Frankenstein: Unabridged & Unadapted from the Original Text w/13 Related Readings

Frankenstein: Unabridged & Unadapted from the Original Text w/13 Related Readings

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Romance Mystery Science Fiction +18 more
Format Relié
Pages 324
Langue Anglais
Publié Jan 1, 2002
Éditeur Everbind/Marco Book Co
ISBN-10 0971075638
ISBN-13 9780971075634
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Description

This edition of a classic tale captures the essence of Mary Shelley's groundbreaking work, presented in its original form alongside 13 related readings that offer deeper insights into its themes and contexts. Readers are drawn into a gripping narrative that explores the consequences of ambition and the darker aspects of human nature through the eyes of Victor Frankenstein and his tragic creation. Shelley’s prose, rich with emotional depth and philosophical questions, resonates just as powerfully today as it did when first published.

The inclusion of related readings enriches the experience, providing a broader framework for understanding the societal and ethical implications of the story. This carefully curated compilation not only honors Shelley's legacy but also invites readers to contemplate the moral dilemmas posed by creation and responsibility. As they turn the clean, crisp pages, readers find themselves immersed in a tale that is as relevant and thought-provoking now as it was over two centuries ago.

Avis

This book dives straight into the consequences of unchecked ambition, the ethics of creation, and the devastating loneliness of being made “wrong” by the world before you ever get a chance to exist. Victor Frankenstein is brilliant but catastrophically irresponsible — he wants the glory of creating life, but none of the accountability that comes with it. His cowardice is honestly more monstrous than the creature’s violence.And the creature? Shelley gives him a terrifying level of emotional depth. He’s articulate, perceptive, painfully self-aware. His tragedy isn’t that he’s ugly — it’s that he learns empathy first, and cruelty second. Watching him shift from yearning for connection to calculating vengeance is the kind of character arc modern authors still try and fail to replicate.What really carries the novel is its atmosphere. The isolation. The raw, bleak landscapes mirroring the absolute unraveling of two souls who can’t escape each other. Shelley understood existential dread before we had a name for it.Is the pacing Victorian? Obviously. Does it meander? Sure. But the ideas are sharp enough to cut through any slow patches, and the emotional intelligence on display is still leagues above most contemporary “dark academia” imitators.Bottom line: Frankenstein is a masterpiece because it doesn’t just tell a story — it forces you to confront what responsibility, compassion, and monstrosity actually mean. And every time you reread it, you walk away with a slightly different answer.

This book dives straight into the consequences of unchecked ambition, the ethics of creation, and the devastating loneliness of being made “wrong” by the world before you ever get a chance to exist. Victor Frankenstein is brilliant but catastrophically irresponsible — he wants the glory of creating life, but none of the accountability that comes with it. His cowardice is honestly more monstrous than the creature’s violence.And the creature? Shelley gives him a terrifying level of emotional depth. He’s articulate, perceptive, painfully self-aware. His tragedy isn’t that he’s ugly — it’s that he learns empathy first, and cruelty second. Watching him shift from yearning for connection to calculating vengeance is the kind of character arc modern authors still try and fail to replicate.What really carries the novel is its atmosphere. The isolation. The raw, bleak landscapes mirroring the absolute unraveling of two souls who can’t escape each other. Shelley understood existential dread before we had a name for it.Is the pacing Victorian? Obviously. Does it meander? Sure. But the ideas are sharp enough to cut through any slow patches, and the emotional intelligence on display is still leagues above most contemporary “dark academia” imitators.Bottom line: Frankenstein is a masterpiece because it doesn’t just tell a story — it forces you to confront what responsibility, compassion, and monstrosity actually mean. And every time you reread it, you walk away with a slightly different answer.

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