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This is the story of Elisabeth Bathory, a 17th-century Transylvanian countess. She was tried as a vampire and became an inspiration for depraved murderers up to the present day.;Based on research conducted at archives in Eastern Europe, this account includes both the recorded truth and the legend that has grown up around her. Tony Thorne is the author of the "Bloomsbury Dictionary of Slang".
Some of the serial killers chosen for this first annual Serial Killers True Crime Anthology you might have heard of and we present their tales in new ways. Others have not graced every newspaper, tabloid or television screen and represent tales of true crime horror told in detail for the first time in these pages. Five of true crime's most prolific authors have come together in these pages to present their most compelling cases of serial homicide, famous and not so famous. WARNING: This book contains graphic forensic crime scene photos and statements that some may find disturbing. "The lambs may have stopped screaming, but Hannibal Lecter has nothing on the very 'real' monsters presented her...
English language edition.
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It has been said that Elizabeth Bathory was the model for Bram Stoker's nineteenth century novel "Dracula." There is no doubt that Stoker heard the legends that have been thrilling audiences for centuries before writing his famous book in Dublin in 1897. Countess Bathory and Count Dracula are alike in so many ways, except she actually lived at the turn of the seventeenth century in Hungary. Her bloody tale is far more terrifying because it was real. Stoker developed the theme of isolation when he wrote "You must not be alone; for to be alone is to be full of fears and alarms." Bathory's victims were often innocent young girls, stolen from their families and trapped alone and defenseless, but...