Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. siblings: Sir Thornley Stoker. children: Irving Noel Thornley Stoker. Quotes By Bram Stoker Novelists. Height: 6'2" (188 cm ), 6'2" Males. Died on: April 20, 1912. place of death: London, England, United Kingdom. Cause of Death: Strokes. More Facts. You wanted to know. 1. What inspired Bram Stoker to write the novel "Dracula?"

    • who were thomas stoker's siblings names1
    • who were thomas stoker's siblings names2
    • who were thomas stoker's siblings names3
    • who were thomas stoker's siblings names4
  2. Mar 23, 2024 · Bram Stoker had six siblings - two sisters and four brothers. Their names were: Mathilda, Margaret, William, Thomas, Richard and George.

  3. People also ask

  4. Bram Stoker was descended from a protestant Dublin artisan family of humble origins. Between the 1780s and 1840s, over two generations the Stokers pulled themselves up by their boot-straps, to establish themselves as professional middle-class. View Bram Stoker’s family tree. The earliest proven Stoker ancestor that we can document is Bram’s grandfather, William Coates Stoker. 1780 was a […]

    • Life
    • Dracula
    • Novel Background
    • Plot Summary
    • "Dracula's Guest"
    • Historical Antecedents
    • Literary Antecedents
    • Literary Significance and Criticism
    • Popular Culture
    • Works

    Bram Stoker was born on November 8, 1847, at 15 Marino Crescent—then as now called "The Crescent"—in Clontarf, a coastal suburb of Dublin, Ireland. His parents were Abraham Stoker (born in 1799; married Stoker's mother in 1844; died on October 10, 1876) and the feministCharlotte Mathilda Blake Thornley (born in 1818; died in 1901). Stoker was the t...

    Stoker supplemented his income by writing a large number of sensational novels, but by far his most famous was the vampire tale Dracula featuring as its primary character the vampire, Count Dracula,which he published on May 18, 1897. Before writing Dracula,Stoker spent eight years researching European folklore and stories of vampires. Stoker's insp...

    Parts of the novel are set around the town of Whitby, where Stoker was living at the time. Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, authors such as H. Rider Haggard, Rudyard Kipling, Robert Louis Stevenson, Arthur Conan Doyle, and H.G. Wellswrote many tales in which fantastic creatures threatened the British Empire. Invasion literature was at a peak, and St...

    The novel is mainly composed of journal entries and letters written by several narrators who are also the novel's main protagonists; Stoker supplemented the story with occasional newspaper clippings to relate events not directly witnessed by the story's characters. The tale begins with Jonathan Harker, a newly qualified English solicitor, journeyin...

    In 1914, two years after Stoker's death, the short story "Dracula's Guest" was posthumously published. It was, according to most contemporary critics, the deleted first (or second) chapter from the original manuscriptand the one which gave the volume its name, but which the original publishers deemed unnecessary to the overall story. "Dracula's Gue...

    Although Draculais a work of fiction, it does contain some historical references. The historical connections with the novel and how much Stoker knew about the history are a matter of conjecture and debate. Following the publication of In Search of Dracula by Radu Florescu and Raymond McNally in 1972, the supposed connections between the historical ...

    Many of Stoker's biographers and literary critics have found strong similarities to the earlier Irish writer Sheridan le Fanu's classic of the vampire genre, Carmilla. In writing Dracula,Stoker may also have drawn on stories about the sídhe—some of which feature blood-drinking women. It has been suggested that Stoker was influenced by the history o...

    Dracula is an epistolary novel, written as a collection of diary entries, telegrams, and letters from the characters, as well as fictional clippings from the Whitby and London newspapers and phonograph cylinders. This literary style, made most famous by one of the most popular novels of the nineteenth century, The Woman in White (1860), was conside...

    The character of Count Dracula has remained popular over the years, and many films have used the character as a villain, while others have named him in their titles, such as Dracula's Daughter, The Brides of Dracula, and Zoltan, Hound of Dracula.Over 150 films feature Dracula in a major role, a number second only to Sherlock Holmes. Dracula has bee...

    Novels

    1. The Primrose Path(1875) 2. The Snake's Pass(1890) 3. The Watter's Mou' (1895) 4. The Shoulder of Shasta(1895) 5. Dracula(1897) 6. Miss Betty(1898) 7. The Mystery of the Sea(1902) 8. The Jewel of Seven Stars(1903) 9. The Man (AKA: The Gates of Life) (1905) 10. Lady Athlyne(1908) 11. Snowbound: The Record of a Theatrical Touring Party(1908) 12. The Lady of the Shroud(1909) 13. Lair of the White Worm(1911)

    Short story collections

    1. Under the Sunset(1881) 2. Dracula's Guest(1914) Published posthumously by Florence Stoker

    Uncollected stories

    1. Bridal of Dead (alternative ending to The Jewel of Seven Stars) 2. Buried Treasures 3. The Chain of Destiny 4. The Crystal Cup(1872)- published by 'The London Society' 5. The Dualitists; or, The Death Doom of the Double Born 6. The Fate of Fenella(1892), Chapter 10, "Lord Castleton Explains" only. 7. The Gombeen Man 8. In the Valley of the Shadow 9. The Man from Shorrox' 10. Midnight Tales 11. The Red Stockade 12. The Seer 13. The Judges House

  5. Feb 25, 2024 · Charlotte Matilda Thornley. mother. Sir William Thornley Stoker, MD. brother. Charlotte Matilda Stoker. sister. Thomas Stoker, Esq. I.C.S. brother. Margaret Dalrymple Stoker, of Ar... sister. Dr./Maj. George Stoker. brother. Surgn Lt. Col Richard Nugent Sto... brother. Sir Thomely Stoker, Sr. brother. About Bram Stoker.

  6. May 17, 2018 · Bram Stoker. Bram Stoker (1847-1912) is best known as the author of Dracula (1897), one of the most famous horror novels of all time. Abraham Stoker was born in Clontarf, Ireland in 1847. He was a sickly child, bedridden for much of his boyhood.

  7. George Blake (Bram’s Great-Uncle) In the 1798 Rebellion, ‘General’ George Blake led the Irish forces, estimated as 1,500 mainly pikemen and cavalry, in the Battle of Ballinamuck co. Longford, on 8th September 1798. General Humbert led the French force of 800. The Irish rebels were hopelessly ill equipped, armed mainly with pikes which ...

  1. People also search for