Frankenstein

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein begins with explorer Robert Walton writing letters from the Arctic. He rescues a half-frozen stranger, Victor Frankenstein, who tells him a cautionary tale. As a brilliant but impatient student of natural philosophy, Victor becomes obsessed with conquering death. He assembles a being from corpses and brings it to life—but the instant the Creature opens its eyes, Victor is horrified by what he has made and runs away.

Left to fend for himself, the Creature learns language and ethics by observing a poor family. When he tries to seek kindness, people recoil; rejection hardens into rage. He demands that Victor make him a companion so he can live far from humankind. Victor agrees, then destroys the second creation in fear of “a race of devils.” The Creature vows vengeance, killing those Victor loves, and the pursuit drives both creator and creation into icy desolation.

Shelley’s novel probes responsibility, loneliness, and the moral limits of ambition. It’s not simply a “monster story.” The horror is ethical and emotional: a scientist shirks the duties of a parent; a sensitive being is turned cruel by isolation. By framing Victor’s confession within Walton’s letters, Shelley turns the book into a warning—about genius without empathy, progress without conscience, and the cost of looking away from what we’ve made.

Quotes from Frankenstein