Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot summary  





2 Synopsis  





3 Characters  



3.1  Main characters  





3.2  Minor characters  



3.2.1  From literature  





3.2.2  From film or television  









4 Historical people mentioned or appearing as characters  





5 Critical reception  





6 References  














Anno Dracula






Español
Français
Português
Türkçe
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Anno Dracula
First edition
AuthorKim Newman
Audio read byWilliam Gaminara
LanguageEnglish
SeriesAnno Dracula series
GenreAlternate history, Horror
PublisherSimon & Schuster

Publication date

1992
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (hardback and paperback)
Pages409 (paperback)
ISBN978-0-380-72345-4
OCLC31220886
Followed byThe Bloody Red Baron 

Anno Dracula is a 1992 novel by British writer Kim Newman, the first in the Anno Dracula series. It is an alternate history using 19th-century English historical settings and personalities, along with characters from popular fiction.

Plot summary[edit]

The interplay between humans who have chosen to "turn" into vampires and those who are "warm" (humans) is the backdrop for the plot which tracks Jack the Ripper's politically charged destruction of vampire prostitutes. The reader is alternately and sympathetically introduced to various points of view. The main characters are Jack the Ripper, and his hunters Charles Beauregard (an agent of the Diogenes Club), and Geneviève Dieudonné, an elder French vampire (a similar version of Dieudonné appeared in Newman's trilogy of novels, written under the pseudonym Jack Yeovil, for the Warhammer Fantasy universe).

Synopsis[edit]

The novel deviates from the events of Bram Stoker's Dracula. In this world, Vlad Tepes killed Abraham Van Helsing, and an injury sustained to Dr. John Seward's hand during a fight with Renfield resulted in Van Helsing's allies lacking the strength to defeat Dracula at the crucial moment. Instead, Dracula killed Quincey Morris and Jonathan Harker and completed Mina Harker's turning into vampire. With no one to oppose him, Dracula creates thousands of British vampires, marries[1] and turns Queen Victoria (acquiring official royal status as Prince Consort) and ushers in a period of increasing British vampire domination. Dracula is well advanced in imposing a police state in the United Kingdom, where dissenters may be jailed or impaled without trial. Many of the country's leading scientists and intellectuals who choose to stay "warm" (including Sherlock Holmes) are imprisoned in concentration camps in the rural counties. The only two survivors of Van Helsing's group are Seward, who now runs a free clinicinWhitechapel, and Arthur Holmwood, Lord Godalming, who chose to become a vampire and is being groomed as a protégé by the new Prime Minister, Lord Ruthven.

Dieudonné has come down in the world, attending sick vampires in Seward's clinic. When another prostitute is murdered, Scotland Yard's Inspector Lestrade turns to them for an opinion. Beauregard, an agent of the Diogenes Club, is tasked with hunting down the killer, dubbed "Silver Knife" by the public, until an anonymous letter is delivered identifying him as "Jack the Ripper". The victim's inquest is attended by Lestrade, Dieudonné, and Beauregard, along with Captain Kostaki (an officer in Dracula's Carpathian Guard), and Dr. Henry Jekyll. Each sets out independently, with differing agendas. Separately, Lord Godalming is also tasked by Lord Ruthven with heading an unofficial investigation to catch the killer.

Beauregard is abducted by an old enemy, a Tong leader who calls a truce on the understanding that the London underworld also has a strong interest in Silver Knife's capture. His official duties also open a rift between him and his fiancée, Penelope Churchward (a cousin of his deceased first wife). In her zeal for social climbing, Penny also urges Beauregard to agree that both of them will become vampires after their marriage.

Jack the Ripper strikes twice, failing to destroy one of his victims, Elizabeth Stride, who is brought to the clinic. Attempting to heal her wounds by shapeshifting, Stride does it imperfectly, lunging at Seward in her agony before dying. The implication is lost on Dieudonné and Beauregard, none of whom know that Seward, driven insane with grief over the loss of his love, Lucy Westenra, has taken to hunting vampires on his own. His murderous activities abate, temporarily, when he becomes infatuated with another prostitute, Mary Jane Kelly, who greatly resembles Lucy.

During a temporary lull in the killings, Beauregard and Dieudonné, having similar ideas, become closer, while Penny is increasingly annoyed at Beauregard's lack of attention. In her haste, she allows Godalming to turn her, but the transformation is imperfect, and Penny almost dies, before being nursed back to health by Beauregard with Dieudonné's help. Repulsed by the creature Penny has become, Beauregard ends their engagement and he and Dieudonné become lovers.

Public unrest escalates, with unclear causes. An anti-vampire leader is shot, and another of the Carpathian Guard is blown up with dynamite, both perhaps by the same mysterious vampire. Captain Kostaki and Scotland Yard Inspector Mackenzie form an unlikely alliance to find the culprit, but the mysterious vampire ambushes them, killing Mackenzie and disabling Kostaki with a silver bullet to his knee. Framed for Mackenzie's murder, Kostaki is imprisoned in the Tower of London, under the control of Graf Orlok. Lord Godalming questions Kostaki in secret, believing he has identified the Ripper as Sergeant Dravot, a vampire agent of the Diogenes Club. Eager to claim the credit for himself, Godalming leaves Kostaki to be condemned for Mackenzie's death. While following Dravot, alone, Godalming is aggravated by a "chance" meeting with his old friend, Seward, not realizing until too late that Seward is the real Ripper, who believes Godalming betrayed him and Lucy by becoming a vampire.

Beauregard and Dieudonné both realize that Seward is the Ripper. They race to Whitechapel and apprehend him, but not before he has killed both Kelly and Godalming. They leave the murder scene with Seward in custody, but then encounter Dravot, who admits to acting on the Diogenes Club's orders. These orders required him to kill Mackenzie, foment the riots, and stand by as Seward butchered Mary Jane Kelly. These orders also require there to be, officially, two Rippers: Seward and Godalming were working together before they fell out and Seward killed the other. Beauregard and Dieudonné are equally disgusted. When Seward points out that Dracula will turn him into a vampire so he can be tortured for all eternity, Beauregard kills him out of mercy.

When Beauregard confronts his superiors at the Diogenes Club, he asks why he was assigned to the case at all, since Dravot did all the actual work. He is told that Dravot, a vampire, could not be given the official credit for solving the murders, and it is necessary for Beauregard to carry out the final step of the plan.

Beauregard soon understands what this means when he and Dieudonné are invited to Buckingham Palace to be officially thanked by Queen Victoria for their role in catching the Ripper. Inside the palace, the two lovers confront Count Dracula, holding the turned Victoria as a prisoner. Knowing that neither of them can defeat Dracula in direct combat, Beauregard slips Seward's silver scalpel to Victoria, allowing her to kill herself, thus depriving Dracula of his status as Prince Consort and his legal authority over Great Britain. Before the vampires can retaliate, a riot breaks loose outside the Palace – possibly orchestrated by the Club – and spills inside, allowing Beauregard and Dieudonné to escape and forcing Dracula to flee the country.

Characters[edit]

Some of the main characters used in Anno Dracula

Newman incorporated numerous figures from popular fiction (due to the historical period, many are from works in the public domain).

Main characters[edit]

Character Creator Origin
Charles Beauregard Kim Newman Original
Penelope Churchward Kim Newman Original
Vlad Tepes, Count Dracula Bram Stoker Dracula
Daniel Dravot Rudyard Kipling The Man Who Would Be King
Mycroft Holmes Arthur Conan Doyle The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
Kostaki Alexandre Dumas The Pale Lady
Inspector Lestrade Arthur Conan Doyle A Study in Scarlet
Lord Ruthven John William Polidori The Vampyre
Kate Reed Bram Stoker Early draft of Dracula
John Seward Bram Stoker Dracula
Arthur Holmwood Bram Stoker Dracula
Geneviève Dieudonné Kim Newman Drachenfels
Count Vardalek Count Stenbock The True Story of a Vampire
Inspector Mackenzie E.W. Hornung The Amateur Cracksman

Minor characters[edit]

The following characters are only mentioned, or appear only briefly in the novel.

From literature[edit]

Character Creator Origin
Kurt Barlow Stephen King 'Salem's Lot
Brides of Dracula Bram Stoker Dracula
Sir Danvers Carew Robert Louis Stevenson The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Thomas Carnacki William Hope Hodgson Carnacki, the Ghost-Finder
Gunga Din Rudyard Kipling Gunga Din
Soames Forsyte John Galsworthy The Forsyte Saga
Fu Manchu (referred to as 'The Celestial', 'The Doctor', and 'The Lord of Strange Deaths') Sax Rohmer The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu
Griffin H.G. Wells The Invisible Man
Basil Hallward Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray
Mina Harker Bram Stoker Dracula
Sherlock Holmes Arthur Conan Doyle A Study in Scarlet
Doctor Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Carmilla Karnstein Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu Carmilla
Lestat de Lioncourt Anne Rice Interview with the Vampire
Macheath Bertolt Brecht The Threepenny Opera
Admiral Sir Mandeville Messervy (presumed ancestor of Admiral Sir Miles Messervy) Ian Fleming (derived) Original
Sebastian Moran Arthur Conan Doyle The Return of Sherlock Holmes
Doctor Moreau H.G. Wells The Island of Doctor Moreau
Professor Moriarty Arthur Conan Doyle The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
The Murgatroyds W.S. Gilbert Ruddigore
Allan Quatermain H. Rider Haggard King Solomon's Mines
Rupert of Hentzau Anthony Hope The Prisoner of Zenda
Bill Sikes Charles Dickens Oliver Twist
Sir Francis Varney James Malcolm Rymer and Thomas Peckett Prest Varney the Vampire
Waverly (presumed ancestor of Alexander Waverly) Sam Rolfe, Norman Felton The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (derived)
A. J. Raffles E.W. Hornung The Amateur Cracksman
Dr. Antonio Nikola A Bid for Fortune: or, Dr Nikola's Vendetta
Clayton Arthur Conan Doyle The Hound of the Baskervilles
Lord John Roxton Arthur Conan Doyle The Lost World
Lucy Westenra Bram Stoker Dracula
Abraham Van Helsing Bram Stoker Dracula
Renfield Bram Stoker Dracula
Jonathan Harker Bram Stoker Dracula
Quincey Morris Bram Stoker Dracula
Lulu Schon Frank Wedekind Pandora's Box
Chandagnac Kim Newman Drachenfels
The Old Jago Arthur Morrison A Child of the Jago
Ivan Dragomiloff Jack London The Assassination Bureau, Ltd
Countess Geschwitz Frank Wedekind Pandora's Box
Melissa d'Acques Kim Newman Drachenfels
Count Brastov Charles L. Grant The Soft Whisper of the Dead
Prince Conrad Vulkan Robert R. McCammon They Thirst
Edward Weyland Suzy McKee Charnas The Vampire Tapestry
Baron Karnstein Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu Carmilla
Lady Adelina Ducayne M.E. Braddon Good Lady Ducayne
Sarah Kenyon F.G. Loring The Tomb of Sarah
Ethelind Fionguala Ken's Mystery
Countess Dolingen Bram Stoker Dracula's Guest and Other Weird Stories
The Amahagger H. Rider Haggard She: A History of Adventure
Ezzelin von Klatka Mark Twain The Mysterious Stranger
Madame de la Rougierre Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu Uncle Silas
Clarimonde Théophile Gautier La Morte Amoureuse
Martin Hewitt Arthur Morrison Martin Hewitt, Investigator
Max Carrados Ernest Bramah Max Carrados
Augustus Van Dusen Jacques Futrelle The Thinking Machine
Cotford Bram Stoker Early draft of Dracula
Mrs. Warren George Bernard Shaw Mrs. Warren's Profession
Berserker the Dog Bram Stoker Dracula
Louis Bauer Patrick Hamilton Gas Light
Edward Malone The Adventure of the Grinder's Whistle
A Wessex Cup Winner Arthur Conan Doyle The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
Mrs. Amworth Mrs. Amworth
Henry Wilcox E. M. Forster Howards End
General Zaroff Richard Connell The Most Dangerous Game

From film or television[edit]

Character Origin
Adam Adamant Adam Adamant Lives!
Baron Meinster The Brides of Dracula
Barnabas Collins Dark Shadows
Elder Chinese Vampire Mr. Vampire
Prince Mamuwalde Blacula
Count Orlok Nosferatu
John Reid The Lone Ranger
Count Von Krolock The Fearless Vampire Killers
Count Yorga Count Yorga, Vampire
Carl Kolchak The Night Stalker
Don Sebastian de Villanueva The Black Castle
The Wurdalak Black Sabbath
Lucian de Terre The Werewolves of London
Count Mitterhouse Vampire Circus
Armand Tesla The Return of the Vampire
Count Duval El Vampiro
Countess Marya Zaleska Dracula's Daughter
Asa Vajda Black Sunday
Martin Cuda Martin
Anthony The Night Stalker
Caleb Croft Grave of the Vampire
Dr. Ravna The Kiss of the Vampire
Dr. Callistratus Blood of the Vampire

Historical people mentioned or appearing as characters[edit]

  • Edward Aveling
  • Barbara of Celje (here said to be one of the three Brides of Dracula)
  • Elizabeth Báthory (her description is strongly suggestive of the 1971 German-Belgian horror film, Daughters of Darkness)
  • Annie Besant
  • Billy the Kid
  • Alessandro Cagliostro
  • Antoine Augustin Calmet
  • Lewis Carroll
  • Catherine II of Russia
  • Count of St. Germain (however, the idea that he was a vampire comes from Hotel Transylvania and its sequels by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro)
  • Annie Chapman
  • Marie Corelli
  • Montague Druitt
  • Catherine Eddowes
  • Edward VII
  • Robert Cunninghame-Graham
  • W. S. Gilbert
  • Frank Harris
  • John Henry "Doc" Holliday
  • Henry Hyndman
  • Mary Jane Kelly
  • Eleanor Marx
  • Henry Matthews
  • Joseph Merrick
  • William Morris
  • Arthur Morrison
  • Mary Ann Nichols
  • Beatrice Potter
  • George Bernard Shaw
  • Emma Elizabeth Smith
  • William Thomas Stead
  • Bram Stoker
  • Florence Stoker
  • Elizabeth Stride
  • Arthur Sullivan
  • Algernon Charles Swinburne
  • Martha Tabram
  • Alfred Tennyson
  • Arnold Toynbee
  • Vlad Tepeş* (here said to be the same person as Dracula)
  • Queen Victoria*
  • Charles Warren
  • Theodore Watts-Dunton
  • James McNeill Whistler
  • Oscar Wilde*
  • Critical reception[edit]

    From the book cover: "The most comprehensive, brilliant, dazzlingly audacious vampire novel to date." (Locus); "A tour de fource which succeeds brilliantly." (The Times); "A marvellous marriage of political satire, melodramatic intrigue, gothic horror, and alternative history." (The Independent).

    David Krugman of The Telegraph said that the book did not have several scares but also mentioned that it is well-written and well-plotted.[2] Milo of The Guardian also noted the book's plot and its well-thought twists.[3] CT Phipps of Grimdark Magazine observed the novel's atmosphere and compared its grimdark setting with the works of Alan Moore.[4]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Steelman, Ben (3 June 2007). "New Harris vamp novel reads like a soap opera". Star-News. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  • ^ Krugman, David (30 October 1993). "Dracula and other Historic Folks". The Telegraph. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  • ^ Milo (5 February 2014). "Anno Dracula by Kim Newman – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  • ^ Phipps, C. T. (19 May 2021). "REVIEW: Anno Dracula by Kim Newman". Grimdark Magazine. Retrieved 21 February 2024.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anno_Dracula&oldid=1222957579"

    Categories: 
    Fiction set in 1888
    1992 fantasy novels
    1992 British novels
    British alternative history novels
    British steampunk novels
    Crossover novels
    Dracula novels
    British horror novels
    Invasion literature
    Novels about Jack the Ripper
    Novels by Kim Newman
    Vampire novels
    Fiction about polygamy
    Wold Newton family
    Cultural depictions of Elizabeth Báthory
    Cultural depictions of Billy the Kid
    Cultural depictions of Catherine the Great
    Cultural depictions of Joseph Merrick
    Cultural depictions of George Bernard Shaw
    Bram Stoker
    Alfred, Lord Tennyson
    Novels depicting Queen Victoria
    Cultural depictions of Vlad the Impaler
    Cultural depictions of Orson Welles
    Cultural depictions of James McNeill Whistler
    Cultural depictions of Oscar Wilde
    Cultural depictions of Alessandro Cagliostro
    Simon & Schuster books
    Novels set in the 1880s
    Alternate history novels
    Novels set in the 19th century
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles needing additional references from February 2024
    All articles needing additional references
    Use dmy dates from April 2022
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Pages using multiple image with auto scaled images
     



    This page was last edited on 9 May 2024, at 00:16 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki