
Drácula
4.02
1,484,255 valoraciones·63,476 reseñas
Cuando Jonathan Harker viaja a Transilvania para ayudar al Conde Drácula con la compra de una casa en Londres, hace una serie de horribles descubrimientos sobre su cliente. Poco después, varios incidentes extraños se desarrollan en Inglaterra: un barco aparentemente sin tripulación naufraga en la co...
- páginas
- 488
- Format
- Paperback
- Publicado
- 1986-05-12
- Editorial
- Norton
- ISBN
- 9780393970128
Sobre el autor

Bram Stoker
52 libros · 0 seguidores
Irish-bornAbraham Stoker, known asBram, of Britain wrote the gothic horror novelDracula(1897).The feminist Charlotte Mathilda Blake Thornely Stoker at 15 Marino crescent, then as now called "the crescent," in Fairview, a coastal suburb of Dublin, Ireland, bore this third of seven children. The parents, members of churc...
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Calificación y Reseña
What do you think?
Reseñas de la comunidad
63,476 reseñas4.0
1,484,255 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Federico DN·11 years ago
What a Leech! London, 1890s. Jonathan Harker returns from Transylvania, a series of bizarre incidents start taking place all around Whitby soon after. Worst of all, a strange malady seems to be slowly draining the life out of the helpless Lucy. Mina, her most trusted friend, unable to help her. After some investigations it’s concluded the deed to be the sole work of a mysterious figure of the night, none other than Count Dracula himself. Jonathan Harker, Mina’s fiancé, and Professor Van Helsin...
daria ❀·3 years ago
i expected it to be gayer tbh
Lisa of Troy·3 years ago
Friend John, this should have been a short story!Dracula is a spooky story which begins with Jonathan Harker, an attorney who travels to Transylvania to help his client, Count Dracula, purchase a home in London. However, Dracula is behaving strangely. Will Jonathan make it out alive?Holy smokes! This book is B-O-R-I-N-G! No wonder there are so many Dracula books and movies because almost anyone else could have done it better!The book itself has an interesting format—it is told through various ch...
Anne·6 years ago
Shockingly, not a whole hell of a lot of vampire stuff up in this bitch.Mostly, it read like a dull travelogue with lots of emotions.Bro love everywhere.All the men loved all the women (platonically or otherwise) to the point they were willing to give their lives for whichever lucky lady was Dracula's snack at the time.It was quite the love fest. Quite frankly, I'm not sure I'm buying that, Stoker.And Dracula?Not since Gary Olman's beehived old woman portrayal have I been less scared of this cha...
Elle (ellexamines on TT & Substack)·7 years ago
I find Victorian horror so interesting as a microcosm of reaction to social norms of the time, to the buttoned-down and repressed social climate of the time, to the “new moral standards” of the church and the new questions brought up and hidden away by scientific thought. But under the fabric of late Victorian society lay wide ranges of change; the increased marriage rate and idea of the domestic sphere for women giving way to the New Woman, the upper class vs. lower class divide giving way to a...
Matthew·8 years ago
Two things about this book:1. It is a really great and creepy story that deserves classic status2. Everything is repeated soooooo much without any obvious benefit.Here is actual footage of Bram Stoker writing this novel:If Stoker had just got to the point, this book would have been much more exciting and suspenseful. I understand the exact same mysterious thing happens night after night. I understand that Dracula has some boxes of dirt. I get that you brought Winchester rifles along for protecti...
emma·9 years ago
Another case of me starting a review with no idea how to rate it. This book was…a ride.I think my professor put it best when he said, “Dracula is either really good or really sh*tty.” Okay, yes, I’m paraphrasing, but only a little.https://emmareadstoomuch.wordpress.co...This book is quite a feat, either way. You can read essentially ANY THEME into this novel: good and evil, race, religion, gender, science, wealth, power, abstinence, war, colonization. More, probably, but it’s a Monday and I had ...
megs_bookrack·10 years ago
Dracula is a truly timeless MASTERPIECE.Believe it or not, I am still unable to review this, one of my very favorite novels of all time. I annotated my most recent time reading it, in the hopes that it would help when it came to composing my final thoughts.Alas, what I am really struggling with is the idea of little ole' me 'reviewing' a masterpiece. I guess my goal is more to compel people to pick up this amazing piece of world literature and give it a shot, as opposed to providing an analysis ...
Jonathan Terrington·14 years ago
Dracula: the very name instantly brings to mind visions of vampires, stakes, garlic, and crucifixes. Yet, when one bothers to read the novel, it becomes self-evident how twisted modern vampire fiction now is.Vampires are not meant to inhabit the roles of 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 should, therefore, inspire the image of a villain...
SP
S.A. Parham·18 years ago
I was rather disappointed by this classic. It started out with promise, especially the Jonathan Harker bits. Then all the male characters descended into blubbering worshippers of the two female characters, and by the end of the novel, I was wishing Dracula could snack on all of them and be done with it. I kept having to put it aside and read chapters in between other books, but I managed to finish it at last.