Frankenstein (Enriched Classics)

by Mary Shelley
Frankenstein (Enriched Classics)
book data
51,702 ratings, 3.68 average rating, 2,178 reviews (more data...)
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published
April 27th 2004 (first published 1818) by Pocket

binding
Mass Market Paperback, 352 pages

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isbn
0743487583    (isbn13: 9780743487580)

description
<CENTER>ENDURING LITERATURE ILLUMINATED

BY PRACTICAL SCHOLARSHIP

A timeless, terrifying tale of one man's obsession to create life -- and the mons

...more




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Jon
09/29/08
Jon rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0553210440)

Read in September, 2008
I had the idea, a couple of years ago, that someone should update Milton's Paradise Lost within the framework of modern day agnosticism, instead of using the same Christian iconography. I tried to think about how I would do it, but that did not last long. Apparently I was right in abandoning this intellectual exercise, because Mary Shelley has already done it far better than I could have imagined. I should have just read this book sooner.

I came to this book knowing it had very little...more
Like this review?   yes   (11 people liked it)
  20 comments

Trevor
02/26/08
Trevor rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141439475)

I don’t really know what I was expecting – though ‘more’ comes to mind. Let’s start with what I liked about this book. I liked the idea that the monster is ‘made’ a monster by the treatment he receives from humanity. He is ugly and humanity does like to punish the ugly - this is a universal truth about us that in itself is also fairly ugly.

The other thing I liked was that standard ploy of gothic novels – the multiple Chinese whisper narration. In this the story is...more
Like this review?   yes   (15 people liked it)
  10 comments

Shannon
Read in November, 2007
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  3 comments

Christina
first i'd like to say this book should (if it hasn't already) be recorded as an audio book with Jon Lovitz as the narrator using his Saturday Nite Live "thespian" voice. i think i read the entire book with that voice in my head which made me laugh out loud when i read "Begone, vile insect!" ha ha! i am still laughing!

second, i wish i had a dollar for every time the word "wretch" was used.

i'm sort of on the fence with this book. while the sto...more
Like this review?   yes   (7 people liked it)
  4 comments

Brandon Pearce
bookshelves: classics
Mary Shelly wrote this book when she was only 18 years old. She was under the heavy influence of her politically radical, and powerful parents. And she was very much aware of the political movements that had shattered Europe in the late 1700's and early 1800's. The noble efforts of the French Revolution had recently ended with the reign of Terror and left Europe in a conservative backlash that included a crack down on civil liberties. Also keep in mind that the book's full title is "Fran...more
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Colin McKay Miller
Read in December, 2007
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is a fantastic character-driven piece with one of the finest endings in literature.

Despite being considered one of the first fully realized science fiction novels, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein really got the shaft when it came to adaptations. It’s the monster slain by pop culture perception. (Dracula, on the other hand, did quite well outside of the book.) Frankenstein is not a big, groaning zombie with a hump in his back, bolts in his green neck and a ...more
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  2 comments

Blaise
12/31/07
Blaise rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2008
recommended to Blaise by: Emily Harris
recommends it for: Anyone
Frankenstein is a book that really shocked me because I did not expect it to have such depth and meaning. The premises is absolutely preposterous. But the story is told so eloquently and with such conviction that I was quickly able to get past that. Additionally, the characters are people you come to care deeply about, which makes the horrific events that dominate the second half of the novel very difficult to cope with, causing serious reflection.

There are really three central is...more
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  4 comments

Kyle Blalock
Read in February, 2009
Most of the people just do not get Frankenstein. It is more along the lines of an epic Romantic poem in a novel's form. The fact that the monster was abandoned by his creator is a direct symbol of the abandonment of men; be it some form of intelligent designer or the process of our own evolution. Either way, man has been abandoned in some fashion by some device. This is where I believe the work coincides with the Romantic period. The monster’s request of Frankenstein to create him a mate is a ...more
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Madeline
bookshelves: science-fiction, the-list
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  4 comments

Jon
09/02/08
Jon rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141439475)

Read in November, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Cam
04/26/08
Cam rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0451527712)

Read in January, 2006
Victor Frankenstein deserves to be dragged into the street and thrashed in front of every other character in this book.

There, I said it.

I'm sorry. This book aggravates me on a level that makes an accurate review very difficult, but it's not Mary Shelley's fault. It's the fault of the main character, who she draws remarkably well- as an absolute moral infant who avoids his own responsibility for everything that his creation does at positively every turn. When the monster m...more
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  4 comments

Shelly
bookshelves: book-club-pick
Read in March, 2008
I'm not too familiar with this book. I think it has something to do with monsters. Sounds exciting!

So, this book was the first pick in a brand new bookclub (and the first I've ever been part of) I started with some friends.
Here's how it went: only two of us (myself included) finished it whereas all of us found it hard to get through and worse, annoying.
I was really hoping that someone else was having a different experience with the book. Or that through discussion we wo...more
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  3 comments

Krystal Castner
Read in March, 2008
recommended to Krystal by: Mrs. Miska!
recommends it for: anyone??
So I have to say, I enjoyed this book a lot more than I expected I would. The versions they show on television and the actual story are two completely polar opposites. I don't even understand why they changed the story around as much as they did. The original version is much, much better. When I first started reading, my expectations were not very high. I thought that for the most part I knew the story cover to cover, being that I've seen most of the Frankenstein movies. But upon reading t...more
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  1 comment

Joe
11/04/07
Joe rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141439475)

Read in May, 2007
I'm not sure what possessed me to select this book to read to my daughters (ages 9 and 10). I think that they were curious about it around Halloween '06, and I told them a little about what I knew of the story. I explained to them that the Frankenstein is the scientist, not the monster, and that the monster was a pitiable creature--misunderstood and unjustly villified.
I had never read the book, and was thinking only of a movie version I had seen, which portrayed the monster as inn...more
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Jane
05/16/09
Jane rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1597371297)

Read in June, 2009
Mary Shelley wrote this novel while on vacation with two poets - Percy Shelley and Lord Byron. Bored and stuck indoors during a week of rainy days, they entertained each other by making up ghost stories. Mary Shelley fleshed hers out into Frankenstein.

The monster in the book is nothing like the monster in the movie.

We’re used to this incredibly hulking zombie with a screw stuck in his neck. Instead what we get here is an educated, emotional human being who relishes P...more
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  1 comment

Julie
11/15/08
Julie rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0451527712)

Read in April, 2009
recommends it for: everyone
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Tim
10/29/08
Tim rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141439475)

Just finished reading Frankenstein today. I found it not only captivating and entertaining, but also a relevant reminder of the dangers of scientific advance. I’ve been thinking lately about how prone we are to worship the creatED rather than the creatOR. Scientific advance perfectly illustrates this very point - more people today worship science and its advances rather than the creator of that very system called science.

In Frankenstein, Victor becomes so obsessed with bringing a c...more
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Sam
01/25/09
Sam rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141439475)

Read in December, 2008
Trailer: "I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs" "...but now that I had finished, the beauty of dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart." Victor Frankenstein, the scientist, tries to make a creature, but a creature turns out to be a hideous-looking monster. He runs away, but he never knows what this monster will bring to his family.

My thought: Great book. There are som...more
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Yvette
10/14/07
Yvette rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 8440619537)

bookshelves: lit
Read in March, 1992
I read this book in high school and really enjoyed it. This book was deeper than a mad scientist trying to recreate life. This book is about emotions and consequences. Amazingly enough I was touched by this monster. I was so affected by his need for companionship and love. I remembering being so touched by his loneliness that I wept. I was angered that Frankenstein shuns his creation. Reminded me of the many people who are shunned by others just because they are different. We all need lo...more
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John
08/15/08
John rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1417822457)

Read in August, 2008
I think Frankenstein was a bit of a crybaby. But I had some sympathy for Frankenstein's monster.
The edition I read includes an essay by Mary Shelley on "How I, then a young girl, came to think of, and to dilate upon, so very hideous an idea?"
I won't go much into her account -- it stemmed from a friendly competition among an elite circle of writers -- except to say that her goal was to tell a story that would "make the reader dread to look round, to curdle the blood, an...more
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  5 comments


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Frankenstein (Paperback)
Frankenstein (Norton Critical Editions)
Frankenstein (Signet Classics (Paperback))
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Frankenstein (Mass Market Paperback)



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