Victor Frankenstein has always been fascinated by the darker side of nature One fateful night, his sinister obsession triggers a chain of events that will have terrible consequences for Frankenstein and those closest to him. Beautiful new illustrations throughout and an elegant format with ribbon marker bring the excitement of this classic story to a new generation of children. This abridged retelling of the classic tale is a perfect introduction to the well-loved legend, ideal for adults to read with children, or for newly confident readers to tackle alone. Please note that due to some scary parts in places, content may not be suitable for very young or sensitive readers.
At 50 pages, almost all full of text, this is quite a lengthy read for a Ladybird book, and abridges Mary Shelley's story very well. The illustrations are perfectly decent too. However, the nature of the story, with dying, death, reanimation, a few murders by the creature, and Victor's grief, guilt, madness, are perhaps not the most appropriate of themes for what is essentially intended to be a children's book. Frankenstein is hardly a bedtime story and I can't imagine many kids going the distance and reading so much, but if teenagers read it, they would find it thought-provoking, atmospheric, faithful and well worthwhile. 4.25/5
so this dude is raised with a girl who isn't his biological sibling but is treated like it then right before his mother dies she says 'it is my wish to see you both be married' like bro that is basically incest what is wrong with you
victor frankenstein while a revolutionary scientist is also an evil freak and i hate him
Following on from reading Raymond Sibley's adaptation of The Mummy, my 8 year-old son chose Frankenstein as his bedtime story which we both really enjoyed. As with The Mummy, the lovely (sometimes creepy!) illustrations added to the enjoyment and the story itself was told perfectly for younger readers. My son liked how the story started off with Victor, his siblings and friends as children as it enabled him to relate with the characters - The Mummy contained only grown-up posh characters so it was perhaps harder for him to relate to them. I think these abridged/adapted versions of these classic tales are a really great way to introduce younger readers to books which would otherwise be outside of their reading and understanding age.