Frankenstein

SBS T 942

Paperback, 271 pages

English language

Published Nov. 24, 1969 by SBS Scholastic Book Services, div. of Scholastic Magazines Inc..

OCLC Number:
862295739

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5 stars (3 reviews)

The original story of science gone berserk: one that changed how far our dreams can stretch. Imagine a human created out of corpses. A monster assembled by a scientist from parts of dead bodies develops a mind of his own as he learns to loathe himself and hate his creator. Who is the monster: this tortured beast, or the man who made him?

Goodread STUDENT Members: --Janelle: So many great lessons in this book. I felt so many mixed emotions for the monster: pity, understanding, sorrow, love. I read it for school, and fell in love with it. How did you feel towards the monster?

--Eric: I refuse to dub Victor Frankenstein's creation as a "monster". The real "monster" in this book is Victor himself due to rejecting his creation and giving him a mate.

I felt bad that the creature had to endure heartache and rejection due to how …

132 editions

reviewed Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (Penguin Classics (Sound Recording))

Sublime in terror

5 stars

Well worth reading. Shelley commands many voices with equal poetry. At times reading it felt bleak, but perhaps that is the result of hubris. Frankenstein opens beautifully. Towards the latter half the plot turns into Victor being sad and everything happens just as you'd expect it to, which lost my interest a little. The end was warmer, it definitely found its direction again.