Read The Mammoth Book of Dracula Online
Authors: Stephen Jones
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The Mammoth Book of
DRACULA
Ed by Stephen Jones
Scanned & Proofed by MadMaxAU
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CONTENTS
Introduction: I Bid You Welcome
Dracula: or The Un-Dead: Prologue
BRAM STOKER
CHRISTOPHER FOWLER
The Heart of Count Dracula, Descendant of Attila, Scourge of God
THOMAS LIGOTTI
MANDY SLATER
RAMSEY CAMPBELL
MANLY WADE WELLMAN
NANCY KILPATRICK
NANCY HOLDER
Zack Phalanx
is
Vlad the Impaler
BRIAN LUMLEY
BASIL COPPER
KIM NEWMAN
HUGH B. CAVE
BRIAN MOONEY
ROBERTA LANNES
LISA MORTON
NICHOLAS ROYLE
PAUL McAULEY
GUY N. SMITH
JAN EDWARDS
R. CHETWYND-HAYES
GRAHAM MASTERTON
TERRY LAMSLEY
JOHN GORDON
JOEL LANE
BRIAN STABLEFORD
MICHAEL MARSHALL SMITH
CONRAD WILLIAMS
CHRIS MORGAN
MIKE CHINN
CHARLAINE HARRIS
BRIAN HODGE
PETER CROWTHER
F. PAUL WILSON
JO FLETCHER
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But first, on earth as Vampyre sent,
Thy corse shall from its tomb be rent;
Then ghastly haunt thy native place,
And suck the blood of all thy race;
There from thy daughter, sister, wife,
At midnight drain the stream of life;
Yet loathe the banquet which perforce
Must feed thy livid, living corpse,
Thy victims, ere they yet expire,
Shall know the demon for their sire;
As cursing thee, thou cursing mem,
Thy flowers are withered on the stem.
—LORD BYRON “The Giaour” (1813)
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INTRODUCTION
I Bid You Welcome
DO WE REALLY need another collection of vampire stories? That is the question I had to ask myself before compiling this present volume. In the past few years, the bookshelves have been groaning under the weight of new vampire fiction. There have been countless novels, collections and anthologies published about every conceivable permutation of the undead and, truth to tell, most of it has been quickly forgettable. However, thanks to the success of Stephenie Meyer’s
Twilight
books and films, along with the TV series
True Blood
(based on the novels by Charlaine Harris), vampires have never been so popular. These days the undead have become a sub-genre in themselves. As my colleague Kim Newman has cleverly remarked elsewhere, vampire fiction has become the
Star Trek
of horror.
When my publisher and I began discussing a follow-up volume to our very successful 1992 anthology,
The Mammoth Book of Vampires,
we agreed that we didn’t want to produce just a second collection of stories. So after careful deliberation, I decided that it might be interesting to see if I could compile a loosely-constructed, “fictionalized history” of the most memorable vampire of them all -Count Dracula. You hold the result in your hands.
Of all the fictional vampires ever created, Dracula continues to endure more than a century after he was created by Bram (Abraham) Stoker. Born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1847, Stoker was a sickly child until he discovered books at around school age. A qualified barrister, his first love was always the theatre, and while working as a civil servant he was introduced to the greatest actor-producer of his time, Henry Irving. The two became friends, and in December 1878 Stoker assumed the acting managership of Irving’s Royal Lyceum Theatre in London, much to the dismay of his family. The same year Stoker married Oscar Wilde’s ex-sweetheart, the Irish-born Florence Anne Lemon Balcombe (whom George du Maurier, author of
Trilby,
described as one of the three most beautiful women he had ever seen).