Showing posts with label Karen Essex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Essex. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Guest Post and Giveaway - Dracula in Love's Karen Essex



Today I am very pleased to welcome author Karen Essex to One Book Shy.  She is on virtual tour right now with her latest book, Dracula In Love.  I was thrilled to get a chance to read this book.  Karen has written a post about one of the very things that I mentioned in my review yesterday ~ "Female Power".  Take it away Karen.........

 


Dracula’s Women: Restoring Female Power to Vampire Lore



By Karen Essex

I want to state outright: I revere Bram Stoker. His seminal novel, Dracula, was a brilliant creation, a haunting and harrowing story, especially considering that so much of what we now know as the “vampire” sprang from his brain. His fantastic book has spawned thousands of variations in movies, books, graphic novels, illustration, and on and on. But when it came to the women, he wrote like a man of his time, constructing the typical paradigm of bad girl (Lucy Westenra who succumbs to the vampire’s seduction) versus the good girl (Mina Harker who does not). The vampire’s seduction was a thinly veiled metaphor for—yes, you guessed it—sex.

My ambition for Dracula in Love, told entirely from Mina’s perspective, was to turn the original story inside out and expose its underbelly or its “subconscious mind.” I wanted to give Mina and Lucy rich, full lives, as well as plausible inner lives, that made sense with the era in which they lived, but also reflected the breadth of women’s desires.

I did extensive research into the late Victorian era but I also wanted to research the history of blood-drinking creatures that evolved into the vampire. Surprisingly, my research turned up a wealth of information that became a major theme. I knew that vampires had a long, rich history dating back to pre-biblical times. What I did not know was that many of the original blood drinkers of myth were female, symbolic of feminine magic and power. I decided to illuminate these historical sources for the vampire, and while doing so, revisit the lost landscape of female magical power.

As I dug deeper into world mythologies, I became fascinated by these bloodsucking goddesses and monsters. These are the true bad girls of mythology—the fearsome Indian goddess Kali who punished and possessed her enemies by drinking their blood; the vengeful, child-eating, blood-drinking Lamia of Greece and North Africa who so captivated the pre-Raphaelite artists popular in Stoker’s day; Lilith, Adam’s first Mesopotamian wife who drank blood in vengeance; and the blood-lusting warrior fairy queens of Ireland. I wanted these sultry sirens in my book, and by God, I did get them in there!

So if the original blood-drinkers were females, then why did Stoker create Dracula as a male? For one thing, mythological stories rarely follow a straight line. Myths are reinvented in every culture, adapted to the needs and beliefs of the people and the times. Through the millennia, concepts of vampires shape-shifted. They were thought to be spirits of women who had been witches; angry plague victims risen from the dead; victims of crime come back to suck the blood of the perpetrators; and succubi who visited men in the night, draining them of their life force (the male spirits who did similar harm to slumbering females are known as incubi).

Then, in what might be construed as a strange twist of fate, to accommodate the Victorian mentality, writers like Mr. Stoker turned the predatory vampire into a male, giving him the supernatural power, with women becoming his victims. The Victorians lived in fear of unleashed female sexuality. To their minds, women were pure and innocent creatures who must remain protected, shielded from worldly life. If women succumbed to sexual lust, ordered Victorian society would combust.

Moreover, sex is power, which was the very last thing the Victorians wanted women to possess. As someone who has made an exhaustive study of women’s history, I cannot think of any period in which women were thought to be as frail as during the Victorian era. I’m certain this was a reaction to the vocal and persistent cries of feminism that escalated as the 19th century came to its end.

As a result, suddenly it was the male vampire roaming the foggy, narrow streets of London threatening lovely young ladies like Lucy Westenra who succumbed to Dracula’s kiss, or the more pious Mina, who resisted him. With Dracula in Love, it was my joy and privilege to infiltrate the original story and promote anarchy. I wanted to turn the old paradigms upside down, and return the ladies to that place of power, lost somewhere in the centuries since Lilith and the Lamia roamed the earth taking their bloody revenge, causing men to quake with fear, and maybe, just maybe, quiver with a tinge of excitement.

~~~~~
Karen, thank you so much for stopping by One Book Shy to share your thoughts with us.  This was a fascinating peek into the thought process behind the book. 

Readers, you can catch up with Karen at her website,  her blog or on Facebook.


I hope you have all enjoyed the sneak peeks at this intriguing story.  Now I have another lovely treat for you!  5 lucky readers will each win your own copy of Dracula In Love!  That's right, FIVE winners!!!!!  Lots of exclamation points!!!!!!!
  • Must be 16 years or older
  • US residents only
  • NO PO Boxes
  • Must fill out the FORM below
  • Contest ends at midnight PST July 19th
  • Winners will have 72 hours to respond to winning email
  • Prize will be shipped by publisher
  • One prize per person/household




I'd like to thank Amy from Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours  for including me and One Book Shy on this book tour. 

Be sure to stop by the other blogs on the tour to find out what they have to say about


Image and video hosting by TinyPic

~~~~~ Disclaimer:  All opinions expressed on this blog are 100% my own.  I do not receive monetary compensation for my reviews but do utilize affiliate links.  I may receive books in  order to facilitate a review, but this does not guarantee a good review - only a completely honest one.  Each review post denotes how I obtained the book.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Review - Dracula in Love by Karen Essex

The private diary of Mina Harker


TITLE:    Dracula In Love
AUTHOR:    Karen Essex
INFO:    Paperback, Fiction, 368 pages
PUBLISHED:   Anchor Books, 2011
SOURCE:   Received from Publisher for Review and Blog Tour

 

FROM GOODREADS:  Karen Essex turns on the heat in this transporting and darkly haunting new tale of love and possession that puts forth the question: What if everything you knew about Dracula . . . was wrong?

From the shadowy banks of the River Thames to the wild and windswept coast of Yorkshire, the quintessential Victorian virgin Mina Murray vividly recounts in the pages of her private diary the intimate details of what transpired between her and Count Dracula—the joys and terrors of a pas­sionate affair and her rebellion against a force of evil that has pursued her through time.


Mina’s version of this timeless gothic vampire tale is a visceral journey into the dimly lit bedrooms, mist-filled cemeteries, and locked asylum chambers where she led a secret life, far from the chaste and polite lifestyle the defenders of her purity, and even her fiancĂ©, Jonathan Harker, expected of her.


Bram Stoker’s classic novel was only one side of the story. Now, for the first time, Dracula’s eternal muse reveals all. What she has to say is more sensual, more devious, and more enthralling than ever imagined. The result is a scintillating gothic novel that reinvents the tragic heroine Mina as a modern woman tor­tured by desire.

MY TAKE:    Bram Stoker's Dracula was one of those books (and movies) that stuck with me for a long time.  When I was given the opportunity to read and review a story that was to be from Mina's point of view, I couldn't resist.  I had always felt that she was slighted by Stoker and that his disdain for women was quite clear in the book.

Karen Essex has given us a fresh view of Mina and her world.  She has created the heroine that most of us would have wanted to see in the original version.  In spite of her childhood, Mina comes out as an intelligent woman who hungers for a bit more than Victorian society is willing to give females of that era.  Her deep friendships with the "hang it all out there" Kate and the spoiled heiress Lucy offer a sort of parallel to her struggle with society's expectations.  She desires to use her brains for more than running a household and raising children.  At the same time, she wishes to be the proper wife for Jonathan with a secure and successful future.

I found it interesting that the author reversed the roles in this story as far as many of the men were the less-than-bright blowhards and we were treated to several strong female characters.  The fact that the Count wasn't a major player until close to the end of the story was a bit of a disappointment; but the plot was well written.  We learned much about Mina and her history before being introduced to most of the other key players.  The pace really picked up once Mina went to the asylum.  It was quite the page-turner.

Readers of Stoker's Dracula will enjoy this variation as well as those who enjoy a good, dark romance full of mystery, sensuality and action.  I highly recommend it. 

Out of 5 JEWELS, I give it:

WHERE TO BUY IT:    The Book Depository



To learn more about Karen; you can visit her website, follow her blog and check out her Facebook page.  But, best of all ~ come back tomorrow for the fantastic guest post from Karen and possibly......A GIVEAWAY!


I'd like to thank Amy from Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours for including me and One Book Shy on this book tour. 

Be sure to stop by the other blogs on the tour to find out what they also have to say about


Image and video hosting by TinyPic
 

~~~~~ Disclaimer:  All opinions expressed on this blog are 100% my own.  I do not receive monetary compensation for my reviews but do utilize affiliate links.  I may receive books in  order to facilitate a review, but this does not guarantee a good review - only a completely honest one.  Each review post denotes how I obtained the book.