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Frankenstein-Mary Shelley

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Ebook About
The story of Victor Frankenstein and the monstrous creature he created has held readers spellbound ever since it was published two centuries ago. On the surface, it is a novel of tense and steadily mounting horror; but on a more profound level, it offers searching illumination of the human condition in its portrayal of a scientist who oversteps the bounds of conscience, and of a monster brought to life in an alien world, ever more desperately attempting to escape the torture of his solitude. A novel of hallucinatory intensity, Frankenstein represents one of the most striking flowerings of the Romantic imagination.

Book Frankenstein Review :



Title: FrankensteinAuthor: Mary ShelleyRead by: Dan StevensPublisher: AudibleLength: Approximately 8 hours and 35 minutesSource: Purchased from Amazon AudibleThis novel has a VERY slow start that had me ready to abandon it. It starts as an epistolary novel between a captain and his sister back in England. They are rather mundane letters until one day the captain picks up a strange fellow in peril on a sledge in the artic. The strange fellow introduces himself as Dr. Frankenstein and starts to give his back story. He has a rather mundane childhood until he becomes intrigued with the idea of being able to create life from death. He feverously works alone in his laboratory until he creates his intended goal and instantly finds himself repelled and leaves the monster, wanting nothing to do with it. This left me with several questions – how did the monster know where Dr. Frankenstein was from and why did he want to destroy his entire family? Then the book goes into the monster’s narrative as related to Dr. Frankenstein as related to the sea captain. The novel overall had a very strange narrative structure.As I got more into the story, I was engrossed. I also realized that Dr. Frankenstein was a big whiner, but he is the person who caused all the mess. The monster didn’t ask to be created and when he was Dr. Frankenstein leaves him in horror to find his way around the world on his own. If he would have provided any sort of love and care, the story would have had a much different conclusion. It is interesting that the monster wanted human contact and affection, but the horror of his appearance made everyone run from him with fear. It was only once he couldn’t get love that he switched to violence.The novel was very different than the Frankenstein movies. There is no assistant Igor and no “It’s Alive!” scene that I always associate with Frankenstein. I found it very odd that Frankenstein was so obsessed with creating the monster and then wanted nothing to do with it.Dan Stevens was a good narrator. I like his British accent for the sea captain at the start of the novel and then his switch to a vaguely European accent for Dr. Frankenstein’s story. He then had yet another voice for the monster. He was very animated in his narration and I really liked listening to him.I’ve been meaning to read Frankenstein my entire life, but it was the PBS Great American Read that finally moved this to the top of my list. I find it intriguing that Mary Shelley was only eighteen years old when she wrote it. She had quite the imagination to write such a unique work. I classify this as one of the classics that endures though not because it is particularly well written, but because the ideas it contains are so electrifying and unique.What are your thoughts on Frankenstein? I’ve love to discuss!Overall, I’m glad I finally invested time into Frankenstein. It was a good audiobook and it is the type of story that you need to invest time into to finally get into the good meat of the story.
The summer of 1816 was named the “Year Without a Summer” after the eruption of Mount Tambora caused a long and dreary Volcanic Winter. With everyone keeping to the indoors, Mary, her future husband Percy Shelley, Lord Byron and John Polidori all entertained themselves by telling ghost stories and then inevitably it was suggested they each come up with their own type of horror story. It was during this very summer that Mary Shelley, at the age of eighteen, came up with the initial concept of Frankenstein.‘After days and night of incredible labour and fatigue, I succeeded in discovering the cause of generation and life; nay, more, I became myself capable of bestowing animation upon lifeless matter.’Frankenstein is the story of Victor Frankenstein, a man that through experiementation in both science and alchemy devised a way to combine pieces of human corpses and give them new life. Frankenstein is a legendary story and has become a pivotal part of our cultural understanding of the supernatural world, however, the novel is actually nothing like the classic movies involving lightning, screaming and Frankenstein actually being excited at his accomplishments.His shock and awe quickly transforms into a horrific realization at what he was capable of and he ran away in terror, leaving the monster alone. We’re told Frankenstein’s story first and the steps that led to the monsters creation and the subsequent events as well. Frankenstein depicts him as a monster, thus the reason he is never given an actual name, but when we are finally given the story via the monsters point of view we realize this ‘monster’ is quite possibly anything but. His is a story of complete despondency that easily garners your compassion regardless of the pain and suffering he has wreaked. He may be a creation but is he still not a person? Is his creators ensuing abandonment to blame for his conduct because Frankenstein had a duty beyond just his creation? I believe it is. Without his creator there to teach him the ways of the world, he was forced to observe, learn and interpret on his own. So then it was his observances of society what transformed him into who he came to be? A matter of circumstance? He became an outcast of society because of his appearance and after a time became lonely and craved a companion. He sought out his creator so as to force him to duplicate his work.This is my first read of the classic and I must say it’s nothing like I was expecting. It ended up being a strange and eclectic blend of genres. It was science fiction, with the creation of a man from pieces of corpses, and it was gothic and horror, the dead coming back to life and wreaking havoc on the world. Neither of those were the sole purpose or point of this story; it only set the scene. At the heart of this story are the revolutionary and intellectual questions about life, death and existence. About scientific possibilities and how far is too far. And it’s about compassion and lack of it in this world. Was Frankenstein’s monster truly an outcast only because of his appearance, because initially he showed the utmost caring towards individuals and even saved a drowning girl at one point. Society saw the monster and judged him harshly based off that alone, never giving him the benefit of the doubt. It’s a fictional accounting of a harsh world but it’s a rather truthful and distressing accounting. This is Gothic literature at its very finest and I’m so glad I finally conquered this incredible piece of work.‘Once I falsely hoped to meet with beings who, pardoning my outward form, would love me for the excellent qualities which I was capable of unfolding. I was nourished with high thoughts of honour and devotion. But now crime has degraded me beneath the meanest animal. No guilt, no mischief, no malignity, no misery, can be found comparable to mine. When I run over the frightful catalogue of my sins, I cannot believe that I am the same creature whose thoughts were once filled with sublime transcendent visions of the beauty and the majesty of goodness.’

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