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=== Publication === [[File:Dracamer99.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|alt=Book cover of 1899 edition. It has the name and title of the novel on a yellow-orange cover, depicting Dracula's castle upon a hill|1899 first American edition, [[Doubleday (publisher)|Doubleday & McClure]], New York]] Early Stoker biographer Barbara Belford noted the novel looked "shabby" because of a last-minute title change;{{Sfn|Belford|2002|p=272}} the printer's copy of the typescript, with hand-written amendments, is titled ''The Un-Dead''.{{Sfn|Stoker|2019|p=191}}{{Efn|As the typescript under the title ''The Un-Dead'' bears the copyright date 1897 and the first known advertisement for the novel under the title ''Dracula'' appeared on 8 May 1897, Paul McAlduff concludes that the title was changed sometime between 1 January and 8 May that year.{{Sfn|McAlduff|2012|p=42}}}} The surviving typewritten publishing agreement was signed and dated 25 May 1897; Peter Beal of [[Sotheby's]] suggests its signing one day before the official publication date indicates that it was a formality.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=245}} To protect his copyright interest for adaptations,{{Efn|This was necessary under the Stage Licensing Act of 1897.{{Sfn|Buzwell|2014}}}} Stoker organised a reading of his stage adaptation of the novel in the week before publication in the [[Lyceum Theatre, London|Lyceum Theatre]]. A small group, primarily theatre staff, attended the reading, and [[Edith Craig]] played Mina.{{Sfn|Miller|2005a|pp=72β73}} Bound in yellow cloth and titled in red letters, ''Dracula'' was published in May 1897 by Archibald Constable and Company. It cost 6 [[shilling]]s.{{sfn|Davison|1997|p=19}} Uncertainty exists around the exact date of publication, but it was probably published on 26 May 1897. Stoker wrote to [[William Gladstone]] that the novel would be released on the 26th.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=274}}{{Efn|The ''Daily News'' said it was "published to-day" in an article published May 27.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=256}}}} Paul McAlduff writes that it was published "on or about May 26".{{Sfn|McAlduff|2012|p=39}} Eighteen-Bisang states it could have been published anywhere from late May to June 1897.{{Sfn|Eighteen-Bisang|2008|p=258}} Stoker's mother, [[Charlotte Stoker]], enthused about the novel and predicted it would bring her son immense financial success. She was wrong: the novel, although reviewed well, failed to earn Stoker much money and did not establish his critical reputation until after his death.{{Sfn|Belford|2002|p=274}} For the first thousand sales of ''Dracula'', Stoker earned no royalties.{{Sfn|Belford|2002|p=269}} Following serialisation by American newspapers, [[Doubleday & McClure]] published an American edition in 1899 with some textual changes.{{Sfn|Belford|2002|p=272}} A cheaper paperback version was published by Constable in 1901, but few copies have survived.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=268}} The text is around 15% shorter than the original but it is not known if Stoker made the amendments.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=280}} Since its publication, ''Dracula'' has never been [[out of print]].{{Sfn|Davison|1997|p=21}} An edition of the novel edited by McNally and Florescu in 1979 was the first to include ''Dracula''<nowiki/>'s "missing chapter", "[[Dracula's Guest]]".{{Sfn|Eighteen-Bisang|2008|p=291}} Bram's widow [[Florence Balcombe|Florence Stoker]] included the chapter as a short story in ''[[Dracula's Guest and Other Weird Tales]]'' (1914), two years after his death.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=226}} While some commentators have described the prose as ''Dracula''{{'s}} discarded first chapter, Clive Leatherdale contests this, arguing that the material was incorporated into the published novel.{{Sfn|Miller|2005|p=234}}
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