries of a recently qualified solicitor, Jonathan Harker, on his was to Transylvania - a region in the Carpathian Mountains. The story is then picked up by Harker's fiancee, Mina - through her own journal and the letters she was writing to her friend, Lucy Westenra. (Worse - ever the ladies' man - Dracula isn't long in making a move). Marraige propposals were obviously a bit like buses in those days - you wait years for one and then three turn up at once). He then became business manager at London's Lyceum Theatre in 1878 and married Florence Balcombe the same year - beating, would you believe, Oscar Wilde to her hand in marraige.
He doesn't have the easiest of journeys - dreadful trains in Hungary, howling dogs beneath his bedroom window - but, poor chap, things are about to get an awful lot worse. Furniture in the castle is very expensive and in excellent condition.though, strangely, there's no sign of either servants or mirrors. Harker's firm had been employed by a local nbleman called Count Dracula to oversee the purchase of an old estate in England. Bram Stoker was born in Dublin in 1847 and studied Pure Mathematics at Trinity College Dublin.
(Dracula is old, incredibly pale, has set of long white teeth, long fingernails sharpened to a point and a strong handshake that's as cold as ice). Harker later starts to understand what he's got himself into - thanks, in part, to an accident with a razor blade and a shaving mirror. (She had turned down Dr Seward - who has his own asylum - and an American gentleman called Quincey Morris the same afternoon Arthur had proposed. Although, initially, very polite Dracula never eats with Harker and effectively bans him from exploring the castle - the majority of its doors remain locked to him. Still, the book is a classic, and - having defined the whole vampire genre - is one of those titles you just have to read.
He developed a passion for the theatre while at university and, on graduation, spent seven years in the Irish Civil Service. Stoker is obviously best known for 'Dracula', which was first published in 1897.Dracula is a little different to the standard novel - it's a collection of journal entries, letters and the occasional newspaper article. Lucy has recently become engaged to the Hon Arthur Holmwood, the only son of Lord Godalming. (Only Van Helsing has any idea what they're dealing with.and it's quite a while before the key players are able to get together and pool their information). By then, the castle has become a prison and he knows why the locals spoke of Hell, Satan and vampires when he was leaving the inn.Harker spends longer at the castle than he had planned, or wanted to - and the action shifts to England when Dracula leaves home - alone.
Despite his coach driver's best efforts - he arrives an hour early, in the hope of taking Harker on to Bukovina - Dracula's coach arrives and Harker makes for the castle. It's very descriptive, and conjures up some great images - for example, Dracula's home in Transylvania was a "vast, ruined castle, from whose tall black windows came no ray of light and whose broken battlements showed a jagged line against the moonlit sky." However, after he leaves Transylvania, Dracula only ever makes fleeting appearances and the book does, occasionally, throw out a line you just have to laugh at. Several 'obvious' clues - like the presence of a bat, or the puncture wounds on someone's neck - are repeatedly ignored. However, he becomes very attached to it in time.Harker's due to get the coach as far as the Borgo Pass, where Dracula's private coach will then meet him.
Seward's journal entries add quite a bit to the book, and his request for help from his old teacher, Professor Van Helsing, is very significant.The book isn't always overtly scary, though there is plenty of mystery and intrigue. (It may sound strange, but it works very well). The pair spend quite some time together in Whitby.which, unfortunately, is exactly where Dracula's boat comes into dock. Like the countryside's howling wolves, the driver's glowing red eyes and sharp white teeth aren't too comforting.though the Count's appearance is little better.
The firm have settled on an estate called Carfax, at Purfleet, and Harker is travelling to tidy up the final details with the Count. It's something that - as an "English churchman" - he's always viewed as "idolatrous".
The detail is fantastic and was ingenious at the time it was written. This book is one of the best books ever written.
Even with the 1990's movie (which follows the story-line very closely to the book) the book is still worth the read. The writing style allows you to view the story as it unfolds to each of the charaters and how their personalities interact. The classic book, written in the late 19th century. Written in the style of diary entries from the various charaters, the story is still compelling and entertaining.
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