88 reviews for:

Dracula's Guest

Bram Stoker

3.58 AVERAGE


Si no fuera una potencial extensión de la obra original, quedaría enterrado como un vampiro regular de un pueblito europeo bajo una tumba cubierta por piedras del olvido. Con otro estilo ajeno al epistolar, transcurre como una historia de terror corriente que se hace efectiva en la ambientación qmostrando pistas para expandir el universo de Dracul. El relato vigoriza su entretenimiento con infinitas posiblidades provenientes de la cabeza de un lector que ya conoce la novela, ¿la vampiresa es acaso un ser que rivaliza en rango y poder con el tio Draky? ¿Están los no vivos regidos por territorios? ¿Está Harker siendo protegido por un interes especifico del conde? No lo sabremos de Stoker, pero es una buena oportunidad para poner en funcionamiento el poder de la imaginación.
adventurous mysterious tense medium-paced

Something of a strange tale of an unnamed man who goes for a walk, almost freezes to death in a storm, and is saved by a wolf. It's only once you realise that the man is Jonathan Harker that the implications of this text are realised.
adventurous challenging dark mysterious tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
dark mysterious tense fast-paced

"La Walpurgis-Nacht no afecta a los ingleses".


"Con la salida del sol estaba recuperando el valor".


"Había algo tan extraño en todo aquello, tan inquietante e imposible de concebir, que me sentí como si fuerzas desconocidas jugaran conmigo, idea que bastó para paralizarme".

Good but short

I can definitely see why this wasn't included in the published version of Dracula. While it's a vampire tale that involves vampires operating under the same rules as presented in Dracula, its narrative has nothing to do with that story and would only have detracted from it if included. As a standalone, it's a fairly straightforward early vampire story, focusing on vampires as the "unholy" living dead--two elements that are made more interesting by their absence in most modern vampire fiction. (It's possible I'm just not reading/watching the right vampire fiction, but vampires seem to have become secular monsters of ever-decreasing association with religious symbols like crosses and holy water, as well as being either post-human creatures transformed by magic or infection or another species of being entirely. Some vampires don't even "rise from the grave" in any capacity anymore, their unlife being a matter of transformation rather than subverted resurrection.)

Dracula's Guest is a story worth reading for anyone who gives a damn about early vampire fiction, but don't be tricked into thinking that it's a vital part of the experience of Dracula. If not for the title and a brief namedrop at the end, it's an entirely separate narrative--but interesting nevertheless.

5/5 estrellas.

Tremendo. Funciona perfectamente como una precuela de Drácula, una maravilla ✨
Me sentí transportado a esos lugares helados y tétricos. Bram hizo un trabajo increíble nuevamente.

Really Enjoyed it after An Enourmous Reading slump. Made Me relieve some “Dracula” Moments from January, when I Read it. Would’ve Preffered if this was included in the Original One. It has A spooky Vibe to it, Perfect for this Halloweeny Time 🎃.