Mary Shelley- Author of Frankenstein
Frankenstein
Dr Frankenstein is a brilliant scientist,who is obsessed with the idea of gaining control over life and death, refusing the limits of contemporary science. He carries out his research alone and unaided until he eventually succeeds in bringing to life a monster he has created out of the organs of dead men. However, even Frankenstein is frightened when he sees the fruit of his insane fantasy. The monster escapes from the laboratory and appears some time later in the Swiss Alps, where he is rejected by all the men that he encounters, not so much for his ugliness as for his clearly non-human features. His need to communicate with others is continually frustrated and anger towards all mankind builds up leading to a tragic climax in his killing of Frankenstein's best friend, his little brother and his wife. The monster takes refuge at the North Pole knowing that only there, in a place of total desolation he will kill no more. Dr Frankenstein follows him, intending to kill his creation but it is the doctor himself who is mortally wounded by the monster. He accuses Dr Frankenstein and the rest of mankind of lacking all compassion. The story ends with the monster being borne away on an ice raft in the Arctic sea.
Her Life
Her mother dies in a few days after she is born.
Her father was a great philosopher, so her house was visited by many famous writers of those times.
She fell in love with Mr. Shelley and later had a child who also died in a few days just like her mother after she was born.
She had moved to France with her lover
Starter writing Frankenstein after they moved to England.
Main Details
Birth: 30 August 1797
Somers Town, London
Death: 1 February 1851 (aged 53)
Chester Square, London
Occupation: Writer
Famous works: Frankenstein (1818)
Spouse(s): Percy Bysshe Shelley (married. 1816–1822; his death)
Parents:
William Godwin and
Mary Wollstonecraft