Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was born in London, England on 30th
August 1797. She is best known for her novel Frankenstein which was
published in 1818, when she was only 20 years old.
Shelley's interest in scientific fiction was influenced by her
father, who was fascinated with developments in scientific thinking
during the nineteenth century. This interest was followed by
Shelley who would regularly attend scientific lectures in
London.
Shelley's later novels never gripped the public's attention as
Frankenstein had; the novel continues to intrigue modern readers,
and has been the subject of several books and films.
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley died of a suspected brain tumour on 1st
February 1851.
Mary Shelley’s horror classic is a story meant to be illustrated.
With language so richly vivid, readers can’t help but picture the
horrors that emerge from her sharpened quill. What young reader
wouldn’t want to see Dr. Frankenstein, reeling from the loss of his
mother, patch together a quilt of human body parts? Whittling down
the story to its most basic elements, Wagner achieves much success
in adapting the slim volume with a good mix of action and emotion.
Paired to Kumar’s haunting artwork, the adaptation will transport
readers into the eeriest reaches of Frankenstein’s memory. The
urgent pace of the original lends itself to comic format, and the
illustrator runs with it: The muted palette evokes a spooky
atmosphere, and, while most of the gore happens behind the scenes,
his depiction of the creature is adequately grotesque. The edition
includes an introduction to the author at its outset and an endnote
about body snatching in the 1800s. A satisfyingly haunting
introduction to a masterwork of English literature, likely to
inspire further interest in all things Frankenstein.
— Kirkus Reviews
"I highly recommend Campfire’s comics. They do what they
are intended to do and do it in a way that excites kids about
classic literature."
— Chris Wilson, The Graphic Classroom (a resource for teachers and
librarians)"Lloyd
S. Wagner's script follow(s) Shelley's narrative fairly closely. .
. . a literary adaptation . . . which includes a one-page biography
of Mary Shelley and a two-page historical feature on
'body-snatching' in 19th Century England. No age rating is given,
but Shelley's gothic masterpiece with its multiple murders is
clearly not for the youngest readers."
—Tom Flinn in ICv2
[A] fantastic way to read this story. . . Readers of all types
will enjoy the visual experience of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein as
a graphic novel.
—The Reading Tub
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