Posts Tagged '1816'

A Meeting in Geneva: The Birth of ‘Frankenstein’

File:RothwellMaryShelley.jpg

My first column on Science Fiction / Fantasy history is now up on Kirkus Reviews! For this first post, I couldn’t think of a better place to start than Mary Shelley’s creation of Frankenstein in 1816 during a summer trip to Geneva, Switzerland. Frankenstein isn’t the first root of the genre, but it is a solid one that has since been built on. You can read the article here on Kirkus Reviews.

A couple of books that I used for the research for this article were:

  • The letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and edited by Betty T Bennett. A three volumn collection of Shelley’s letters, which provided a great insight into her life around the time of her writing the book.
  • Survey of Science Fiction Literature, by Frank Northen Magill. This is an academic survey that I recently picked up that has essays from thousands of SF/F novels up to around the 1970s. Great series of reviews of books, which also provides an incredible amount of background on the author and a critical look at the literature.
  • Frankenstein (Norton Critical Editions) by Mary Shelley and J. Paul Hunter. This edition provides the original text of the novel, plus extras: commentary, a couple of letters, and several reviews of the novel from when the book was first published.

“When ships to sail the void between the stars have been invented, there will also be men who come forward to sail those ships.” -Johannes Kepler

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