Reviews

Mary Shelley by Miranda Seymour

ylimegwen's review against another edition

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informative reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

serrasa's review

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slow-paced

2.5

lydiacherith's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

3.25

violetvale's review against another edition

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5.0

One of the best-researched books on Mary Shelley's life that I have come across thus far. The writing is beautiful and imaginative in the missing moments of Shelley's life where Seymour had to fit certain missing pieces together to form a flowing narrative that never lost momentum. If you desire to get down to minutiae Mary's life, or investigate all the fascinating seedlings of Frankstein's creation, this memoir has it all.

teachocolateandbooks's review against another edition

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4.0

This was one of those books that once I started I simply speed through. It was well researched and as I read I wanted to know more. One of the aspect's of Mary's life that I would like more information about was her relationship to Byron, since it seemed as though she was respected more than her husband.

I knew Mary only through Frankenstein, her parents and her husband. To have a biography that showed her in relation to those three pillars and to flesh her out was fascinating.

acoffeeandagoodbook's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative inspiring slow-paced

4.0

 This book is DENSE, and despite my enthusiasm bordering on obsession for the subject, even I found it hard-going at times. There is a lot of information here, a lot of footnotes, and a lot of densely packed paragraphs in a small font. The reading experience is not terribly enjoyable, but if you can persevere, the reward is well worth it.

Mary Shelley is a fascinating woman, and I loved that Seymour delivered a much more complete view of her life than most biographies offer. I've read a fair bit about the whole set of Mary Shelley, her husband, and her friends, and many biographies concentrate on the eight years she spent with Shelley, cramming the rest of the almost thirty years she lived after his death into a few pages at the end.

This biography is much more balanced. Of course, those eight years do take up a considerable chunk of the book, but there is plenty to learn about her life both pre and post-Shelley. I particularly liked the last part of the book that covered Mary's middle age. As she matured, her radical views shifted, and her extraordinary efforts to save the reputation of her husband and secure him the legacy as a master poet that she felt she deserved were incredibly interesting to read about.

Whenever I read about Mary Shelley, I am always intrigued by her step-sister, Claire Clairmont, and this book was packed with tidbits of her too, following her from the excitable young girl who ran away with Mary and Shelley, to the old, bitter woman she became, desperate to distance herself from the scandals of her youth. 

kikiandarrowsfishshelf's review against another edition

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5.0

Seymour writes well and engaging. The biography presents Mary in a fair; in other words, she is not presented as a saint.

wealhtheow's review against another edition

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4.0

Mary Wollstonecraft was a passionately political woman; her essays [b:A Vindication of the Rights of Man|224388|A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, A Vindication of the Rights of Men|Mary Wollstonecraft|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1172856084s/224388.jpg|217315] and its follow up, [b:A Vindication of the Rights of Woman|224387|A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (Penguin Classics)|Mary Wollstonecraft|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1172856084s/224387.jpg|1938850], made her justly famous, particularly in intellectual circles. After a disastrous love affair (from which issued [b:A Short Residence in Sweden Norway and Denmark|1965539|Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway and Denmark|Mary Wollstonecraft|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1190991747s/1965539.jpg|2479348] and her natural daughter, Fanny Imlay), Wollstonecraft fell in love with William Godwin. Godwin was well known himself, particularly for [b:Enquiry concerning Political Justice|1227184|Enquiry Concerning Political Justice and Its Influence on Modern Morals and Happiness|William Godwin|http://www.goodreads.com/images/nocover-60x80.jpg|2785985]. Although neither believed in marriage, when Wollstonecraft found herself pregnant they decided to marry to make their child's life easier. And thus, a few months after her parents' marriage, Mary Godwin was born. Wollstonecraft died a few agonized days later, probably of peurperal fever.

Four years later, Godwin married Mary Jane Devereux/Vial/Clairmont (she went by a number of different names; she was actually an unwed mother masquerading as a widow), who had children of her own. And thus does Jane Clairmont, later called Claire Clairmont, enter the story. All the little girls and boys grew up in a household full of books and very short on money.

One day, the handsome Percy Shelley entered their lives. 20, a poet, given to extravagant exaggerations about his own actions and the persecution he suffered, Shelley seemed like a savior to Godwin (who expected to get a great deal of money from his aristocratic patron) and Godwin's daughters (who viewed their new friend rather more romantically). Shortly thereafter, Shelley fell in love with 16 year old Mary Godwin (many say for her parentage as well as for her beauty and wit) and, with Jane/Claire Clairmont's help, the girls ran off with him. Of course, Shelley was married at the time, to another teenage girl, and she was pregnant with his second child. But no matter!

Shelley, Mary and Jane/Claire swept across Europe, constantly impoverished but flush with excitement and the romance of it all. A tense triangle sprang up amongst them--Mary and Shelley were in love, but Jane/Claire felt left out, and Shelley liked that she was so sensitive and easily persuaded. Eventually, they ran out of money and returned to England, where they found themselves utterly ostracized. Not even Mary's family would see her, despite their own pasts. Mary's first child was born and died, shortly followed by the birth of another child. She, Shelley and Claire retreated from London for their health, and fell in for a short time with the notorious Lord Byron. Claire had a brief, lopsided affair with him that left her pregnant and Byron annoyed. Meanwhile, Mary had begun to write her greatest work, [b:Frankenstein|18490|Frankenstein|Mary Shelley|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255576965s/18490.jpg|4836639]. This was also a period of tragedy: no sooner had they returned to England than Mary's half-sister Fanny committed suicide in a little anonymous room, and shortly thereafter Shelley's wife Harriet drowned herself. Less than two weeks later, Mary and Shelley were married.

They continued to live much as they had, although Mary's social ostracization was somewhat lessened. Mary bore two more children in short succession, and then lost her son William and daughter Clara while in Italy. She continued writing, studying, translating while simultaneously leading a vivacious social life and producing good copies of her friends' writing. Shelley became distracted by another woman (the duplicitous Jane Williams, oh how I hate her)

And then tragedy struck. Shelley and his friend were drowned at sea, leaving Mary a widow with an infant son and no money, in a foreign land. She returned to England, fought to get a small allowance from her father-in-law, and spent the rest of her life writing articles and books to supplement her income. Her remaining son, Percy, grew up to be a good-natured man with no poetry and little intellect. Mary died of a brain tumor at 53, having spent her life devoted to Shelley and then, to Shelley's legacy.

All of these tempestuous romances, tragic deaths, domestic quarrelings, petty gossiping, and timeless literature went on in a period of incredible tension and upheaval. Revolution after revolution swept Europe. England was a land of strict censorship laws, incredible disparities between rich and poor, strict codes of conduct--and amidst all this, Mary Shelley is just a smart, depressed woman with few allies, trying to live her life. She was intimidatingly well-read, and set herself to a rigorous education of languages and history. Like her mother, she suffered from bouts of depression; and like her mother, she devoted a great deal of time to uplifting women (but in specific cases, not as a general group). She spent her last days campaigning to get a widowed friend of hers a small allowance to live on.

Seymour does an incredible job of creating a seamless biography out of the countless letters, diaries, articles, and books written by and about her subjects. I never felt overwhelmed, although this book is stuffed full of names, quotes, historical contexts, literary criticism...For anyone interested in the Romantics, the history of early nineteenth century, the evolution of political thought, or Mary Shelley herself, I highly recommend this book.
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