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Dracula
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Feb - Apr 15 Quarterly Read: Dracula
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Colleen
(last edited Feb 20, 2015 05:09AM)
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It slows down the read but it certainly adds to it


In this editiin I quite enjoyed the Illustrations from Varney the Vampire peppered throughout.
Klinger seems to have a lot of respect for both Anne Rices books and the Buffy series.







The actual documentation left by Stoker for his conceptualization and writing of the Dracula novel are a collection of Notes, prepared circa 1890-1896, and held by the Rosenbach Museum and Library in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and an interim manuscript prepared sometime before the published version of 1897. The interim manuscript has a private owner, Mr. Paul G. Allen. Klinger had reviewed all of these documents for the annotated volume published by Norton. It seems the "Harker Papers" are only a tag used by him for interviews we are to presume were made by Stoker with real people, and who were involved in real events described in Dracula. Gasp! Klinger suggests that the later Stoker Notes of record were prepared from those interviews, after changing names to protect identities of the real people. Any original set of "Harker Papers" predating Stoker's Notes are thus only Klinger's "gentle fiction," as he says obliquely in the Preface. It's still a haunting good read.



http://io9.com/5911728/which-fictiona...

There were stretches where the pace seemed to slow for me and I started to lose interest. From time to time during those stretches I couldn't hold back the blasphemous thought that Van Helsing was a bit of a windbag! I also got a bit tired of the effusive admiration they all had for each other and of some of the melodramatic aspects. I realise this is typical of the period and so not a fault, but I guess it did keep me from enjoying it as much as I had hoped to.
That said, I didn't dislike it. I liked the epistolary form and loved the build up at the start where Jonathon is in the castle and we are introduced to the Count. There were other great passages too (the Russian captain's log being one).
I listened to the Audible version and with one exception the cast was excellent - Alan Cumming and Tim Curry especially didn't disappoint.