
Frankenstein
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Narrated by:
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Derek Jacobi
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By:
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Mary Shelley
About this listen
The tale of Dr. Frankenstein and the horrendous monster he unleashes on the world when he tinkers with the laws of nature had almost as strange a birth as the monster itself. It was the product of one of the most famous ghost story telling sessions in history. Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley and several others were stranded on the shores of Lake Geneva during a particularly sodden summer. They challenged each other to come up with the most ghastly and soul-rending story their sizable literary talents could muster, and the hands-down winner came from Shelley's wife - Mary Shelley.
The novel that emerged several years later has been recognised as one of the most chilling and gruesome horror stories ever written, and it is certainly one of the most famous. It's a moving account of a battle for independence, it's a warning against man's pride in his ability to change the world with his blind pursuit of science, it's a story of revolt and revenge and, most intriguingly, it was one of the first novels to be written where the narrator is not necessarily a reliable witness, and we are left to carve the truth of the matter out for ourselves.
This is an alarming book - in several very enjoyable ways.
Author Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (1797-1851) was a novelist, dramatist, essayist, biographer and travel writer. She is, however, best known for her Gothic horror novel Frankenstein: or, the Modern Prometheus, published 1818. She also edited and promoted the works of her husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Public Domain (P)2008 Silksoundbooks LimitedTop Notch
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A haunting and thrilling novel
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In relation to the story -it's difficult to comment on this. As any one does I had the general idea of a man who created another creature, but I didn't know the detail. As modern reader I am coming to this with my knowledge of how Mary Shelley's ideas and themes have been used many times since then, so can't perceive it with the freshness that her original readers would have had.
I found it difficult not to become intensely annoyed by Frankenstein. He represents himself as being highly clever, and indeed the narrator who starts and finishes the book is hugely impressed by him (I think he describes him as god-like). My view was that he completely lacked common sense and forethought, did not learn by his own mistakes had no empathy whatsoever for the creature he had created and seemed to be subject to breakdown rather than coping with the consequences of his actions.
The whole story is told in first person, so it is difficult to know what Shelley's own view of Frankenstein's character might be. I had assumed she was in sympathy with him, but whenever she gave the creature voice I came to doubt that.
She herself clearly brought in her own travel experience with the descriptions that characters give of their travels. (although she might have benefited from an atlas to check the distance between Orkney and Ireland).
It's not a book I would listen to again, but I found it interesting and worth hearing.
of its time
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really well natrated
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Excellent voice narration
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Now I know the REAL story
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Thankyou Sir
Absolute classic
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I love this book, and it’s masterfully told by Derek Jacobi, one of my favourite narrators. He did amazingly reading the M. R. James Ghost Stories volumes, and was such fun listening to him read Tolkien’s Tales from the Perilous Realm. This performance was, for me, flawless. Absolutely loved it. He captured the atmosphere, he relishes the language with which it is written, and he embodies characters and their emotions. Masterful.
A Gothic Masterpiece
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Can't help wanting to side with the Creature and give Frankenstein a boot up the backside for his sheer stupidity and moral feebleness.. I wonder if this was a Mary Shelly anti-God polemic. There's so much philosophical to consider in this relativly short book.
Wonderful accents
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Structurally, the book seems rather influenced by the ‘play within a play’ scene in Hamlet, as at one point — from Chapter 11 onwards — we are presented with a story within a story within a story.
Derek Jacobi’s narration is characteristically Shakespearean. This suits the high-flown melodrama of the tale. Admittedly he struggles with the demand to narrate most of the book in a Genevese accent, but this is entirely forgivable.
Well worth listening to, and inevitably far deeper than any of the cinematic adaptations.
To be, or not to be: that is the question
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