Dracula: The Undead; a genuine sequel?

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The Mythwriter
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Dracula: The Undead; a genuine sequel?

Post by The Mythwriter »

So, it's already out but I hadn't noticed it until now, or at least not known it for what it was. Apparently, one of Bram Stoker's descendants, Dacre Stoker, has written and published a sequel to the one and only Dracula, entitled Dracula: The Undead.

I dislike sequels in general, especially to books/series that seemed to conclude well on their own. Take, for example the new Hitchhiker's Guide book. Nevertheless, this book, according to some, has great promise, and is, apparently, based on material Bram Stoker created but never fully developed.

Is this sequel what Stoker fans, in the current hype over vampires, have desperately sought from lesser authors, or is it a mistake, another attempt to suck more money from the greatest of all vampire legends? The readers decide...
"The world has been printing books for 450 years, and yet gunpowder still has a wider circulation. Never mind! Printer's ink is the greater explosive: it will win." - Christopher Morley, "The Haunted Bookshop."
Moore
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Post by Moore »

I agree that it's not necessary to make sequels when everything has been said, but sometimes they turn out to be quite good.
At the same time everyone has the right to express himself or herself, and we, readers have the chance to choose. :D
Last edited by Moore on 23 Oct 2009, 08:26, edited 1 time in total.
Classical is Classy
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Post by Classical is Classy »

I wonder if it'll be written in the same style of letters and diary entry's. One of my favorite aspects of the book :).
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The Mythwriter
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Post by The Mythwriter »

Classical is Classy wrote:I wonder if it'll be written in the same style of letters and diary entry's. One of my favorite aspects of the book :).
I just had a chance to look at it in B&N, i couldn't do much more than flip through it, but it didn't look like most of it was written that way; it looked more like a normal narrative style.
"The world has been printing books for 450 years, and yet gunpowder still has a wider circulation. Never mind! Printer's ink is the greater explosive: it will win." - Christopher Morley, "The Haunted Bookshop."
Classical is Classy
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Post by Classical is Classy »

The Mythwriter wrote:
Classical is Classy wrote:I wonder if it'll be written in the same style of letters and diary entry's. One of my favorite aspects of the book :).
I just had a chance to look at it in B&N, i couldn't do much more than flip through it, but it didn't look like most of it was written that way; it looked more like a normal narrative style.
Unfortunate :-/
J.Seishu
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Post by J.Seishu »

Im planning on getting this book soon. Hope it will be good. I don't expect it to be as good as the original Dracula but hopefully it won't be too bad
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