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Lady Athlyne (1908)
Bram Stoker

Reprint of the 1908 edition

Joy Ogilvie, the beautiful young daughter of a Kentucky colonel, plays a joke with her friends, pretending to be "Lady Athlyne", after hearing a story about the dashing Irish nobleman Lord Athlyne. Little does she know that half a world away, the real Lord Athlyne is a prisoner of war in a South African camp, where word reaches him that a woman in America is impersonating his wife.

Upon his release, he decides to investigate the situation and travels to New York, where a near-fatal accident introduces him to Joy and her father. Athlyne and Joy fall instantly in love-but a series of misadventures and dangerous obstacles threatens to prevent their marriage. And when Colonel Ogilvie learns of their affair and challenges Athlyne to a duel to the death, their love just may end in tragedy!

One of the most remarkable treatments of the theme of mutual and passionate love in English literature, Lady Athlyne reveals Stoker to be a versatile and multi-dimensional author. Poorly received upon its initial release in 1908, it has remained out of print and unobtainable for a century. This Valancourt Books edition follows the text of the exceedingly rare 1908 New York edition held by the Library of Congress.


BOOK DETAILS
ISBN: 0979233240
ISBN-13: 978-0979233241
$19.99 US, 284 pp.
​Trade paper
Published 2007

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AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

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Bram Stoker (1847-1912). Abraham “Bram” Stoker was born in Dublin, the third of seven children in a middle-class Protestant family. His father, Abraham Stoker, was a civil servant, and his mother, Charlotte Stoker, was a social activist. He was bedridden as a child but later went on to enroll at Trinity College, Dublin, where he studied mathematics and was known for his skills as a debater and athlete. After graduating from Trinity in 1870, he followed his father into civil service, working as a clerk at Dublin Castle. The next year, Stoker began working in his spare time as an unpaid theater critic for the Daily Mail, a position which brought him into contact with a number of writers and actors, including Henry Irving. His glowing reviews of Irving’s performances planted a seed of friendship between the two men, and in 1878, Stoker became Irving’s business manager, a position he held for twenty-seven years. In the same year, Stoker married Florence Balcombe, and the two welcomed a son, Noel, in 1879.

Assuming the position as Irving’s business manager required that Stoker move from his native Dublin to London, where he was responsible for running Irving’s Lyceum Theatre. During the next few years, the two men, along with partner Ellen Terry, developed the theater into one of the most popular and esteemed West End venues. Stoker oversaw a number of international tours as well as the daily operations of the theater. The Lyceum came to be seen primarily as a vehicle for Irving’s and Terry’s work, especially their acclaimed performances of Shakespeare. In part due to Stoker’s devoted management, Irving achieved the pinnacle of fame when he received the knighthood in 1895.

In 1872, Stoker published his first work of short fiction, “The Crystal Cup,” in London Society magazine, and in the 1880s and ’90s, he published a number of books, including a collection of fairy tales titled Under the Sunset (1882) and an adventure novel titled The Snake’s Pass (1890). However, it wasn’t until the publication of Dracula in 1897 that Stoker became a literary celebrity. Stoker went on to write ten more novels, including The Jewel of Seven Stars (1903) and The Lair of the White Worm (1911), but these works did not significantly advance his literary reputation. Indeed, by the early twentieth century, he was perhaps best known as the author of a celebrity memoir, Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1906).

- Contributed by Alexis Easley & Shannon Scott

"We owe a debt of gratitude to the publisher Valancourt, whose aim is to resurrect some neglected works of literature, especially those incorporating a supernatural strand, and make them available to a new readership." 
- Times Literary Supplement

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