Happy World Dracula Day 2025!

While it’s true that today is Memorial Day in the United States—an annual remembrance of the country’s fallen military members, held on the last Monday in May—it also happens to be World Dracula Day, which was launched in 2012 by the Whitby Dracula Society 1897 (based in Whitby Abbey, England), to mark the day in 1897 when Bram Stoker’s seminal novel was first released by publisher Archibald Constable & Co.

So, what’s the best way to celebrate the occasion if you’re a horror fan? Well, you could read Dracula, of course, or have your own movie marathon of horror flicks starring the count—there are certainly enough of those to watch, from the original Bela Lugosi classic to Christopher Lee’s Hammer films, and from Frank Langella (Dracula) to Gary Oldman (Bram Stoker’s Dracula) to Luke Evans (Dracula Untold). Not to mention movies in a more comedic…vein (c’mon, I had to say it!): George Hamilton in Love at First Bite; Leslie Nielsen in Dracula: Dead and Loving It; Nicholas Cage in Renfield; and even Richard Roxburgh’s scenery-chewing performance in Hugh Jackman’s Van Helsing.

Or you could purchase a book that helped to inspire Stoker in creating the count’s unforgettable debut—especially when it came to the presentation of his vampirie “brides.” In fact, it’s recently been ranked a “Best of #BookTok” title!

Carmilla is J. Sheridan Le Fanu’s 19th-century classic vampiric tale of love gone wrong. Laura is so desperate for a friend that when a young woman named Carmilla practically turns up on the doorstep of the castle owned by Laura’s father, she thinks her prayers for companionship have been answered. But as she comes to realize, Carmilla isn’t as interested in making friends as she is in spilling blood…

Regarded as the one of the earliest female vampire tales—if not the first—Carmilla was an influence on Stoker’s Dracula, and remains a popular character in fiction to this day. Our special edition contains six exclusive illustrations by the super-talented Eliseu Gouveia (Lorelei: Sects and the City, The Saga of Pandora Zwieback Annual #1).

“With a cover that looks like it belongs on the paranormal romance shelf in a bookstore and half a dozen illustrations provided by Eliseu Gouveia, this edition stands a good chance of tempting some younger readers to pick up this classic vampire tale…. I wish I’d picked this book up in seventh grade instead of slogging through Dracula.”The Gothic Library

Carmilla is available in print and digital formats. Visit its product page at StarWarp Concepts for ordering information.

World Dracula Day: The True Vampires of History!

Bela Lugosi as Dracula (1931)

Happy World Dracula Day 2022

What is World Dracula Day, you ask? Established in 2012 by the Whitby Dracula Society 1897, it’s the annual celebration of the first publication of Bram Stoker’s seminal novel, Dracula, on May 26, 1897—which would make today its 125th anniversary!

To celebrate, you could, of course, read the novel, or perhaps watch the 1931 film adaptation starring Bela Lugosi (or its Spanish-language version, starring Carlos Villarias) or the Frank Langella adaptation from 1979; maybe have a marathon of the Hammer Films’ Dracula series starring Christopher Lee as the count and Peter Cushing (who would have turned 108 today!) as his nemesis, Van Helsing; or perhaps even watch the unauthorized 1922 movie adaptation Nosferatu—which celebrated its 100th anniversary back in March—starring the unforgettable Max Schreck as the rat-faced Count Graf Orlok.

Right now, though, let’s take a trip through the Horror Comics Archives for an appropriate spooky story! Here we have “True Vampires of History!,” a one-page terror tale that first appeared in Adventures into the Unknown! #54, published in April 1954 by ACG (American Comics Group).

Although the writer is unknown—1950s comics rarely carried creative team credit—the art is by Bob Forgione (1929–1994), who started out as an assistant to Jerry Robinson, the legendary co-creator (with writer Bill Finger) of Robin the Boy Wonder and Batman’s archnemesis, the Joker. On his own, in addition to his work for ACG, Forgione provided art for such titles as Atlas/Marvel’s Strange Tales and Tales to Astonish, DC’s Our Army at War and G.I. Combat, and Charlton Comics’ The Thing, and as an uncredited artist on the pulp-hero newspaper comic strip The Phantom.

So, Happy World Dracula Day to one and all! However you celebrate the occasion, make it a fangtastic one!