Sunday, 16 June 2019

Anno Dracula - entertainingly complex!

Anno Dracula, by Kim Newman presents an alternative version of the late Victorian era, where fact and fiction have been merged together to create something very dark and disturbing. It is 1888, and Queen Victoria is no longer a widow mourning the loss of her beloved Albert - instead, she has married Vlad Tepes, otherwise known as Count Dracula. This has led to a distinct power shift from the "warm" to the undead. Anyone with any power has "turned" and the new world order is a scary place which sees impaling as a suitable form of punishment once again. Charles Beauregard, a spy, lives to protect the interests of the Queen, and is commissioned by the mysterious Diogenes Club, to track down Jack The Ripper, who is stalking Whitechapel and killing vampire prostitutes in the most bloody of ways. Also on the case is Geneviève Dieudonné, a four hundred year old vampire "elder" who has seen it all. Together they make a formidable team and hunt down their prey through many twists, turns and not a little danger. There is an enormous amount of atmosphere in this book and the main characters are ones that you are happy to spend time with (the obvious exception being The Count ... for those of us with a sensible disposition). However, the plot is dense and so many characters are jammed in, that it was easy to become lost - I did keep having to pause to remind myself who was who. If you are not familiar with Bram Stoker's Dracula, as well as the other key literary characters who embody the Victorian era, I think you might struggle at times. Personally, I would have preferred something with a little bit more focus. That being said, this is a highly enjoyable, if bloody, romp and will please fans of gothic horror, thrillers and those who love to theorise about who Jack the Ripper really was! 

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 560 print pages.
Formats: print, unabridged audio download, edMP3-CD, ebook.
Price I paid: £1.99.

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