The Book of Renfield explained

Italic Title:(see above) -->
The Book of Renfield: A Gospel of Dracula
Author:Tim Lucas
Cover Artist:Melissa Isriprashad
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Gothic horror
Release Date:June 2005
April 2023
Media Type:Print (hardback and paperback)
Pages:403 pp
290 pp
Isbn:0-7432-4354-4

The Book of Renfield: A Gospel of Dracula is a 2005 novel written by Tim Lucas.[1] It is the first of the mashup horror-themed novels that rose to commercial prominence later in the decade. It is an unofficial prequel to Bram Stoker's Dracula. Like the original novel, Renfield is an epistolary novel written in series of written documents. It focuses mainly on Renfield, mostly remembered for his minor role in Dracula as a lunatic that ate flies, rodents and other animals, and Dr. John Seward, the administrator of an insane asylum who is trying to understand Renfield's psychosis.

Plot summary

The Book of Renfield works mainly as a companion piece to Stoker's original novel. In some cases, excerpts from the actual book are used but are modified and expanded under the pretense that Dracula is nonfiction and that Seward's entries were "edited, and in some instances, rewritten by John L. Seward before he provided them for the use of Mr. Bram Stoker, at the request of Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Harker". As such, whenever the text from Dracula is used, it is bolded to differentiate the changes.

The book starts with a man discovered outside the ruins of Carfax Abbey, feasting on a rat, whose only form of identification is a handkerchief that reads "R. M. Renfield". He is taken in to Seward's asylum, where his sessions with the doctor reveal fragments of his tragic past and how he came to be Count Dracula's pawn.

References

  1. Web site: 18 April 2005 . THE BOOK OF RENFIELD: The Gospel of Dracula by Tim Lucas . 2024-02-17 . www.publishersweekly.com.