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A short story by "Dracula" author Bram Stoker was discovered in the archives of the National Library of Ireland in Dublin after being lost for 134 years.
The ending line of Bram Stoker's "Dracula" suggests that the protagonist, Jonathan Harker, has undergone personal growth and will come to understand t ...
The work by Bram Stoker, previously unknown to scholars, will be read and included in a book launched during Dublin’s annual Bram Stoker Festival.
Bram Stoker, who was born in Clontarf in Dublin and went on to be remembered for his work "Dracula," died in London on April 20, 1912.
As Halloween approaches, Count Dracula will inevitably resurface as one of the most iconic and enduring monsters in popular culture. Since Bram Stoker published his original novel in 1897, countless ...
Natasha Kermani’s film plays a frustrating game of footsie with horror elements in a period tale based on a story from ...
There have been many adaptations of Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula, but finding the definitive one is harder than you think.
Born in Dublin, Abraham Stoker, or ‘Bram’ as he’s popularly known, was an Irish writer who is remembered today for his magnum opus, the malevolent Dracula, which he completed in 1897.
We’ve counted all the counts and put together a high-stakes ranking of the best and the worst.
Dracula’s Daughter is technically not based on Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel Dracula, but rather a chapter called “Dracula’s Guest” that Stoker wrote then cut from the final version of the book.
Dracula is perhaps one of the most enduring horror icons of all-time. The titular character of Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel, he is the prototype for most, if not all, vampires that followed in his ...