Showing posts with label Bram Stoker Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bram Stoker Award. Show all posts

Thursday, November 8, 2012

20 Facts About Bram Stoker


He Created the Greatest Anti-Hero
Stoker’s Dracula is the most adapted villain in a work of fiction. There are more than 217 Dracula films and 1,000 plus books featuring this famous (or infamous) character.

He Spent More Time Writing Dracula than on Any of his Other Books
Bram Stoker spent 7 years researching European folklore and superstitions before writing Dracula.

He Never Stood Up Without Help Until Age 7
The legendary writer was bed-ridden until the age of seven and needed a little assistance to walk.

His Mother Was a Writer and Told Him Tales of Horror
Stoker’s mom was a writer and she read horror stories to him while he lay sick in bed. This would later influence his interest in the supernatural and occult many years after.

He Was the Business Manager of a Theatre
Stoker became the business manager of the Lyceum theatre (owned by Irving) and actor-manager to Henry Irving (one of the most prominent actors of his time) after a favorable review of the latter’s performance in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

Dracula Was Inspired by
Stoker made no trips to research for his novel, Dracula. His work was mostly inspired by Emily Gerard’s Transylvania Superstitions.

He Wrote 12 Novels
Stoker authored 12 novels and published several short story collections. He wrote about 18 books during his lifetime.

He Had Only One Kid
Irving Noel Thornley was the only son of Stoker and Florence. Both father and son’s cremated remains are joined in one urn. Visitors to the Golders Green Crematorium in London must be escorted to a room where the urn is housed for fear of vandalism.

His Original Title for Dracula was The Un-Dead
It has been suggested that Stoker coined the term, undead. His novel, Dracula was formerly titled The Undead. The original 541-page manuscript was discovered in a barn in Pennsylvania. The title page was handwritten. It included the title ‘The Un-Dead’ and the author’s name, Bram Stoker appeared at the bottom. The co-founder of Microsoft, Paul Allen, bought the manuscript.

He Worked as a Journalist
Bram Stoker was a theater critic, an accomplished athlete, author, biographer, theater manager and a journalist.

His Friend Was Inspiration for His Famous Character
Henry Irving (Stoker’s friend who owned the Lyceum Theater that Stoker managed) was the physical inspiration for the author’s famous character, Count Dracula. Henry Irving was an important model for Dracula.

Published First Fiction Book in 1881
Bram Stoker published his first fiction book, Under the Sunset in 1881.

The Dracula Story Was Inspired By a Real Historical Figure
Vlad the Impaler, a real historical figure, infamous for impaling his enemies on stakes and watching them die in slow agony was the inspiration for Stoker’s book, Dracula. He was also known as Vlad III Dracula of Wallachia.

He Published His First Horror Story in Installments
Stoker’s first horror story, The Chain of Destiny was published in four parts in ‘The Shamrock.’

He Was an Art Lover
Stoker loved art and was the founder of The Dublin Sketching Club in 1874.

Competed with Oscar Wilde for a Lady
He fought Oscar wild for the hand of actress, Florence Balcombe who was the daughter of a lieutenant-Colonel. And won. The two stayed together until his death in 1912.

He Met Two American Presidents
Stoker did a lot of traveling with Henry Irving and visited the US frequently. He met two American Presidents, William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt.

He was the third of 7 children
Stoker was the third child of Abraham Stoker and Charlotte Mathilda Blake Thornley in a family of seven.

His wife survived him by twenty-five years
His wife Florence survived him by twenty-five years. She was his literary executor and published Dracula’s Guest and Other Weird Stories in 1922. There are speculations that the eponymous story, ‘Dracula's Guest’ may have been intended as the first chapter for his novel, ‘Dracula.’

Cause of Death is Controversial
Stoker passed on at No. 26 St George's Square in London on April 20 1912 of exhaustion/overwork or tertiary syphilis or stroke (depending on whose report you believe).
Bram Stoker would probably be remembered as the man who took Eastern European folklore and superstitions and invented fiction’s most popular and probably most dreaded anti-hero, Dracula.


Akpan


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Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Honing Your Craft with Personal Experience

Write what you know.
Who made this statement? Who do you suppose, is the original source of that phrase? Mark Twain? Howard Nemerov? Gore Vidal? Ernest Hemingway? (These names are some of the numerous suggestions I stumbled upon while surfing the web for answers.)
            So, who exactly said, ‘Write what you know?’

Do you suppose I’m the right guy to discuss the subject since I have no idea how the legendary writing advice (and possibly, the most misunderstood) came into existence?

What might be the case if we were to discuss the pros and cons of etymology and word origin pales in comparison with what I am about in this post. I’d love to point the strobe light on two unique examples of authors who put this quote to use, effectively with the sustained resonance initiating a ripple effect, which kindled a popular resurgence of their respective genres.

J.R.R. Tolkien is the mastermind behind The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Did you know that many of the scenes in his fiction are slightly altered re-creations of his real life travels and travails?
            What follows is a slightly modified version of a Wikipedia article:

J.R.R. Tolkien Photo Courtesy: newstalk.ie
Tolkien enjoyed exploring Sarehole Mill and Moseley Bog in England (where he grew up after his dad passed away of a bout of rheumatic fever in South Africa–Tolkien was born here on 3 January 1892 in Bloemfontein in the Orange Free State now Free State Province in South Africa). His explorations inspired scenes in his books. His adventurous mind led him to his Aunt Jane’s farm of Bag End. The name which occurs in his fiction.
            After his mother’s demise at age 34, Tolkien lived in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham in the shadow of the Victorian tower of Edgbaston Waterworks which is believed to have influenced the images of the Dark Towers within his works.

Maybe, I’m tackling the ‘Write what you know’ subject in its narrowest sense. Maybe, it’s exactly what I want to do in this article. The entire concept blurs into personal experiences and feelings and the imaginative ability of the writer to take a footprint he found in the dirt in some out of the way place and recreate it as a secret code that could spark world war III in his fiction!
Tananarive Due Photo Courtesy: chroniclesofharriet.com
Tananarive Due, one of a handful of black science fiction and fantasy writers, in an interview on NPR, tells how she came about the idea for her book My Soul to Keep (which won a Best Novel nomination in the Bram Stoker Award).
            Due at one time worked as a journalist and columnist for the Miami Herald. She had at some point in time been in a relationship with a guy who turned out to be different. And who she believed was trying to fool her. What Due did with her personal experience was create her ‘perfect guy’ by re-inventing her former boyfriend in her fiction.

My Soul to Keep’s plot revolves around the life of a young newspaper reporter who is still in her twenties and who discovers her husband is a 500-year old immortal from a culture of immortals.

The places we are most at home become our comfort zones. The niche we are most familiar with and accept as the definition of who we really are.
These places invite us to explode into a million creative seeds if we will tap into its electricity.

Writing what you know can be a thrill. With a little bit of imagination, it can make all the difference between a lifeless piece of literature and a definitive work of art.

Keep your pen bleeding.


Akpan


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