Book Recommendations

Frankenstein

By Mary Shelley

Fiction, Classics, World Literature, England, 19th Century, Horror, Gothic | 176 pages
1 recommendation

Few creatures of horror have seized readers' imaginations and held them for so long as the anguished monster of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. The story of Victor Frankenstein's terrible creation and the havoc it caused has enthralled generations of readers and inspired countless writers of horror and suspense. Considering the novel's enduring success, it is remarkable that it began merely as a whim of Lord Byron's.
"We will each write a story," Byron announced to his next-door neighbors, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin and her lover Percy Bysshe Shelley. The friends were summering on the shores of Lake Geneva in Switzerland in 1816, Shelley still unknown as a poet and Byron writing the third canto of Childe Harold. When continued rains kept them confined indoors, all agreed to Byron's proposal.
The illustrious poets failed to complete their ghost stories, but Mary Shelley rose supremely to the challenge. With Frankenstein, she succeeded admirably in the task she set for herself: to create a story that, in her own words, "would speak to the mysterious fears of our nature and awaken thrilling horror — one to make the reader dread to look round, to curdle the blood, and quicken the beatings of the heart."

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Sophie Phelps
18th Nov 2024
"From the captivating mountainscapes of Switzerland, to the desolate land of ice that is the Arctic, Frankenstein is a novel which draws on the beauty and the majesty of the natural world. Drawing on classic Romantic ideals regarding the restorative powers of the natural world, Shelley utilises the multiple settings employed in Frankenstein to comment on how connected the human world and the natural world truly are.

The sublime experience of witnessing a thunder storm over Lake Geneva, provides Dr Frankenstein with the inspiration for his most dangerous idea - the notion that humans can disrupt the natural order. It is that same doctor who searches desperately for solace and peace of mind in the landscapes of the German wilderness, before embarking on a journey that will lead him into the most dramatic and desolate wastelands of the frozen Arctic. Shelley truly understood the power the natural world holds over the human soul."