I read it for the first time about two years ago and was stunned by how boring it was. The only thing the book did really well was to make Dracula seem pretty alien.
What if they're not idiots, but actually psychotic—like Fight Club "Tyler Durden" psychotic?
When I read it, I couldn't help thinking the evidence for Dracula is pretty thin apart from some very surreal experiences journaled by a handful of people. Consider: Dracula doesn't appear in the mirror, and the woman calls Jonathan the monster when she sees him in the window.
What if they are the monster that is predating the neighborhood, and everyone is too stuffy with Victorian sexual mores to confront it, so they all take part in a collective fantasy to purge the monster?
Lucy is dying for a good 45% of the book it seems like. I would almost assume Stoker wrote it as an indictment of Victorian society since people who know what’s going on delay and delay because they don’t want to upset the other characters.
There are some good turns of phrase though, like Harker talking to the real estate agent and calling him “A prig of the first order.”
i've tried to read it several times. there's a stretch for like 80 pages where someone is going on and on about how people lie on tombstones. i just can't make it past that. i'd rather give finnegan's wake another attempt.
John Stephens i'm down with that interpretation. the book is essentially presented as a collection of writings in defense of why they murdered this aristocrat. maybe they're going for that insanity plea.
still can't bring myself to read it cover to cover.
It's excellent. I read it thinking that having seen enough movies it would make sense. And that's true. Francis Ford Coppola's version is close enough.
Originally shared by Jonathan Tweet Tonight, my "Lethal Damage" 13th Age campaign draws to a close. Meanwhile, the guys are work have talked me into running a couple D&D sessions for them. That was the day 13th Age was announced, and they're happy to play 13th Age instead. That will be my "Great Center" campaign, based in the imperial capital of Axis, the center of the world. It's my opportunity to explore the setting from yet another perspective.
Life is short and unfair. I don’t even know what to say. Hours after the last picture I posted of Alice and the kids we came home from the movie to find her nearly dead in her kennel. She stayed at the vet for 36 hours, and after making some improvement on the first day, started to fade last night. I was with her when they put her to sleep this morning. We buried her collar and her stuffed elephant under our deck where she liked to crawl just out of reach. Alice had four owners in her short life. She survived being hit by a car and moving from Alabama to Minnesota. Then being moved around in foster care before she got to us. I hope she knew she was with for the long haul. She was a good pup. This is the last picture I took of her. We were visiting her yesterday at the vet, anticipating bringing her home today.
Pre-gen from Frank Mentzer's module, The Needle , 1987. I knew this was insulting and gross when I was 14. At the time I didn't know who Frank was, since I only played AD&D. I found this module again when I was going through a box of old stuff and was surprised he wrote it, because I thought it was a pretty shitty adventure.
I read it for the first time about two years ago and was stunned by how boring it was. The only thing the book did really well was to make Dracula seem pretty alien.
ReplyDeleteWhat if they're not idiots, but actually psychotic—like Fight Club "Tyler Durden" psychotic?
ReplyDeleteWhen I read it, I couldn't help thinking the evidence for Dracula is pretty thin apart from some very surreal experiences journaled by a handful of people. Consider: Dracula doesn't appear in the mirror, and the woman calls Jonathan the monster when she sees him in the window.
What if they are the monster that is predating the neighborhood, and everyone is too stuffy with Victorian sexual mores to confront it, so they all take part in a collective fantasy to purge the monster?
Lucy is dying for a good 45% of the book it seems like.
ReplyDeleteI would almost assume Stoker wrote it as an indictment of Victorian society since people who know what’s going on delay and delay because they don’t want to upset the other characters.
There are some good turns of phrase though, like Harker talking to the real estate agent and calling him “A prig of the first order.”
Also good: Dracula's scheme to spread his lairs all over the city. That is pretty much ignored in every version I've seen.
ReplyDeletei've tried to read it several times. there's a stretch for like 80 pages where someone is going on and on about how people lie on tombstones. i just can't make it past that. i'd rather give finnegan's wake another attempt.
ReplyDeleteSpoiler alert: Dracula kills that long-winded old dude.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things I dig about it is the way it presents Dracula not as a known species as much as the Antichrist/Beast of the Apocalypse!
ReplyDeleteJohn Stephens have you read Kim Newman's Anno Dracula? If not, you should.
ReplyDeleteJohn Stephens i'm down with that interpretation. the book is essentially presented as a collection of writings in defense of why they murdered this aristocrat. maybe they're going for that insanity plea.
ReplyDeletestill can't bring myself to read it cover to cover.
Casey G., no I haven't heard of it, but I just put it on my list.
ReplyDeleteDracula and Finnegan's Wake both getting slammed at once? Surely fisticuffs are not far behind!
ReplyDeleteIt's excellent. I read it thinking that having seen enough movies it would make sense. And that's true. Francis Ford Coppola's version is close enough.
ReplyDeleteThe last time I read it, my takeaway was "Dracula is syphilis, isn't he? Foreign syphilis getting all over our nice English women."
ReplyDeleteJeff Rients at least joyce was intentionally dense.
ReplyDeleteHey cut the fellas some slack - they've never seen any vampire movies!
ReplyDeleteIt's a bad book, man. It's success just baffles me.
ReplyDeleteYou will find in nearly all stories that the smart ones are only intelligent by comparison.
ReplyDelete