Dracula Cha Cha Cha (novel)
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Wikidata image
Anno Dracula: Dracula Cha Cha Cha (re-titled Judgment of Tears: Anno Dracula 1959 upon initial U.S. release) is an alternate history/horror novel by British writer Kim Newman.[1][2] First published in 1998 by Carroll & Graf, it is the third book in the Anno Dracula series.
Plot
In 1959, several of the world's notable vampires gather in Rome for the wedding of Count Dracula. Nefarious schemes are afoot and being investigated by British Intelligence, the Diogenes Club, and several others, including a British spy on the trail of a sinister madman with a white cat.
Setting
The book is an alternate history novel set in a world where Van Helsing never killed Dracula. The version of Rome shown in the book is heavily influenced by Italian filmmaker Federico Fellini. As always in the series, the novel contains a number of characters from other fictional works, though due to copyright restrictions some are not named or are given aliases.
Some of these identity shifts are quite clear (such as the character of Commander Hamish Bond, based on James Bond, who has a fondness for martinis, drives an Aston Martin, carries a Walther PPK, has the Scots version of the name "James" for his name, and gets to say "the bitch is dead."), while some are more obscure (a Kansas football player named Kent, for example).
The novel's original title is inspired by Bruno Martino's song "Dracula Cha Cha" (1959) ("La voce del padrone", 7 MQ 1271), which appears on the album I grandi successi di Bruno Martino (The Great Successes of Bruno Martino; 1959) (La voce del padrone, QELP 8012) and is performed onscreen in Vincente Minnelli's film Two Weeks in Another Town (1962).
References
<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Navbox".
- Pages with script errors
- 1990s horror novels
- 1998 British novels
- 1998 fantasy novels
- American alternate history novels
- American horror novels
- American vampire novels
- American zombie novels
- Carroll & Graf books
- Crossover novels
- Cultural depictions of Alessandro Cagliostro
- Cultural depictions of Charles de Gaulle
- Cultural depictions of Edgar Allan Poe
- Cultural depictions of Elvis Presley
- Cultural depictions of Ernest Hemingway
- Cultural depictions of Frank Sinatra
- Cultural depictions of Gilles de Rais
- Cultural depictions of John F. Kennedy
- Cultural depictions of John Profumo
- Cultural depictions of Nikita Khrushchev
- Cultural depictions of Orson Welles
- Cultural depictions of Pope John Paul I
- Cultural depictions of Salvador Dalí
- Cultural depictions of Winston Churchill
- Dracula novels
- Fiction set in 1959
- James Bond parodies
- Novels by Kim Newman
- Novels set in Rome
- Novels set in the 1950s
- Novels set in the 20th century
- Sherlock Holmes pastiches
- Wold Newton family