Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 2, Summer 2008 | Page 59

Evil in the Worlds of D racula and The H istorian 55 Speaking of her friend Dr. Seward, Mina says, “How good and thoughtful he is; the world seems full of good men—even if there are monsters in it” (254). Her words well express the main theme of Stoker’s novel. Even though Mina is diseased from Dracula’s bites, she can still ask her friends to take some pity on the Count. He has to be destroyed so that “his better part may have spiritual immortality” (349). Mina’s belief that “perhaps we are the instruments of ultimate good” and Jonathan’s exclamation that “We are in the hands of God!” are just two examples of how Stoker sets up the opposition to evil in this fictional world (357, 401). At the end of the wild race to Castle Dracula, the Count is killed by a slash through the throat and a knife thrust to the heart. Before he crumbles into dust, Mina tells us in her journal that “there was in [his] face a look of peace, such as I never could have imagined might have rested there” (424). The curse passes from Mina, who is now released from Dracula’s spell and the blood disease. The novel concludes with Jonathan’s “Note” written seven years later. He and Mina are living happily and have a son. Love, friendship, and faith in the good triumph over Dracula’s horrendous evil and his plan to spread that evil. Stoker’s novel allows the reader to believe that the threat of the vampire is gone from the world with Dracula’s death, but such is not the case at the conclusion of Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian, the novel to which we now turn. The Nature of Evil in Kostova’s The Historian Kostova’s debut novel took about ten years to research and write, and it has been published in over thirty languages. According to commentator Jessica Treadway, The Historian is “intriguing for its thorough examination of what constitutes evil and why it exists” (ii). Her novel is inspired by Stoker’s Dracula, yet it surpasses that earlier work in