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  2. Jan 2, 2022 · Write Like Bram Stoker. 1. Throw in the extraordinary suddenly; 2. Show character’s reactions and thoughts; 3. Link character with keywords; 4. Use only letters, journals, clippings; 5. Have other people hint at evil your hero is facing; 6. Make your hero’s plans fail

    • Seth Tan
    • Rachel Scheller
    • That Harker’s diary is kept in “shorthand” immediately reveals something of the man’s personality: With shorthand, he can record his impressions rapidly.
    • Stoker, had he been writing in our era, might well have launched Dracula far later into the story at a much more dramatic moment, giving us, perhaps, Harker’s escape from Castle Dracula.
    • Observe, writer, an absolutely masterful transition. Transitions get characters (and readers) from “there” to “here,” from “then” to “now.” It is easy to mess up transitions by thinking it necessary to detail every moment/movement between “there” and “here” and “then” and “now.”
    • It is with Harker’s little note to self that he begins to really come alive. This little note of domesticity reveals much of just who Husbandly Harker is.
  3. Jennifer Bogut. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. Scholars tend to agree that Stoker's inspiration for writing Dracula was the real-life story of Vlad the Impaler, a notorious historical figure...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DraculaDracula - Wikipedia

    Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker, published in 1897. An epistolary novel, the narrative is related through letters, diary entries, and newspaper articles. It has no single protagonist and opens with solicitor Jonathan Harker taking a business trip to stay at the castle of a Transylvanian nobleman, Count Dracula.

    • Bram Stoker
    • 418
    • 1897
    • May 26, 1897
  5. Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker published in 1897. Derived from vampire legends, it became the basis for an entire genre of literature and film. It follows the vampire Count Dracula from his castle in Transylvania to England, where he is hunted while turning others into vampires.

  6. Jan 9, 2019 · By Maria Popova. A quarter century before his now-classic epistolary novel Dracula catapulted Abraham “BramStoker (November 8, 1847–April 20, 1912) into literary celebrity, the twenty-four-year-old aspiring author used the epistolary form for a masterpiece of a different order.

  7. Dracula. by Bram Stoker. Buy Study Guide. Dracula Study Guide. The first edition of Dracula was published in June 1897. As late as May of that year, Stoker was still using his original working title for the novel, The Un-Dead. "Undead," a word now commonly used in horror novels and movies, was a term invented by Stoker.

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