Elizabeth Kostova's The Historian was published in 2005, the same year as the first novel in the Twilight series. Like Twilight, The Historian deals with vampires and the folklore surrounding them. This is where the similarity between the two novels ends. It would be a mistake to discount Kostova's first novel as another manifestation of the current vampire trend.
Kostova's novel is intellectual and will appeal to those familiar with academia. Almost all of the main characters are professors, researchers, or students. Toward the end of the novel, Kostova "reprints" a fictional thesis on Dracula, and this chapter drags a bit, even for those accustomed to reading research.
Travel enthusiasts are sure to enjoy the setting. The characters in the novel travel around Europe, including Amsterdam and Eastern Europe. Mystery lovers will enjoy the interweaving of narratives, although certain developments can be a bit predictable. While the central narrator is a teenage girl, the story also follows her father and his former academic advisor, so the narrative should appeal to men as well as women.
Do not be intimidated by the thickness of this novel. The Historian is compelling, even if one has to skim the "thesis" chapter. It will inspire the reader to travel, to learn, and to plunge oneself into research.
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The Historian is the 2005 debut novel of American author Elizabeth Kostova. The plot blends the history and folklore of Vlad Ţepeş and his fictional equivalent Count Dracula. Kostova's father told her stories about Dracula when she was a child, and later in life she was inspired to turn the experience into a novel. She worked on the book for ten years and then sold it within a few months to Little, Brown, and Company, which bought it for a remarkable US$2 million.
The Historian has been described as a combination of genres, including Gothic novel, adventure novel, detective fiction, travelogue, postmodern historical novel, epistolary epic, and historical thriller. Kostova was intent on writing a serious work of literature and saw herself as an inheritor of the Victorian style. Although based in part on Bram Stoker's Dracula, The Historian is not a horror novel, but rather an eerie tale. It is concerned with history's role in society and representation in books, as well as the nature of good and evil. As Kostova explains, "Dracula is a metaphor for the evil that is so hard to undo in history." The evils brought about by religious conflict are a particular theme, and the novel explores the relationship between the Christian West and the Islamic East.
Little, Brown, and Company heavily promoted the book and it became the first debut novel to become number one on The New York Times bestseller list in its first week on sale. As of 2005, it was the ...