Dracula
read book* *Different edition

Dracula

by
3.92 of 5 stars 3.92  ·  rating details  ·  279,986 ratings  ·  9,031 reviews
The vampire novel that started it all, Bram Stoker's Dracula probes deeply into human identity, sanity, and the dark corners of Victorian sexuality and desire. When Jonathan Harker visits Transylvania to help Count Dracula purchase a London house, he makes horrifying discoveries about his client. Soon afterward, disturbing incidents unfold in England—an unmanned ship is wr...more
Hardcover, Clothbound, 402 pages
Published April 20th 2011 by Penguin Classics (first published 1897)
more details... edit details

Friend Reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar WildeJane Eyre by Charlotte BrontëPride and Prejudice by Jane AustenGreat Expectations by Charles DickensWuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Penguin Classics Clothbound
8th out of 42 books — 60 voters
Pride and Prejudice by Jane AustenLes Misérables by Victor HugoTales of the Jazz Age by F. Scott FitzgeraldThe Beautiful and Damned by F. Scott FitzgeraldDracula by Bram Stoker
Coralie Bickford-Smith Designs
5th out of 62 books — 8 voters


More lists with this book...

Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
filter  |  sort: default (?)  |  rating details
Jonathan

Dracula: the very name instantly brings to mind visions of vampires, stakes, garlic and crucifixes. But when I bothered to read the novel I realised, sadly, how twisted modern vampire fiction has become.

Vampires are not meant to exist as heroes. Go back a few hundred years and men believed truly that the vampire was a real immortal, cursed to quench his undying thirst with a living mortal's blood. The very idea of a blood drinker inspires the very image of a villain in my mind. And that is what...more
Mike (the Paladin)
I believe this isn't the edition I read "first" but I did have it. (and now I've actually changed that picture as apparently Goodreads lost the right to use that particular cover. I wanted a cover picture there so I went with this one...oh well.)This is an amazing book. I've read reviews by those who disagree and reviews by those who hated the format. But I was swept up in it the first time I read it as a teen and have been every time since.

My advice is don't worry about all the psychological b...more
Paquita Maria Sanchez
This was neither as bad as I assumed it would be or (nor?) as good as I eventually started thinking it could be. Much as I love receiving real mail, whether it's a letter, present, post card, or even just a book I ordered (Shucks, for me? Thanks, me!), the epistolary form just doesn't generally jiggle my jolly parts. This is especially true when a lot of what you're reading is the journals of a bunch of people you'd never even want to have passing conversations with, Dr. Van Helsing and Dr. Sewa...more
Emma
I first read Dracula as a teenager and it had a big effect on me. Stoker's suave monster fascinated me and sparked an interest in all things gothic and supernatural. After finishing the book for the first time I promptly ditched CS Lewis, bought some kohl eyeliner, decided to dress in black for the foreseeable future and devoted myself to studying Dracula. I don't think this book left my side for the following year.

Good-times.

Looking through my annotated notes in my copy from the 90s, the enth...more
Lady Danielle aka The Book Huntress
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Kim

I want to make a confession. This is the first vampire book I've ever read. I've never been interested in vampires, ghosts, werewolves and other manifestations of superstition and the supernatural. Indeed, for as long as I can remember, I've avoided horror - gothic and otherwise - in both literature and film, basically because I hate being scared. So I've not read Dracula before. I've never seen a Dracula film. The closest I've come to watching anything featuring vampires on television was an ep...more
Martine
'Welcome to my house. Come freely. Go safely. And leave something of the happiness you bring!'

These are pretty much the first words spoken to Jonathan Harker, one of the heroes of Bram Stoker's Dracula, upon his arrival at Count Dracula's castle in Transylvania, just minutes after a nightmare journey through the landscape of gothic horror: darkness, howling wolves, flames erupting out of the blue, frightened horses. Within a few days of his arrival, Harker will find himself talking of the Count'...more
Jason Pettus
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)

The CCLaP 100: In which I read a hundred so-called "classic" books for the first time, then write reports on whether or not I think they deserve the label

Book #13: Dracula, by Bram Stoker (1897)

The story in a nutshell:
To best understand the storyline of Dracula, it's important to imagine yourself as a...more
Hannah
Rating clarification: 4.5 stars

Welcome to my house. Come freely. Go safely. And leave something of the happiness you bring!
Sounds like something fine living maven Martha Stewart would say, doesn't it? Or perhaps the Persian poet Omar Khayyam? Well, you'd be wrong on both counts, as this lovely little welcome speech is from none other then the Count of all counts: Dracula.


I'm sorry it took me so long to read this book. Gotta admit that after the Epic Fail that was Frankenstein, I was leary of pi...more
Paul
If I was Bram Stoker I’d remake the old Melanie hit – remember this one?

Look what they done to my song, ma
look what they done to my song
well it's the only thing that I could do half right
and it's turning out all wrong ma
look what they done to my song


Which the Count would have sung as

Uite ce au facut sa ma cantec, mama
Uite ce au facut cintecul meu e singurul
lucru care i s-ar putea face jumatate
dreptate si e intorcandu-se in toate regula mama
uite ce au facut sa ma cintec


Reviewing Dracula in...more
Kay
I read this in the Frankfurt International Airport during a five-hour layover. In retrospect, it was fitting because I was pretty much among the living dead, operating on close to 20 hours of no sleep after being kept awake the entire flight from the US to Germany by my goddamn seat refusing to lean back for the first half of the trip, and then by a goddamn crying baby for the last half. It was a bright and early morning when I mercifully stepped out of the Lufthansa jet, and I was abnormally pi...more
Shannon (Giraffe Days)
Now here's a novel that is perfect reading for autumn, and added a delicious tremor to the chill air and overcast sky, leaf-littered ground and rotting plants. Which is interesting, considering it's largely set over a long summer.

The story begins with Jonathan Harker, a young lawyer, travelling to Transylvania at the request of his company's client, Count Dracula. The previous lawyer, Renfield, had some kind of breakdown and retired from the business (otherwise known as, being locked up in an in...more
Andrea
I've never been a huge goth/horror fan. I suppose werewolves and undead and all that are okay, as long as the heroes get to smack them good before the story's over. But if it gets too scary, I don't like it. I don't like being seriously scared, I guess. Suspense, that's great, and adventure, but not horror.

Anyway, I really loved this novel. I was a little leery at first, for the reasons mentioned above, and also because of the sometimes association of vampires with sex. I wanted to read it becau...more
Henry Avila
"Children of the night what music they play". Jonathan Hawker hears those words from Count Dracula, in Castle Dracula ,in Transylvania.What started out as a simple real estate deal by an English solicitor and a foreign nobleman,becomes a blood sucking nightmare. Jonathan is imprisoned by the Count.Three strange, but beautiful women appear in his room looking not quite human.When Dracula arrives also, they fade away....Next day the Englishman can't decide if what he saw last night was real .The t...more
Paul
Oct 26, 2012 Paul marked it as to-read-novels  ·  review of another edition
Oh wow, this majestic volume arrived just the other day and is utterly magnificent, quite dractastic. I have reviewed Dracula-the-Novel elsewhere and I'll be gladly reviewing Dracula-the-New-Annotations when I can get to it (there is a small but urgent tranche of books to read before I can get to it).
Why New? Well, in 1975 there was a previous Annotated Dracula by a different guy, a Mr Wolf (I kid you not). That is also a handsome volume which I have. But this one is a completely different thin...more
Sunny in Wonderland
November 8, 2012
Happy 165th birthday, Mr. Stoker!

September 12, 2012
I was recently reading another book written from multiple perspectives, and it reminded me of this book. And then I realized that it was several years ago that I read Dracula - back when I got my first e-reader - and so I never actually wrote a review about it.

I'm still not going to write a proper review, because it's been too long since I read it and I won't remember the details. But, for my own benefit in the event that this bo...more
Eric Althoff
All cliches were once new. Yet even in Bram Stoker's day, vampire lore had already been around for centuries (indeed, Stoker plundered earlier, though more forgotten, writers on the subject). It is all here in "Dracula": the dark and stormy night, the castle, the funny Eastern European accent, the sexualized nature of vampirism. We've seen it so many countless times by now that we forget that the horror of it all was once fresh...and still is.

"Dracula" remains fresh. Told as an epistlery through...more
F.R.
I’ll be honest, I’ve only actually read ‘Dracula’ once before – when I was twenty or so – and didn’t really think much of it. Jonathan Harker’s opening narrative seemed to me, then, slow and uninvolving and I believe I thought the rest of the book not much of an improvement. One of the joys of art – be it books, films or music – is that you can come back to something with fresh eyes at a later point in your life and appreciate it in a whole different way. ‘Dracula’, this time around, has been a...more
Gwen
I think I have something of a thing for epistolary novels. The conceit that the scenes of this book were transcribed from the characters' own personal journals, letters, and even phonograph recordings, and the mention of Mina transcribing the materials of the novel from shorthand being part of the plot were really nice touches.

There are some things which stretch credulity of this being a series of real letters and journal entries, however. Such as the idea that the characters would write down wo...more
Terence
Nov 04, 2011 Terence rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Gothic horror fans; vampirophiles
I first read Dracula in the tenth or eleventh grade; I still own the Signet paperback edition (which makes it almost 30 years old). It started a love affair with the vampire that had me reading some really crappy stuff in my late high school/early college years. It also had me reading some very good stuff - Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Suzy McKee Charnas, Les Daniels, etc.

When I saw that one of my libraries had it in a Playaway version (read by Robert Whitfield), and I was looking for something to list...more
Paul
This mighty volume should stand apart from all the thousand editions of Dracula because of its great beauty and because of the many interesting, witty, alarming and plain bonkers annotations which would the the main reason it's called The Annotated Dracula.
In 2008 an even more annotated edition was published, by some other people entirely, and that too is gorgeous and devoutly to be requested as a Christmas present. It's called The New Annotated Dracula, to distinguish itself from this one.
So,...more
Yomna hosny
I picked this up out of obligation, I confess. I didn't expect it to hold my attention but it did!

The story begins when Jonathan Harker travels to Transylvania on business with Count Dracula. And pointedly ignores several signs that seem to point him in the opposite direction. He becomes Dracula's prisoner as he slowly begins to uncover the horror of his situation.

When you read this book, keep in mind that people in 1897 were not as vampire saturated as we are. So the things you might expect fro...more
Brian
I found this book for sale at Skylight Books in Los Angeles, CA for a great price in late September and decided to take the Dracula challenge. It is a large textbook style edition, filled to the brim with annotations and more reference material then you would ever need about the the world that is, Dracula. The vampire myth had already been established to readers by the mid 1890's but this was the first time the world was introduced to the Count. Not sure what to expect, I jumped in with reckless...more
Concannon
[Please note that this is not so much a review as it is a collection of my various thoughts upon finishing the book.]

Okay, so, here's the thing. I was just browsing through other reviews, and most of them start with, "I don't usually read horror novels..." or something to that degree. But I feel like Dracula isn't really horror, even though it is categorized as such. Classically it is, of course it is. It's a prime example of a Gothic novel. But never at any point while I was reading it was I ho...more
jzhunagev
More Than Bats, Castles, and Fangs
(A Book Review of Bram Stoker's Dracula)

Conceivably, no other single work in horror fiction has had a greater impact than Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Published in 1897, Stoker’s vision of the vampire, based from a Romanian folklore, has experienced repeated resurgence from time out of mind and had been imitated countless times in books, films and television (even video games) making Count Dracula probably one of the most iconic villains apart from Satan. As the Undea...more
Erin
4.5 stars

It's easy to see why this book made such an eternal impression. From the gothic ambience of the fog, castle, wolves, the Victorian language and repressed times melding with the twisted foreign dangers, the courageous men surrounding their "protected" and somewhat sheltered women, Dracula wasn't the first vampire book but it was the more influential and memorable.

The first half left me riveted. There were genuinely eerie moments, which is surprising to me since it's 18th century literatu...more
Fatima
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Christine Grant
For the life of me I can't understand why anyone would like this book. It is one of the most tedious reads I've ever read! First I should say that after reading Twilight I though I'd better read the original, really just for fun.

The first part of the book is exciting, and shows promise of a good story. Count Dracula is evil, secretive, and clever. Jonathon Harker, from London on business to Count Dracula, visits him in Transylvania. He sees first hand what the Count is like and that part is inte...more
Werner
Apr 11, 2008 Werner rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Any fan of vampire fiction, or of supernatural fiction in general
Actually, I read Dracula in a different edition than the Norton one (and so can't comment on that edition's critical features). I'd read a dumbed-down kid's adaptation of it as a child; but when I was in the process of writing my own vampire novel, I wanted to read the real thing, just to experience the roots of the literary tradition. I'm glad that I did!

Of course, Stoker's isn't the first treatment of the vampire theme in literature, though it became the first one to have world-wide popularity...more
Dhawa
Bram Stoker's Dracula is a literary genius. It is dark, has romance, an underlying love-story, is layered, much better than the tweenage vampire novels of today. It takes guts to read.

Although, some say the style of the writer is a bit hard to follow, I think it suits the storyline as is. For the story is hard to follow and has layers of information that can only be discerned by reading and re-reading. A HP style of adventurous writing would certainly do it no justice.

Bram Stoker's Dracula is a...more
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 99 100 next »
topics  posts  views  last activity   
Reading the Classics: Dracula, part 6; ch 24-end of book 14 60 15 de May 06:34  
Reading the Classics: Dracula, part 5; ch 19-23 6 44 15 de May 06:29  
The Page Turners: Dracula 3 17 10 de May 07:20  
Vampires, Werewol...: Dracula 11 13 1 de May 01:52  
Goodreads Librari...: Better Description 3 52 28 de Abr 08:46  
Chapter Chatter: "Dracula" by Bram Stoker 1 3 15 de Abr 00:24  
Reading the Classics: Dracula, part 4; ch 14-18 4 44 14 de Abr 10:16  
Dracula (Paperback)
Dracula (Paperback)
Dracula (Paperback)
Dracula (Paperback)
Dracula (Paperback)

6988
He was born Abraham Stoker in 1847 at 15 Marino Crescent – then as now called "The Crescent" – in Fairview, a coastal suburb of Dublin, Ireland. His parents were Abraham Stoker and the feminist Charlotte Mathilda Blake Thornely. Stoker was the third of seven children. Abraham and Charlotte were members of the Clontarf Church of Ireland parish and attended the parish church (St. John the Baptist lo...more
More about Bram Stoker...
Dracula's Guest and Other Weird Tales Lair of the White Worm The Jewel of Seven Stars Dracula's Guest The Judge's House

Share This Book

Your website
100 trivia questions
7 quizzes
More quizzes & trivia...
“We learn from failure, not from success!” 661 people liked it
“There is a reason why all things are as they are.” 240 people liked it
More quotes…