
Frankenstein
by Mary Shelley
Victor Frankenstein's obsessive creation of life — and his abandonment of the creature he brings into being — with consequences that pursue them both to the ends of the earth.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)British · b. 1797
Regarded as the mother of science fiction
Mary Shelley was a British author who wrote Frankenstein at eighteen, creating the prototype for modern science fiction and one of literature's most enduring meditations on creation, responsibility, and the monstrous.
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was the daughter of two radical philosophers — William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft — and the lover and eventual wife of Percy Bysshe Shelley, facts that shaped her intellectual formation and the ambition of her first novel. Frankenstein, begun when she was eighteen during the famous ghost story challenge at the Villa Diodati in 1816, was published in 1818. It invented the template for modern science fiction and introduced questions — about the ethics of creation, the responsibilities of the maker to the made, the meaning of humanity — that have not been exhausted by two centuries of repetition and adaptation.
The novel is considerably stranger than its cultural afterlife suggests. Victor Frankenstein is not a hero but a man whose Promethean ambition is exposed as vanity and cowardice, and the creature — eloquent, wronged, and genuinely moving in his account of his own rejection and education — is the more sympathetic figure. The nested narrative structure (Walton writes to his sister about Frankenstein’s account of the creature’s account of his own life) distances and layers the story in ways that anticipate modernist technique. Shelley is asking not just whether we can create life but what we owe what we create.
The novel has limitations: the plot strains credulity in places, and the female characters are underdeveloped even by the standards of what Shelley elsewhere demonstrated she could do. But its central questions remain urgent, and its creature — abandoned by his maker and made into a monster by human rejection — has entered the cultural imagination as a figure who refuses to stay buried.

by Mary Shelley
Victor Frankenstein's obsessive creation of life — and his abandonment of the creature he brings into being — with consequences that pursue them both to the ends of the earth.
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