Mary’s Monster: Love, Madness and How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein
by Lita Judge
Interest age: 14+
Reading age: 12+
Published by Wren & Rook, 2018
About this book
Most people know that Mary Shelley wrote the novel Frankenstein, but the common perception that she dreamed up this story as part of a parlour game with poets Shelley and Byron is misleading. In fact, the book's themes of birth, creation and science versus nature were very much a combination of her own experiences of pregnancy, birth and death, as well as developments in science and philosophy.
In her stupendously illustrated verse novel, Lita Judge reminds us that Mary was a teenager when she wrote Frankenstein, having run away pregnant with the married Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley – enduring his depression and infidelities over many years.
Judge also shows us that Mary, the child of feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and political philosopher William Godwin, was a vastly intelligent and well-read young woman who also followed her heart, just as they had done.
The book contains some challenging and adult themes of infant death and unfaithfulness in marriage, but they are handled well within the context of the real life of an important woman, feminist and writer.
It’s a heart-wrenching read in parts, and a deeply inspiring one in others.
More books like this
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Tales From Beyond The Rainbow
5 to 14 years
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Jane Eyre
by Tanya Landman
11 to 14 years
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Mary and Frankenstein
by Linda Bailey and Julia Sarda
5 to 14 years
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The Story of King Arthur
by Siân Lewis, illustrated by Graham Howells
5 to 14 years
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