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From Publishers Weekly: The fictional Dracula of Bram Stoker's novel is better known than the actual Vlad Dracula the Impaler, who ruled as prince of Wallachia for three brief periods in the mid-15th century. This study by two Boston College professors who have written other books about Dracula explores how the legend of the Transylvanian vampire arose. As a ruler, Dracula spread terror far and wide, inflicting appalling tortures on his victims, killing them by impalement, by boiling or skinning them alive. Yet when the time came to defend Europe against Turkish invaders, he led the battle, and the authors view him as "the first modern Renaissance prince of the land.'' Florescu and McNally offer so much detail about the battles of kings, princes, princelings and claimants to thrones that the book will appeal only to the most ardent Dracula fanatics.
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Dracula, Prince of Many Faces
2009, Little, Brown and Company
Electronic resource
in English
0316092266 9780316092265
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2
Dracula: prince of many faces : his life and his times
1989, Little, Brown & Co.
in English
0316286559 9780316286558
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3
Dracula: A biography of Vlad the Impaler, 1431-1476
1974, Hale
Unknown Binding
in English
0709146140 9780709146148
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Dracula: a biography of Vlad the Impaler, 1431-1476
1974, Hale, The Crowood Press
in English
0709146140 9780709146148
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Dracula, Prince of Many Faces reveals the extraordinary life and times of the infamous Vlad Dracula of Romania (1431 - 1476), nicknamed the Impaler. Dreaded by his enemies, emulated by later rulers like Ivan the Terrible, honored by his countrymen even today, Vlad Dracula was surely one of the most intriguing figures to have stalked the corridors of European and Asian capitals in the fifteenth century.



