A review by the_gandy_man
Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley

3.25

 Overall, I enjoyed this book. I liked what it has to say about prejudice, and the plot is interesting enough. It does have some problems which kept me from loving it. The framing device at the beginning takes way too long to set up. Too much of the book feels unimportant; we go on these lengthy explanations regarding things about which I don't care. At the same time, the book is missing things I would like to see. I wish it talked more about the implications of creating life. Frankenstein
creates life and then because it's ugly (because he made it ugly), he treats all of his research as evil and doesn't want anyone else to repeat what he has done. Like dude just don't make it ugly if you don't want it to be ugly. Let's focus on the massive scientific breakthrough that you just had, not to mention the fact that his creation is not only alive, but highly intelligent.

My expectation going into this book was that we would see Frankenstein do monstrous things due to his prejudice against ugly monsters, while the ugly monster is not so monstrous after all. Instead,
I found that Frankenstein was not really that bad of a guy. He fucked up making Frankenstein and then just letting him go, but that's an honest mistake. The act of creating life from nothing is not inherently evil. He is prejudiced toward his monster, and that's certainly immoral, but that's true of every person that meets the monster. For that reason, I feel like the critique is on the prejudices of society rather than of Frankenstein. When the two finally meet and the monster tells his story, I expect that this is when we'll see that Frankenstein is just a guy that's been unfairly rejected by society, but instead he tells of how he kills a kid because of the way people have treated him. You can't do that my guy. Frankenstein and I were on your side until you killed the kid. And then he goes and kills a bunch more people. He's a bad dude. I was expecting a sort of reversal of expectations between Frankenstein and his monster, but instead I found that Frankenstein is not really a bad dude although he made a number of bad choices, and his monster is a sympathetic villain who did some real bad stuff, but we understand how he was driven to that place of irrational violence.


I also felt like I had to do a good bit of suspending my disbelief, to the point that it bothered me. It seemed odd to me that
the monster can easily hide himself while spying on people and not get noticed. He can also travel incredibly well. He finds Geneva just by walking south west (or whatever direction it was) with only the sun to guide him (it also said he traveled by night and rested during the day so there's some dissonance there). And he's able to follow Frankenstein to Britain without being noticed, which would require hiding on a boat. Also Frankenstein sometimes seemed incredibly stupid. The only instance of this I can remember is toward the end when he left his wife alone on his wedding night when his monster specifically said he would see him on his wedding night and had already established a pattern of killing Frankenstein's loved ones. I can't see how in that moment he would be thinking about anything other than protecting Elizabeth.


Overall, while I liked the book, it isn't as good as I hoped it would be. I liked its message, and I appreciate its significance in the sci-fi genre; however, there's a lot of filler between the interesting parts, and I don't find
Frankenstein's monster's actions as justified as I feel the book wants me to.