Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress"'s Reviews > Dracula

Dracula by Bram Stoker
My rating:
didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing
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1570669
's review
Mar 18, 10

5 of 5 stars
bookshelves: started-but-put-down, classic-horror, favorites, owned-copy, epistolary-narrative, vampire, occult-detective, heroine-i-adore, hero-to-die-for
Recommended for: Vampire fans
Read in October, 2009, read count: 1.5

** spoiler alert ** I highly recommend reading this to any fans of the vampire genre. It is a commitment and investment for the reader, but it is worthwhile. While Dracula is not the 1st vampire novel/story, it has firmly established many of the conventions of the vampire genre. I must say that no movie version I have watched does this justice. Bram Stoker's Dracula might have been a somewhat faithful rendition, but it took unforgivable liberties with the relationship between Mina and Dracula, and downplayed the deep, abiding love between Mina and Jonathan. In addition, it portrayed Dracula as a seductive, lovelorn and sympathetic character. He is none of these. Dracula is a complete and utter fiend. He is unrelenting evil, and I spent this whole book waiting for him to get what he deserved.

I love the use of letters and correspondence to tell the story. It added an authenticity to this story by revealing the narrative through written details of events. One would think that this would create a distance between the reader and the story, but strangely it does not. Instead it infuses the story with a human element, as we see things unfold through the eyes of the humans who witnessed everything. In addition, the diary entries from Jonathan Harker, Mina Murray (soon to be Harker), Lucy Westenra, and John Seward show the emotional impact of the characters to the horror of Dracula.

Dracula is very much a Victorian work. It is clear what the mores were at that time in reading this story. It is also evident how society is changing as time speeds towards the 20th Century (this book was published in 1896). The attitudes towards women as sweet, beloved creatures who should be loved and adored is very much in evidence. However, Mr. Stoker took the time to show that Mina has a powerful role and usefulness beyond what was expected of her as a woman of her times. In fact, she plays a very pivotal role in this story. Because of the connection between Dracula and herself, she cannot be relegated to a second class citizen in this story. In addition, her view of the situation shows much about how Dracula managed to wreak his reign of terror over poor Lucy and how devastated Jonathan was from his early encounter with Dracula. Mina turns out to be a real heroine in this story. She is very resourceful, and her methods are a great help in the process of understanding what Dracula is, and tracking him down. I felt for her when she was under his thrall, because her love for Jonathan was true, as well as her abhorrence of the evil of Dracula and how it had affected her. Those scenes added a psychological component to the horror element in this book.

This book is not a thrill a minute book. It might be a horror story, but it's also a crime novel, in that the group composed of Drs. Van Helsing and Seward, Jonathan and Mina Harker, Quincy Morris, and Arthur Holmwood spend much time trying to track and defeat their prey, Dracula. Readers should approach this story with this in mind. There are some moments that are truly unnerving and scary, all the same, but they are used with good effect. I would be reading right along, and then something really scary would happen all of a sudden. When my heart rate went back to normal and I fell back into the procedural-type narrative, another creepy moment would occur. Thus, my investment of diligent reading paid off, for those scary moments were quite suspenseful.

Readers should also be aware that the characters tend to be along sentimental lines. They are good, decent people. They cry and feel sorrow. The men might be brave, but they are not afraid to break down and sob out their anguish. I admired each of the protagonists that I was supposed to admire: Mina, Jonathan, John/Jack Seward, Van Helsing, Arthur, Quincy, and the poor, unfortunate Lucy. Each of them invest their heart and life into tracking and destroying the beast. This might strike a modern reader as being too good to be true. But in the historical context, I didn't have trouble with it. I might expect different characterizations for a modern vampire novel.

I found that issues that I had with the recent movie adaptations of Dracula did not exist in this novel. Mina is not played as the good, innocent foil for the sexually adventurous and slightly wanton Lucy. Lucy is a sweet girl who was preyed on and destroyed by Dracula. Mina is not a fickle woman who would abandon her true love for the seductive wiles of the vampire Dracula. That always bothered me about the movies. I didn't see why poor Lucy was deserving of what happened to her. Even if she had been a wanton, I couldn't say she deserved her demise at Dracula's hands. Reading about her decline, death and resurgence as a vampire was extremely difficult, not to mention the effect it had on the loved ones she left behind. Additionally, I dislike how throwaway the love that Mina had for Jonathan is portrayed in the movies. I'm glad it was not this way in the book.

Renfield is a character who has been played for laughs in many of the Dracula adaptations and knockoffs. In the original novel, he is a character to be pitied. He was seduced by Dracula, subsequently losing his reason. There are glimpses of his formerly formidable intellect and sanity, as well as a sense of right and wrong that shone through, causing me to feel sorry for him. Particularly when he warns Seward not to keep him in the Asylum. If only Seward had listened.


Drs. Seward and Van Helsing are physicians and men of science with profound respect for each other, but who tend to look at situations differently. Dr. Seward is very much a rationalist. He tries to approach Lucy's strange illness from a completely scientific perspective, yet Dr. Van Helsing is a learned man who is trained in modern medical science (as well as a pioneer in medicine), but gives credence toward the ancient beliefs, and whose knowledge is shored up by his faith in God. The struggle that Seward faces in having to accept that Lucy's demise is due to a powerful supernatural entity is evident as we read his journal entries. Van Helsing is seen through the descriptions of the diary entries of Mina, Jonathan, and Seward. I found Van Helsing quite the character. Without a doubt, he's my favorite in this book, although I found some of his lines hard to read because of the fact that it is written as though English was his second language (which it was). He is a man of compassion, although with a tendency towards bluntness. I like that he's able to think his way out of difficult situations, but also relies on faith against his demonic enemy.

The movies tend to emasculate Jonathan, but he is a very strong character to have survived his imprisionment in Dracula's castle, with his body and his sanity intact. His conviction to protect Mina at all costs, despite knowing the depths of the power of his enemy speaks to me. He might not be a he-man, but he is definitely a worthy man mate for Mina.

Arthur Holmwood is a noble, yet he is not protrayed as a prig. He is very down to earth, and willing to do his part to destroy Dracula and to see justice done for his beloved Lucy. I admit I tended to picture Cary Elwes (an old crush of mine who played Holmwood in Bram Stoker's Dracula) about 50% of the time. He definitely rose to the occasion, despite the seemingly insane ravings of Van Helsing about Un-dead creatures, and the need to drive a stake through the heart and cut off the head of his beloved.

Quincy Morris embodies the Texan spirit in the very best of ways. His devotion to Lucy and later Mina causes him to risk his life in the struggle against Dracula.

Don't look for a sexy creature of the night in this book. Dracula is a horrid, evil beast. When he meets his demise, I didn't feel one iota of sympathy. I was cheering instead. It's refreshing to read about evil vamps without any charisma for once (and this from a paranormal romance fanatic).

This book is a delicious work to have read. I'm glad I attempted it when I could fully appreciate its genius. I freely admit when I read it in high school, I wasn't ready for it. It took me the better part of the week, but I found myself eager to keep reading, despite the somewhat antiquated language. I wanted to see how things would unfold. You might think, "Well Dracula is old hat. I've seen many vampire movies. It's all the same." I'd tell you, not so. You should read this book if you're a vampire fan. You will find a resonance that is lacking in most of the modern vampire fare, with its classic setting, genuine characters, and the tangible essence of the unearthly evil of the vampire. And to think that Stoker wasn't quite as glutted on the rich milk of the vampire legends as us modern vamp fans are. Maybe that's why this book felt so authentic to me.

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Quotes Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Liked

Bram Stoker
“We learn from failure, not from success!”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“Listen to them - children of the night. What music they make.”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“Oh, the terrible struggle that I have had against sleep so often of late; the pain of the sleeplessness, or the pain of the fear of sleep, and with such unknown horror as it has for me! How blessed are some people, whose lives have no fears, no dreads; to whom sleep is a blessing that comes nightly, and brings nothing but sweet dreams.”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“Despair has its own calms”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“There was a deliberate voluptuousness that was both thrilling and repulsive.
And as she arched her neck she actually licked her lips like an animal till I could see in the moonlight the moisture
Then lapped the white, sharp teeth.
Lower and lower went her head. I closed my eyes in a languorous ecstasy and waited. ”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“There are darknesses in life and there are lights, and you are one of the lights, the light of all lights"
Dr. Van Helsing to Mina”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“The last I saw of Count Dracula was his kissing his hand to me, with a red light of triumph in his eyes, and with a smile that Judas in hell might be proud of.”
Bram Stoker, Dracula

Bram Stoker
“Remember my friend, that knowledge is stronger than memory, and we should not trust the weaker”
Bram Stoker, DRACULA


Reading Progress

10/24/2009 page 325 3 comments
10/23/2009 page 250 "Van Helsing meets Mina for the first time."
10/22/2009 page 183 "The iconic Van Helsing is on the scene. It's so great to read a book which is a foundation for one of my all time fiction genres. Vampires!"
10/21/2009 page 98 "We meet Mina and Lucy." 2 comments
10/20/2009 page 72 2 comments
10/20/2009 page 36 "Jonathan is a bit thick at times. I guess he hasn't watched/read all the vampire stuff I have. Bless his heart." 5 comments

Comments (showing 1-44 of 44) (44 new)

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Shannon Ugh, I've been meaning to start this for ages - I want to read it before I read The Historian, but I just can't seem to find the time to get started :S


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" I read some of this years back but put it down. I'm really loving it this time around. I know what you mean, though. It's taken me years to pick this up again. And I'm such a vampire fan!


Shannon Sounds like me and Lord of the Rings! :)


message 4: by Tina (last edited Oct 19, 2009 12:15pm) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Tina This is one of my top ten books. I had to read it my Freshmen year in college and had no idea how good it was going to be. I love how the tension ratchets up and up and up. Great storytelling.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" I haven't read the LOTR either. I will...one day.

You are so right about the tension, Tina. Since I've been a vamp fiction since I was just about an infant, I'm sitting here yelling at Jonathan to 'get a clue.' The poor guy has no idea what he's in for.


message 6: by Michelle (new)

Michelle Styles Read this earlier this year. It is absolutely brill. Minna is great asis Van Hesling


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" I'm loving it so far. The lines in this book are classic and enduring.

P. 54

"You yourself never loved; you never love!' says one of Dracula's brides.

'Yes, I too can love; you yourselves can tell it from the past. Is it not so?' says Dracula.

This is going to be a five star read for me. :)


message 8: by Rae (new) - added it

Rae It's awesome, isn't it? :-D I'm also surprised at how much of a heroine Mina is in the book. :-)

I agree, though, great quotables!


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" I'm on page 98 right now. I have just read Lucy's correspondence with Mina about her suitors. I feel bad for Lucy, knowing what's coming for her.


message 10: by Rae (new) - added it

Rae I agree, it is sad.


Susan I listened to the audio of this not too long ago. The narrator was Greg Wise and - forget the woman's name - and I enjoyed it so much. That being said, I did find the middle part to lag a bit but it really picked up toward the end.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" There are parts I have to reread because of the Victorian way of writing, but I'm actually pretty engrossed. The parts with Van Helsing speaking are somewhat confusing because his English is very idiomatic.
I'm picturing all the people in my head as unknowns, not the actors who have played the parts in the many Dracula movies I've seen. It's nice to see them the way Mr. Stoker envisioned.


message 13: by Tina (new) - rated it 5 stars

Tina Rae wrote: "It's awesome, isn't it? :-D I'm also surprised at how much of a heroine Mina is in the book. :-)

I agree, though, great quotables!"


Mina totally rocks in this.




Susan Danielle, I would highly recommend, at some point, listening to the audio version. Greg Wise has such a lovely speaking voice as does the woman reader.

I give you alot of credit for undertaking the reading of this. While I keep saying to myself, literature is good for me, I find I just can't get through some of the master authors. Don't get me started on Henry James and his paragraph-long sentences... :)


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" I really like the classic horror, so this was on my must read list. I probably won't read much of the serious classics, to be honest with you. I'm not a big fan of literary fiction. I read my share and I'm done with it. But genre fiction, old or new, sign me up. :)

I will have to consider listening to the audio version. I bet it's delightfully creepy.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Tina and Rae, I am loving how Mina was such a good friend to Lucy. The part with Lucy succumbing is about breaking my heart. She's such a sweet girl.


message 17: by Sandi (new) - added it

Sandi Wonderful review!


message 18: by Rane (new)

Rane Awesome Review Danielle!


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Thanks Sandi and Rane. I'm glad I finally got to read this influential book.


message 20: by Rae (new) - added it

Rae Awesome review indeed, Danielle! Now that you mention it, the movies do tend to emasculate Jonathan and hypersexualized Lucy. I wonder if it all started with the Lugosi Dracula and just continued on down the ages? Maybe trying to dim him a bit to make Dracula more masculine in a way? Hmm.

Great points though. I couldn't agree more. :-)


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Thanks, Rae. I think they have emasculated Jonathan perhaps to make Dracula seem more appealing and romantic, the obvious choice. It's unfortunate how they made Lucy into the 'bad girl,' like being killed by Dracula was her just deserts. Not cool. Almost a double standard that Drac is cool and sexy, and Lucy deserves to be punished for her sexiness. Okay I'm shutting up now. :)


Auntee Great review Danielle! I remember reading this one a long, long time ago and enjoying it too.:)


message 24: by Sandi (new) - added it

Sandi I was in the library today and they had a copy of Dracula The Un-Dead, the new book by Bram Stoker's great-grandnephew, Dacre Stoker. I think it just came out within the last two weeks and it's been getting a lot of buzz. I checked it out along with a copy of the original. I think I've read Bram Stoker's classic before, but I'm not really sure.


Minnie Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "I'm loving it so far. The lines in this book are classic and enduring.

P. 54

"You yourself never loved; you never love!' says one of Dracula's brides.

'Yes, I too can love; you yourselves ..."


This surprised me, too. Dracula loved?
I read part of your review and stopped midway. I was looking for something I felt missing so far--bringing Dracula out of hiding. You got me with Mina's role, although it was hinted at when she went to marry and nurse Jonathan. She is and said she is strong. That should be a nice little cat and mouse game between Mina and Dracula.

I wanted to read the Classic Bram Stoker novel to get a feel for the original 1897 myth. I'm writing a vampire novel. Yeah, I know, so are many others. I like to think I'm combining the 1897 myth with contempory times.

I'm still reading (at p.171).




Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Oh, sorry Minnie. I didn't see your comment. I think that Dracula is great source material for a vampire novel. It has the crucial elements, in my opinion. Although I love Twilight, I confess I like the dark, deadly, menacing vampires in stories the best. Vampires are and should be predators, IMHO.


message 27: by Tina (new) - rated it 5 stars

Tina Great review Danielle. I had already read this book twice by the time Francis Ford Coppola's version of the movie hit the screen. And I was soo stoked (ha ha no pun intended) that he was making the movie. But I was so disappointed with what made it up on screen. So much was butchered.


message 28: by Minnie (last edited Mar 18, 2010 01:30pm) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Minnie Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "Oh, sorry Minnie. I didn't see your comment. I think that Dracula is great source material for a vampire novel. It has the crucial elements, in my opinion. Although I love Twilight, I confess I l..."


It's so great to read a book which is a foundation for one of my all time fiction genres. Vampires!"

I totally agree that's why I'm reading Bram Stoker's version.

You're not comparing Twilight with Dracula are you? Please tell me why? I'm curious.

I'm writing my second vampire story--the first was a short story and my first baby--and followed my mind about the creature. And he ain't all bad. Ha! I've posted a draft chapter in my writing section--Minnie Estelle Miller. Take a look at Lucien when you have time.


Susan Hmmm, I didn't know Dracula was into retail...


message 30: by Amy or "Ames" (last edited Jul 14, 2010 05:47am) (new) - added it

Amy or "Ames" Susan wrote: "Hmmm, I didn't know Dracula was into retail..."

I didn't know either.


Astrid Reyes I read this a few months ago (I'm 13, almost 14) and I absolutely loved it!! And I agree with you about movies changing Mina's feelings towards Dracula, yet I have not seen any Dracula movies and i really don't want to, bot until they make a beautiful and truthful version of it. I can't wait to be 10 years older and read this with new eyes.
- from a big Jane Austen and Emily Bronte fan


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Hi Margo. Glad you enjoyed it. :)


Abigail Great review. This is one of my all time favorite books, and one of the few I will give a five star rating to. I think anyone who hasn't read the original owes it to themself.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Thanks, Abigail. I agree that it's required reading for a vampire fan.


message 35: by Minnie (last edited Jan 09, 2011 02:49pm) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Minnie Astrid wrote: "I read this a few months ago (I'm 13, almost 14) and I absolutely loved it!! And I agree with you about movies changing Mina's feelings towards Dracula, yet I have not seen any Dracula movies and i..."

I love Dracula. I read it many years ago, read it again several months ago, and will probably read it again. I write vampire stories so I'm interested in how other writers treat the vampire. I'm presently reading Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire. I pay particular attention to how mortals are turned into vampires. Science and medical research are discovering some interesting facts about cells living even after death.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Minnie, I like how each writer puts their own spin on the vampire legend, although there are some executions that resonate higher than others.


message 37: by Minnie (last edited Jan 09, 2011 07:37pm) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Minnie Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "Minnie, I like how each writer puts their own spin on the vampire legend, although there are some executions that resonate higher than others."

Yes, you're correct. I read your review thoroughly. Great job. It all came back to me.

I've been holding this for a while trying to decide to investigate further. See what you think.

Long for This World: The Strange Science of Immortality
By Jonathan Weiner
310 pp, $27.99
New York, NY, Harper Collins Publishers, 2010
ISBN-13: 978-0-0607-6536-1


JAMA. 2010;304(17):1961. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.1602

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

Death has been the one certainty for every person born since humans first appeared on earth, and ways to avoid death have probably been discussed and debated for almost as long. Even though human beings possess mortal bodies, they have always longed for immortality.

In Long for This World: The Strange Science of Immortality, Jonathan Weiner reviews the scientific search for human immortality. Weiner, a noted popular science writer, has also won a Pulitzer Prize for previous work. He clearly has a passion for this topic. Although this book seems to be meant for readers without a science or medical background, the information included on scientific advances in the study of cell biology is written in such a fashion that professionals not conversant with this research will also learn a great deal without feeling that the science has been oversimplified.



message 38: by JenC (new) - rated it 4 stars

JenC I have to say I love reading your reviews.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Jen, thanks so much!


Mackerel Skies Greetings. I came to discuss how I felt about the book but you have left me nothing to say - this is a fabulously well thought out and written discussion of all the things that combine to make this a wonderful book to read.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" Thanks, Miscellany. This was a great book!


message 42: by Mupples (new)

Mupples Great review. I agree it's impotant for people into the vampire genres to read this. Back when vampires were really evil, and not creatures for teenage girls to fall in love with. Your review reminded me of how much I enjoyed it a few years ago. :) Keep them coming!


message 44: by Rose (new)

Rose Great review! When it comes to horror I prefer the Gothic side of the genre--maybe because there's an actual plot, not just blood and guts flying everywhere. With winter coming I should read a good Gothic tale, I might re-read Dracula.


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