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Binding
Paperback
Number of Pages
288
Age Group
All
Language
English
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Book Summary
This is a classic work of fiction presented in its original 1818 text, offering a bold meditation on creation, responsibility, and the consequences of unchecked curiosity. The central questions probe what it means to seek knowledge, who bears the cost, and how society responds to the products of scientific ambition. The tone is thought-provoking, morally charged, and quietly daring, with a voice that remains vividly relevant to readers today.
This edition preserves the original language while pairing the text with scholarly context. It features a new introduction by National Book Critics Circle award-winner Charlotte Gordon, along with suggestions for further reading, literary excerpts, and reviews selected by Gordon. A chronology and an essay by Shelley scholar Charles E. Robinson anchor the work in its historical moment and literary conversation. The edition also foregrounds Shelley’s relationship with her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, highlighting a feminist lineage that informs the text’s enduring resonance and placing the work within a broader feminist legacy rather than as a lone statement in a male-dominated literary circle.
The reading experience blends a tightly woven narrative with reflective passages. You follow a driven scientist and his ill-fated creation through a journey of pursuit, consequence, and moral reckoning. The Gothic atmosphere and social critique are preserved, while the introduction and notes invite readers to engage with themes of responsibility, otherness, and the power of imagination from a modern perspective.
Readers finish with a deeper understanding of classic literature’s enduring questions and a heightened appreciation for nuanced storytelling. The edition fosters critical thinking, curiosity about historical context, and a lasting sense of relevance, leaving a thoughtful, lingering impression long after the last page.
Product Details
Author
Mary Shelley
Publisher
Penguin Random House
Number of Pages
288
Language
English
SKU
9780143131847
ISBN
9780143131847
Reading Age
All
Dimensions
2.29x12.7x19.05cm
Binding
Paperback
MRP: ₹ 650
₹ 553
₹ 97 Off
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (Ne Godwin; 30 August 1797 1 February 1851) Was An English Novelist, Short Story Writer, Dramatist, Essayist, Biographer, And Travel Writer, Best Known For Her Gothic Novel Frankenstein: Or, The Modern Prometheus (1818). She Also Edited And Promoted The Works Of Her Husband, The Romantic Poet And Philosopher Percy Bysshe Shelley. Her Father Was The Political Philosopher William Godwin, And Her Mother Was The Philosopher And Feminist Mary Wollstonecraft. Mary Godwin'S Mother Died When Mary Was Eleven Days Old; Afterwards, Mary And Her Older Half-Sister, Fanny Imlay, Were Reared By Their Father. When Mary Was Four, Godwin Married His Neighbour, Mary Jane Clairmont. Godwin Provided His Daughter With A Rich, If Informal, Education, Encouraging Her To Adhere To His Liberal Political Theories. In 1814, Mary Godwin Began A Romantic Relationship With One Of Her Fathers Political Followers, The Married Percy Bysshe Shelley. Together With Mary'S Stepsister, Claire Clairmont, They Left For France And Travelled Through Europe; Upon Their Return To England, Mary Was Pregnant With Percy'S Child. Over The Next Two Years, She And Percy Faced Ostracism, Constant Debt, And The Death Of Their Prematurely Born Daughter. They Married In Late 1816 After The Suicide Of Percy Shelley'S First Wife, Harriet. In 1816, The Couple Famously Spent A Summer With Lord Byron, John William Polidori, And Claire Clairmont Near Geneva, Switzerland, Where Mary Conceived The Idea For Her Novel Frankenstein. The Shelleys Left Britain In 1818 For Italy, Where Their Second And Third Children Died Before Mary Shelley Gave Birth To Her Last And Only Surviving Child, Percy Florence. In 1822, Her Husband Drowned When His Sailing Boat Sank During A Storm Near Viareggio. A Year Later, Mary Shelley Returned To England And From Then On Devoted Herself To The Upbringing Of Her Son And A Career As A Professional Author. The Last Decade Of Her Life Was Dogged By Illness, Probably Caused By The Brain Tumour That Was To Kill Her At The Age Of 53. Until The 1970S, Mary Shelley Was Known Mainly For Her Efforts To Publish Percy Shelley'S Works And For Her Novel Frankenstein, Which Remains Widely Read And Has Inspired Many Theatrical And Film Adaptations. Recent Scholarship Has Yielded A More Comprehensive View Of Mary Shelleys Achievements. Scholars Have Shown Increasing Interest In Her Literary Output, Particularly In Her Novels, Which Include The Historical Novels Valperga (1823) And Perkin Warbeck (1830), The Apocalyptic Novel The Last Man (1826), And Her Final Two Novels, Lodore (1835) And Falkner (1837). Studies Of Her Lesser-Known Works Such As The Travel Book Rambles In Germany And Italy (1844) And The Biographical Articles For Dionysius Lardner'S Cabinet Cyclopaedia (182946) Support The Growing View That Mary Shelley Remained A Political Radical Throughout Her Life. Mary Shelley'S Works Often Argue That Cooperation And Sympathy, Particularly As Practised By Women In The Family, Were The Ways To Reform Civil Society. This View Was A Direct Challenge To The Individualistic Romantic Ethos Promoted By Percy Shelley And The Enlightenment Political Theories Articulated By Her Father, William Godwin.