Dracula by Bram Stoker — book cover

Book details

Dracula

by Bram Stoker

1897 · Wordsworth Editions

About the book

Jonathan Harker, a young solicitor, travels to the Carpathian Mountains to finalize a London property purchase for Count Dracula. After realizing he is a prisoner in a castle inhabited by the undead, Harker escapes, but the Count successfully relocates to England. Using a series of diaries, letters, and phonograph recordings, the narrative follows a small group including Abraham Van Helsing and John Seward as they track the vampire. They utilize blood transfusions, crucifixes, and garlic to protect Mina Harker while hunting the Count across Europe to destroy him with a bowie knife and a stake.

This book serves readers of gothic fiction and historians of Victorian social anxieties. It appeals to those interested in the transition from ancient superstition to modern scientific methodology. Readers gain a foundational understanding of vampire mythology, specifically the rules governing shape-shifting and sunlight. The text provides a technical look at late nineteenth-century technology, such as stenography and telegrams, used as weapons against a medieval threat. By the end, a reader understands the specific tropes that established the modern horror genre.

Details

Published
1897
Publisher
Wordsworth Editions
ISBN
9780393970128
Language
EN