In this groundbreaking portrait of the man who birthed an undying
cultural icon, David J. Skal pulls back the curtain to reveal the author
who dreamed up this vampire (TIME magazine). Examining the myriad
anxieties plaguing the Victorian fin de siecle, Skal stages Bram
Stoker's infirm childhood against a grisly tableau of medical mysteries
and horrors: cholera and famine fever, childhood opium abuse, frantic
bloodletting, mesmeric quack cures, and the gnawing obsession with bad
blood that pervades Dracula. In later years, Stoker's ambiguous
sexuality is explored through his passionate youthful correspondence
with Walt Whitman, his adoration of the actor Sir Henry Irving, and his
romantic rivalry with lifelong acquaintance Oscar Wilde--here portrayed
as a stranger-than-fiction doppelgänger. Recalling the psychosexual
contours of Stoker's life and art in splendidly gothic detail,
Something in the Blood is the definitive biography for years to come.