Bram Stoker books: 9 things you didn't know about the 'Dracula' author

Bram Stoker is the godfather of the vampire craze, but the writer is often a mystery to modern readers. Here are 9 facts you probably don't know about the author.

4. 'Dracula' was once titled 'The Un-Dead,' and Count Dracula was originally Count Wampyr

The original 541-page manuscript of “Dracula” had been lost until, sources posit, it was unearthed in a barn in Pennsylvania during the 1980s. Though the manuscript itself was typed, the title was handwritten “The Un-Dead.” The title of America’s most famous vampire novel, it turns out, was changed at the last minute.

What’s more, had it not been for a similar last-minute change, Dracula might never have entered common parlance. The novel’s central character, “Count Dracula,” was originally “Count Wampyr.”

As for that original manuscript once thought lost, Microsoft co-founder, billionaire, and science fiction geek Paul Allen purchased it, and it now resides in his personal library.

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