Late throughout everyday life, Stoker started composing fiction, and in 1890 he delivered The Snake’s Pass, a heartfelt tension book with a barren western Ireland setting. In 1897, his magnum opus Dracula was distributed. The principal characters of the book — Jonathan Harker, who initially experienced the vampire Count Dracula; Wilhelmina (“Mina”) Harker (née Murray), Jonathan’s future spouse;

tvguidetime.com

Dr. John (“Jack”) Seward, a specialist and sanatorium overseer; and Lucy Westenra, Mina’s companion and a Dracula casualty who later transforms into a vampire — compose most of the book as journals and diaries they keep.

The plot fixates on a Transylvanian vampire who goes to Britain using powerful capacities and goes after defenseless residents there to get the blood he wants to get by. After various unnerving experiences and under the course of Dr. Abraham Van Helsing,

— Curtailed Rambler (@francisxyzk) October 30, 2022

Seward’s tutor and an expert in “dark sicknesses,” Harker and his buddies are at long last ready to overcome and kill Dracula. The two plays and movies in light of the gigantically effective book were similarly fruitful.