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Author:Mary Shelley
Title:Frankenstein
Publisher:  Pyramid Royal
Country:USA
Date:1957
Format:Paperback
Class Number:823.7
Genre:Fiction, Science Fiction, Horror
Cat#:R290
Total Editions:9
Rating:Rate
Collection:  I Own It     I Want It 
Community: 1 Owns, 1 Wants
Price Guide:Valuation Page
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Notes

Mass market paperback.
192 numbered and total pages.

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Comments and Reviews
 
ppint.
2nd Jun 2023
 mary wollstonecraft shelley was the daughter of mary wollstonecraft and william godwin, q.v., who was also a published author of fiction including horror and fantasy, and whose influence upon mary wollstonecraft shelley's work does not appear to've been deeply studied.
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
ppint.
30th Aug 2020
 the number-string in the isbn10 field is^W was wrong - only 8 digits long - and should^W has been deleted.

this book bears an isbn13 (which i've added), and it *might* quote an isbn10 inside, as some books bore both, for a while.

n.b. the final, checksum digits of an edition's isbn10 and isbn13 - if it bears both - *should* normally be different - though not absolutely always, as they are calculated differently.
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
Terence Archer
24th Jan 2018
 Alternative front and rear covers added.
Cover illustration "Tintern Abbey by Moonlight" by John Sell Cotman(1782-1842).
New introduction and notes added 1999.
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
Magic Marmalade
15th Sep 2017
 Ashamed to say that all this record collecting business has meant that I haven't read a book in almost two years!

...so I got a little carried away once I picked one up again at last, and had to tell you all about it.

(To my surprise, I'm a considerably quicker reader than I used to be).
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
zabadak
15th Sep 2017
 Size isn't everything Lee! Usually, but not always! :erk:
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
Lee Wrecker
15th Sep 2017
 Yes, zabadak, Magic's review is actually longer than the book. I held a copy of the book up against the screen and Magic's review is in fact about 9cm longer. So, no wonder you haven't finished it yet.
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
zabadak
14th Sep 2017
 The book. Not completed your review yet... :erk:
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
Magic Marmalade
13th Sep 2017
 What... the book, or my review? :)
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
zabadak
13th Sep 2017
 Took me ages to wade through! :erk:
(this comment is from another edition of this book)
 

 
Magic Marmalade
13th Sep 2017
 Review
It never fails to amaze me...

... how different these classic tales are in the reading, than what you think you know about them, as gleaned from the filmed versions, and even literary discussions on arty programmes and such.

This, for instance, leaves a very different impression in the mind than the sight of Mr Squarehead - bolt neck - Karloff, or those Hammer productions with Christopher Lee lumbering around as a monolithic, mute, and intellectually impaired American quilt of human bits 'n' bobs in some loose arrangement of anatomy would make of it.

No, this is a very different creature than such liberties and licence over the intervening years since it's publication have created in the mind of popular culture.

In fact, the first thing that struck me, and which even the notes by scholars here (and subsequent moseying around he net at other opinions) have failed to draw attention to, is that there is very, very little by way of detailed descriptions of persons, processes, or places in it.
Indeed, the only thing said about the creation of "the creature" is that Victor Frankenstein gives him "The spark of life" - and hey-presto, the creature is born. No bubbling test-tubes, no grand mechanisms, lightning, castles, angry, torch bearing villagers, no grave robbing, stitching of pieces or even the source of the components that go to make him.

No, the only thing we are told is that Victor discovers the secret to giving life... and Shelley makes a particular point of not saying how he does it (the point of the book, is not to follow his folly, and so he tells Walton; A man on a similar scientific expedition who finds Victor pursuing the creature through the northern Ice cap in order to destroy it; that hill will not tell him that secret, but simply relates his tale to warn him off his endeavour.

The structure of the book is a bit of a Russian doll of narratives, opening with Walton sending letters home to his sister Margaret, relating how he found Frankenstein, and in these, he relates Victor's narrative, who in turn relates the creature's narrative, as told to him (yes, the creature speaks, and in fact, is articulate, eloquent, philosophical, and highly intelligent).

And perhaps this is the power of the book on the imagination, which subsequent film-makers have learned... that the less you describe, the more you allow the reader / viewer's imagination to make the horror for themselves (like Ridley Scott's: Alien)...

(There's barely enough description of protagonists to fill a paragraph, in terms of concrete facts)

...And in fact he only descriptions we are afforded of the creature, over and above judgemental characterisations of him as a "demon", "hideous" etc. Is that he has a watery-yellow eye (conspicuously, this reference is very closely followed by reference to the moon...

((The sun and moon are very strong symbols in the this book, from what I gleaned))

...and that he is eight feet tall, with "flowing black hair", and moves with superhuman strength, speed and agility (Have a look at Lord Byron - could he be a source of inspiration for this creature?).

In fact, the very strong impression grew in my mind of an alternative theory about the story than those I've found elsewhere... that "The Creature" is not a physical entity within the story at all, but is Victor Frankenstein's psychosis, that he is the killer and the monster in this work, and that the creature is a split element of his own personality - his own murderous ambition, against which he is struggling, and which may well be the Hyde to his Jekyll that he cannot contain. For it seemed to me that there are many very suggestive clues all through the book which point to this, including the creature's narrative (later related) having taken place at exactly the time, early in he book, after he is created, where Victor spends months wandering, delirious, and semi-conscious.... and the general Superman thing, where neither seems to be where the other is, in the sight of others, at the same time.

Victor Frankenstein is the creature... the creature is his own split personality?

This is only a very short book in fact (How penguin and the like stretch this out into hundreds of pages in their editions is beyond me), as once you take all the introductions, out, it probably boils down to only 150 pages or so, and it only took me two days last week, so it can be gotten through easy enough.

Great read though, another one to finally tick off the list!
(this review is from another edition of this book)

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Other Editions

Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Wordsworth Classics - Paperback - UK - 1853260231 (1999)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Dale - Paperback - USA - 0895591308 (1978)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Barnes & Noble - Paperback - USA - 1593080050 (2003)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Penguin Classics - Paperback - UK - 9780141439471 (2003)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - WDL Books - Paperback - UK (1958)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Editura Excelsior-Multi Press - Paperback - Romania - 9739086101 (1991)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - Vintage Classics - Paperback - USA - 9780307474421 (2008)
Book

Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - W. W. Norton & Company - Paperback - USA - 0393964582 (1996)

See Also

Book
Mary Shelley - Frankenstein - WDL Books - Paperback - UK (1958)
Next by Author
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Mary Shelley - Mary Shelley's Journal - University Of Oklahoma Press - Hardcover - USA (1947)
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Jules Verne - Michael Strogoff - Pyramid Royal - Paperback - USA (1957)
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