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![]() FrankensteinMary ShelleyFrankenstein follows Victor Frankenstein's triumph as he reanimates a dead body, and then his guilt for creating such a thing. When the "Frankenstein monster" realizes how he came to be and is rejected by mankind, he seeks revenge on his creator's family to avenge his own sorrow. Mary Shelley first wrote Frankenstein as a short story after the poet Lord Byron suggested his friends each write a ghost story. The story so frightened Byron that he ran shrieking from the room. Search this CliffsNote
Book SummaryMary Shelley BiographyMary Shelley's Career HighlightsAbout FrankensteinSummary, Analysis, and Original Text by ChapterPreface to the 1817 EditionIntroduction to the 1831 EditionLetter 1: To Mrs. Saville, EnglandLetter 2: To Mrs. Saville, EnglandLetter 3: To Mrs. Saville, EnglandLetter 4: To Mrs. Saville, EnglandChapter 1Chapter 2Chapter 3Chapter 4Chapter 5Chapter 6Chapter 7Chapter 8Chapter 9Chapter 10Chapter 11Chapter 12Chapter 13Chapter 14Chapter 15Chapter 16Chapter 17Chapter 18Chapter 19Chapter 20Chapter 21Chapter 22Chapter 23Chapter 24Final LettersCharacter ListCharacter MapCharacter AnalysisVictor FrankensteinThe MonsterElizabeth LavenzaJustine MoritzCritical EssaysThemes in FrankensteinThe Romantic Movement and FrankensteinFrankenstein as a Gothic NovelPlot of FrankensteinStudy and Homework HelpGlossaryQuizEssay Questions
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