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Mailbox Monday is where other bloggers write about the books they received the previous week. The Mailbox Monday is now going on a blog tour with the host this month being Bermudaonion Weblog. Visit her blog to see what books made it her way and check out the others who are participating like me in the Monday Mailbox Meme.

PhotobucketLondon, 1890. Mina Murray, the rosy-cheeked, quintessentially pure Victorian heroine, becomes Count Dracula’s object of desire. To preserve her chastity, five male “defenders” rush in to rescue her from the vampire’s evil clutches. This is the version of the story we’ve been told. But now, from Mina’s own pen, we discover that the story is vastly different when told from the female point of view.

In this captivating, bold act of storytelling, award-winning author Karen Essex breathes startling new life into the characters of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, transporting the reader into the erotic and bizarre underbelly of the original story. While loosely following the events of its classic predecessor, Dracula in Love deviates from the path at every turn.

The result is a darkly haunting, propulsive, and rapturous tale of immortal love and possession.

From the shadowy banks of the river Thames to the wild and windswept Yorkshire coast, Dracula’s eternal muse—the most famous woman in vampire lore—vividly recounts the joys and terrors of a passionate affair that has linked her and the Count through the centuries, and her rebellion against her own frightening preternatural powers.

Mina’s version of this gothic vampire tale is a visceral journey into Victorian England’s dimly lit bedrooms, mist-filled cemeteries, and terrifying asylum chambers, revealing the dark secrets and mysteries locked within. Time falls away as she is swept into a mythical voyage far beyond mortal comprehension, where she must finally make the decision she has been avoiding for almost a millennium.

Stoker’s Dracula offered one side of the story, in which Mina was a victim bearing no responsibility for the unfolding events. Now, for the first time, the truth of her secret history, and of vampirism itself, is revealed. What this flesh and blood woman has to say is more sensual, more devious, and more enthralling than the Victorians could have expressed or perhaps even imagined. – FROM THE BOOK JACKET

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  • http://metroreader.blogspot.com kim V

    I have this one in my TBR pile too.

  • http://bermudaonion.wordpress.com bermudaonion (Kathy)

    I have a feeling this book is going to be very popular! Enjoy!

  • http://parchmentgirl.com Kate

    Looks interesting. Enjoy!

  • http://bookaholicmom.blogspot.com/ Beth(bookaholicmom)

    I have this on my tbr pile too. I hope it is as good as it sounds.

  • http://aisleb.tumblr.com Aisle B

    Lucky YOU! Am dying for a copy of Dracula in Love! Hmmmmmmmmmm green with envy!

   

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