Mary Shelley (1797-1851) was an English novelist best known for her Gothic novel Frankenstein. She wrote other novels, but none achieved the level of success of the science fiction/horror classic. She was married to Percy Bysshe Shelley, the famed poet-philosopher. Frankenstein was originally published anonymously. It was her first novel, and she wrote it at the age of nineteen.
Frankenstein
Hardcover
- ISBN-13: 9780141393391
- Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
- Publication date: 09/30/2014
- Series: Penguin Clothbound Classics
- Pages: 352
- Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.90(h) x 1.20(d)
- Age Range: 18Years
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Frankenstein is a masterpiece of nineteenth-century Gothicism and the prototype of the twentieth-century science-fiction novel.
It was conceived in the Swiss Alps in mid-June 1816 after a conversation about bringing corpses to life provoked a nightmare, and was written over the next eleven months in largely morbid circumstances. Death and the terrors of childbirth--as much as Romanticism, a burgeoning awareness of unconscious drives, and contemporary ideas of atheism, the collapse of the social contract, and the corrupting influence of society on human nature--inform this story of a man (or monster) built by Dr. Victor Frankenstein and brought to life by electricity.
The monster's culpability for various horrific acts, his powerlessness in the face of his complete ostracism from society, and Dr. Frankenstein's lies, abdication of responsibility, and the pain he inflicts on his creation raised chilling questions that made the novel an immediate bestseller.
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This Modern Library edition includes a new Introduction by Wendy Steiner, the chair of the English department at the University of Pennsylvania and author of The Scandal of Pleasure.
Mary Shelley was born Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin in 1797 in London. She eloped to France with Shelley, whom she married in 1816. After Frankenstein, she wrote several novels, including Valperga and Falkner, and edited editions of the poetry of Shelley, who had died in 1822. Mary Shelley died in London in 1851.