# Frankenstein

> <p>A scientist&#x27;s reckless ambition births a sentient being—one whose loneliness curdles into rage. Shelley&#x27;s novel is less a monster story than a chilling meditation on creation, abandonment, and the scars of rejection.</p>

Price: 7.50 USD · in stock

## About
Victor Frankenstein&#x27;s obsession with animating lifeless flesh succeeds—horrifically. His creature, articulate and yearning, becomes a mirror to humanity&#x27;s cruelty. This isn&#x27;t just Gothic horror; it&#x27;s a fever dream of parental neglect, scientific hubris, and the unbearable weight of existence.
What it&#x27;s about
A young Geneva scholar, intoxicated by the promise of conquering death, assembles a living being from stolen body parts. When the creature awakens, Frankenstein recoils, abandoning his grotesque progeny. The narrative spirals outward—through the creature&#x27;s self-education in a hovel, his bitter isolation, and his escalating demands for companionship from his creator. Their fates intertwine across icy wastes and Alpine peaks in a chase that questions who, exactly, is the real monster.
Themes
Shelley exposes the dark underbelly of creation: the moral vacuum when makers disown their creations. The novel pulses with questions of parental responsibility—Frankenstein&#x27;s refusal to nurture what he wrought mirrors societal rejections of the &#x27;other.&#x27; Equally potent is its interrogation of unchecked ambition; science, divorced from ethics, becomes a self-consuming fire. Woven throughout is the creature&#x27;s heartbreaking search for belonging, turning him from victim to avenger.
Why it still matters
Nearly 200 years later, &#x27;Frankenstein&#x27; remains the blueprint for anxieties about AI, genetic engineering, and creators dwarfed by their creations. Its core tragedy—the creature&#x27;s eloquent suffering—resonates in debates about marginalization and the violence of exclusion. The book birthed sci-fi&#x27;s existential dread while remaining a searing psychological study of alienation.
Who it&#x27;s for
Readers who want horror with philosophical heft, or Gothic atmosphere paired with razor-sharp social critique. Fans of &#x27;Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde&#x27; or &#x27;The Strange Case of the Albigenses&#x27; will recognize the moral duality, while admirers of Toni Morrison&#x27;s &#x27;Beloved&#x27; will find kinship in its themes of monstrous love and abandonment.
On reading it now
In an era of ChatGPT and CRISPR, Shelley&#x27;s warning about creation without compassion feels prophetic. The creature&#x27;s plea—&#x27;I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather the fallen angel&#x27;—lands differently when our own &#x27;monsters&#x27; are algorithms demanding accountability from their makers.
Related reading
If this resonates, you might also reach for Civil Disobedience, Emma, or The Souls of Black Folk.

## Specifications
- author: Mary Shelley
- publisher: DotBooks
- language: en
- pages: 280
- format: paperback
- gutenberg_id: 84
- published_year: 1818
