SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

This topic is about
Dracula
What Else Are You Reading?
>
"Dracula" by Bram Stoker (Daily Read May-Nov)

Read entry 1 of this guy Jonathan's travel blog. He sure seems like a judging fellow. Maybe he didn't get out much before. Hope his travels teach him a little about the world. I'm sure this Mina girl would appreciate it when he returns a little more mature, he seems into her.



Loving the description of all the paprika laced food. Rather interesting tying in imagery of a spicy red spice right away. Clever!

I don't know where to find mamaliga (meat-stuffed eggplant). I may have to make it myself.

yes and "more barbarian than others" 😒😒

💯

"do you know what day it is?" On my saying that I did not understand, she went on:
"It is the eve of St. George's Day. (view spoiler)
Now I would not usually pick it up, but we've already had St. George's Day here, (it fills up the tiny space in my calendar)- it's not tomorrow. In England our patron Saint's Day is 23rd April! So I looked it up, and it said that in Dracula, Bram Stoker used the Western Gregorian calendar, because St. George's Day is the date observed by the Eastern Orthodox churches in that area, and of that era.

Our dog Wolfie came from near the Carpathian mountains - it took 3 days to England in a lorry from Romania :) I did wonder if he would understand the howling dogs it talked about.

It starts with a diary entry from Bistritz (it’s Bystrzyca now) and I was there yesterday! OMG what are the odds! It’s a beautiful little town with some medieval churches and towers for sightseeing and two little marketplaces.
I was on holiday in the mountains nearby and it was the closest place with an ATM XD Just got home.
Funny thing is that Frankenstein (now Ząbkowice) is quite close to Bistritz. There is the Museum of Frankenstein where we have learned how an article about grave robbers from Frankenstein had inspired Mary Shelley.
***
Edit: Ahhh, but it’s different Bistritz.

Audible+ Dracula: https://www.audible.com/pd/Dracula-Au...
May 4:
I suspect he's making these superstitions and exaggerations of the locals up to make his story seem more interesting. I mean, anybody in his right mind would at least do some more research into this weird Count and his castle after hearing all those warnings. If he wants to seem especially brave or dutiful, it isn't working for me.
I think he should have started a food blog instead, not sure if travel blogging is really his thing.
I suspect he's making these superstitions and exaggerations of the locals up to make his story seem more interesting. I mean, anybody in his right mind would at least do some more research into this weird Count and his castle after hearing all those warnings. If he wants to seem especially brave or dutiful, it isn't working for me.
I think he should have started a food blog instead, not sure if travel blogging is really his thing.

Yes, sort of. If you look at Ed's first post, and follow the 3rd link, you will get each daily chunk sent to your email. We are still only part way through the 1st chapter, although we've had 2 days :)

https://www.preceden.com/timelines/29...

It is amazing how many different locations and cultures around the world celebrate him. And yet, there is a great deal of confusion about who he was, when he lived (and how many times), who killed him (and how many times), and how many dragons he slew (0 or 1).
According to some versions, he came back to life after being killed. And then was killed and came back to life 2 more times, or even more.
(PS: I've added Anna's link into the first post.)

I did the same right before coming to the thread! I made little labels so I can follow his path.

2. The Readers Review (another GR group, for classics) read this for Halloween a few years ago.
Background information:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Week 1: Chapters 1-5
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

and ran across this; it has some historical info on Transylvania:
Mina Murray's Recipe Book
https://colonelmustardinthekitchen.wo...

If you insist on finding a translation, you could look for English translations of the Swedish or Icelandic book Powers of Darkness: The Lost Version of Dracula.
This version is thought to be a translation of the first draft. It spends a longer time in the castle. "One of the principal differences between Dracula and Makt Myrkranna is that the bulk of the latter concerns Harker's stay at Castle Dracula with the story that makes up the majority of Dracula appearing only a very abridged form. Harker's visit to Transylvania takes up 80% of Makt Myrkranna."
Swedish version:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powers_...
Icelandic version:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powers_...

Maybe that is why my egg this morning had 2 yolks.
May 5:
Glad to see Jonathan has not given up on the idea of food blogging. I'd like to read more about that instead of exaggerated descriptions of the superstitious locals. He sure is milking that trope. I do enjoy the little occasional info about the history and current state of the region, though, wish he would write more about those.
But man, those locals did seem really suspicious when they were trying to lure him away from the pass. I get the feeling they don't like this Count person. No wonder, I'd make up all sorts of scary stories too, about a guy living out there in those woods with those scary wolves, all by himself, apparently.
He seems nice enough, though, even carrying Jonathan's luggage himself. Maybe he's nicer to his guests than to the locals.
Glad to see Jonathan has not given up on the idea of food blogging. I'd like to read more about that instead of exaggerated descriptions of the superstitious locals. He sure is milking that trope. I do enjoy the little occasional info about the history and current state of the region, though, wish he would write more about those.
But man, those locals did seem really suspicious when they were trying to lure him away from the pass. I get the feeling they don't like this Count person. No wonder, I'd make up all sorts of scary stories too, about a guy living out there in those woods with those scary wolves, all by himself, apparently.
He seems nice enough, though, even carrying Jonathan's luggage himself. Maybe he's nicer to his guests than to the locals.
Here I was, thinking daily Dracula would be a five minute read each day, and then May 5th introduced itself. I got shy and ran away but I'll get to it before too long.


I was confused about the idea that the coachman seemed transparent at one point. But now our character has the idea that maybe the coachman and the count are the same person. Interesting possibility. The count certainly understood that May 5 was a day when normal people would be unwilling to travel about, yet he insisted on sending for his guest on that specific day.
I don't understand how he is able to cook and set the table and do all the other little duties so quickly on his own.

One of the foods most likely to cause nightmares was supposedly Welsh Rarebit. Windsor McCay was doing an almost surrealistic cartoon in the early 1900s called "Dream of the Rarebit Fiend".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_o...
And the 1902 book Welsh Rarebit Tales contains some weird fantasy and early examples of Sci-Fi stories. I think I'll try reading some of those.
So apparently Tumblr found this list serve, and now Bram Stoker is all over the internets, and I just found this letter he sent to Walt Whitman
https://www.themarginalian.org/2019/0...
https://www.themarginalian.org/2019/0...
not entirely relevant, but fan/thirst letters cannot be ignored! do we see Whitman's influence in Stoker's style?

I hadn’t noticed Jonathan Harker’s obsession with food before but now I definitely did! He should have given up on the idea of visiting Castle Dracula and started a food blog instead. “Travels through the cuisine of Eastern Europe: Fat but not exsanguinated”


I think our friend Harker is a bit... thick!
Books mentioned in this topic
Welsh Rarebit Tales (other topics)Powers of Darkness: The Lost Version of Dracula (other topics)
Dracula (other topics)
This novel is written as a series of letters and journal entries spanning May 3 to November 10. We will discuss each entry on the day it was written.
Rules:
* On May 3 we begin. You may discuss anything that happened in the May 3 journal entry starting on May 3.
* On May 4 we read the May 4 journal entry. You may discuss anything you read in the May 4 entry, or earlier entries.
* And so forth until the end on November 10.
* If you read further ahead, don't spoil anything.
* Feel free to start late and catch-up.
* The day begins at 00:01 am London time.
The first entries are on May 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, midnight (treat as May 9th), and 12.
Use any edition you want. Purchase a copy if you want, or use one of these:
Online at wikimedia:
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dracula
Online or download from Project Gutenberg:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/345
Optionally, you can sign-up with "Dracula Daily" to have each entry sent to you by e-mail here: https://draculadaily.substack.com/about
Dates per chapter given here, along with spoilers.
https://www.preceden.com/timelines/29...
(I am not a part of that substack project, but it did give me the idea to post this here.)