![]() ![]() The notorious barbarian’s excesses coexisted with his “predilection not only for the best of the academic world. The story settles into a hypnotic dual rhythm as the narrator seeks her father (who seems to be hunting for Rossi) throughout Istanbul and the Balkans, accompanied by Helen, a young scholar pursuing her own agenda-while testimony from both Paul’s letters to his narrator-daughter and Rossi’s to him reveal Vlad Tepes’s unearthly ambivalence. We learn, piecemeal, about Paul’s mentor Bartolomeo Rossi’s fascination with the Dracula story (and its little understood relation to the history of the Ottoman Empire), Rossi’s unexplained disappearance and the alarming fact that people interested in obscure manuscripts keep turning up dead (if not undead). The image of a huge dragon and the word “Drakulya” thus stimulate her excited questions, her father’s initially evasive responses and his gradual disclosures of intersecting scholarly researches into a centuries-old enigma: the unknown location of the tomb bloodthirsty warlord Vlad Tepes (whose atrocities inspired Bram Stoker’s ur-vampire) is buried in, though perhaps not resting in peace. ![]() ![]() Kostova’s unnamed narrator, a brainy schoolgirl whose education has benefited from European travels required by her father Paul’s pacifist foundation, kick-starts the narrative when she happens upon an old book that features a striking woodcut illustration. ![]() An intricately plotted first novel, ten years in the making, lavishly reworks the Dracula legend. ![]()
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