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Bram Stoker es un niño enfermizo que apenas sale de su casa.
Una noche, la fiebre que le asalta casi a diario lo lleva a las puertas de la muerte. Su niñera, Ellen Crone, echa a todo el mundo de la habitación del pequeño y lo salva por medios que nadie conoce. Tras este episodio Bram se recupera, y crece su fascinación por Ellen. Él y su hermana Matilda descubren cosas muy extrañas de la niñera y antes de que puedan hablar con ella, ésta desaparece de sus vidas… Obsesionado con ella, quince años más tarde los hermanos vuelven a reunirse para encontrarla y sus caminos se cruzan con el del Conde
Drácula...
Inspirada por notas y textos escritos por el propio Stoker, la precuela de Drácula revela no sólo el origen de Drácula y el de Bram Stoker, sino la historia de la enigmática mujer que les conecta.
523 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 2, 2018
“It is believed that the strongest of them can assume any form, be it bat, wolf, swirling mist, even human. They can appear young, old, or any age between. Some can manipulate the elements, producing fog, storms, crashing thunder. Their motives remain unknown, but one thing is clear: they leave a trail of death in their wake, thinking no more of a human life than we would the life of a fly.”Dacre Stoker knows a thing or two about vampires, Dracula in particular, given that his great-grand-uncle was none other than Bram Stoker. Dacre has had non-literary careers of his own, but for a while now has picked up the family business and been writing, not only about his illustrious ancestor, but (with some assistance from writing partners) fiction relating to you know who. He wrote a sequel to Dracula a few years back, incorporating Bram as a character. This time he has written a prequel.




“It is clear he was meant to die as a child, yet his alliance with this unholy creature has garnered him more years; a deal with the Devil, possibly worse, if such a thing is imaginable..”When Bram and Matilda investigate Nanna Ellen’s room and follow her into the countryside, they confirm her to be a preternatural being . Even with the supernatural threat she carries, they have developed a caring relationship with her, especially Bram, who has a deep extrasensory connection. The authors have decidedly followed the modern acceptance that not all monsters should be evil, and perhaps there is a watchful, even protective, connection with her.


“I fell still and peered up at the forbidding castle. The weathered stones dripped with ivy and moss. As I focused my eyes, I spotted tiny ants crawling over the surface, skittering this way and that, unnaturally active considering the frosty air, with a purpose known only to them. There were spiders, too, hundreds of them, spinning their wicked webs amongst the leaves of ivy in hopes of snaring flies.”
