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Daughters of Frankenstein: Lesbian Mad Scientists

Steve Berman

In the field of mad science, women have for too long been ignored, their triumphs misattributed to mere men. Society has seen the laboratory as the province of men. Jacob's Ladder electric arcs, death rays, even test tubes have phallic connotations, subliminally reinforcing the patriarchy. Thankfully, the women working to dangerous and/or questionable ends in the pages of Daughters of Frankenstein are unafraid of the patriarchy--indeed, as lesbian mad scientists, they prefer the company and comforts of their own gender.

Table of Contents:

  • 1 - Introduction (Daughters of Frankenstein: Lesbian Mad Scientists) - essay by Connie Wilkins
  • 3 - From Alexander Pope to Splice - essay by Jess Nevins
  • 13 - Infusion of Waking Dreams - short story by Aynjel Kaye
  • 31 - Doubt the Sun - short story by Faith Mudge
  • 49 - Meddling Kids - short story by Tracy Canfield
  • 59 - Eldritch Brown Houses - short story by Claire Humphrey
  • 67 - The Moorehead Maze Experiment - short story by Tim Lieder
  • 85 - The Eggshell Curtain - short story by Romie Stott
  • 101 - Poor Girl - short story by Traci Castleberry
  • 121 - Bank Job Blues - short story by Melissa Scott
  • 139 - The Long Trip Home - short story by A. J. Fitzwater
  • 159 - Imaginary Beauties: A Lurid Melodrama - short story by Gemma Files
  • 179 - Riveter - short story by Sean Eads
  • 193 - A Shallow Grave of Orange Peel and Eggshells - short story by Thoraiya Dyer
  • 203 - Alraune - short story by Orrin Grey
  • 211 - Preserving the Integrity of the Feminine Mystique - short story by Christine Morgan
  • 231 - Hypatia and Her Sisters - short story by Amy Griswold
  • 245 - The Lady of the House of Mirrors - short story by Rafaela Ferraz
  • 261 - The Ice Weasels of Trebizond - short story by Mr. and Mrs. Brenchley
  • 281 - Love in the Time of Markov Processes - short story by Megan Arkenberg

Frankenstein's Daughters: Women Writing Science Fiction

Jane L. Donawerth

Women Science fiction authors - past and present - are united by the problems they face in attempting to write in this genre, an overwhelmingly male-dominated field. Science fiction has been defined by male-centered, scientific discourse that describes women as alien "others" rather than rational beings. This perspective has defined the boundaries of science fiction, resulting in women writers being excluded as equal participants in the genre. Frankenstein's Daughters explores the different strategies women have used to negotiate the minefields of their chosen career: they have created a unique utopian science formulated by and for women, with women characters taking center stage and actively confronting oppressors. This type of depiction is a radical departure from the condition where women are relegated to marginal roles within the narratives.

The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein & Other Gothic Tales

Thomas Ligotti

The majority of the pieces in The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein, and Other Gothic Tales feature characters and storylines that have previously made appearances, sometimes many times over, throughout the history of supernatural horror. This is not unusual. Like cannibals or vampires, authors have fed off the flesh and blood of one another's creations in various ways. Even if the intent is not monstrous or malign in the manner of the aforementioned beings, this practice is as old as literature itself.

In addition to the deranged or diabolical actors in stories well-known to seekers after horror, Ligotti has provided newly fabricated accounts to express a greater variety of pain. Much in the style of the older agonies, these take the reader into realms of pathos that may also be found elsewhere in his published work of the same period.

Contents:

  • The Heart of Count Dracula, Descendant of Attila, Scourge of God - (1985) - short fiction
  • One Thousand Painful Variations Performed Upon Divers Creatures Undergoing the Treatment of Dr. Moreau, Humanist - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Excruciating Final Days of Dr. Henry Jekyll, Englishman - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein, Citizen of Geneva - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Insufferable Salvation of Lawrence Talbot the Wolfman - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Intolerable Lesson of the Phantom of the Opera - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Unbearable Rebirth of the Phantom of the Wax Museum - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Perilous Legacy of Emily St. Aubert, Inheritress of Udolpho - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Eternal Devotion of the Governess to the Residents of Bly - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Unnatural Persecution, by a Vampire, of Mr. Jacob J. - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Superb Companion of André de V., Anti-Pygmalion - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Ever-Vigilant Guardians of Secluded Estates - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Scream: from 1800 to the Present - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Transparent Alias of William Wilson, Sportsman and Scoundrel - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Worthy Inmate of the Will of the Lady Ligeia - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Interminable Residence of the Friends of the House of Usher - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Fabulous Alienation of the Outsider, Being of No Fixed Abode - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Blasphemous Enlightenment of Prof. Francis Wayland Thurston of Boston, Providence, and the Human Race - (1985) - short fiction
  • The Premature Death of H. P. Lovecraft, Oldest Man in New England - (1985) - short fiction
  • Introduction (The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein and Other Gothic Tales) - essay

Young Frankenstein

Gilbert Pearlman

A brilliantly outrageous riff on Mary Shelley's classic story of Frankenstein. After inheriting his grandfather's castle in Transylvania, young Dr. Frankenstein follows in his ancestor's freaky footsteps as he sets out to reanimate a dead body.

Novelization of the movie

Edison's Frankenstein

Chris Roberson

This novelette originally appeared in the anthology Edison's Frankenstein (Postscripts #20/21) (2009), edited by Nick Gevers and Peter Crowther. It can also be found in the anthologies The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Seventh Annual Collection (2010), edited by Gardner Dozois, Year's Best SF 15 (2010), edited by David G. Hartwell and Kathryn Kramer, and The Mammoth Book of Steampunk (2012), edited by Sean Wallace.

Frankensteins and Foreign Devils

Walter Jon Williams

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction - essay by Gardner Dozois
  • Solip: System - (1989) - novelette
  • Broadway Johnny - (1995) - novella
  • Woundhealer - (1995) - novelette
  • The Bad Twin - novelette
  • Red Elvis - (1994) - novelette
  • Prayers on the Wind - (1991) - novella
  • Erogenoscape - (1991) - novelette
  • Foreign Devils - (1996) - novelette
  • Bag Lady - novelette
  • Wall, Stone, Craft - (1993) - novella

In Frankenstein's Wake: Mary Shelley, Morality and Science Fiction

Alison Bedford

Just over 200 years ago on a stormy night, a young woman conceived of what would become one of the most iconic images of science gone wrong, the story of Victor Frankenstein and his Creature. For a long period, Mary Shelley languished in the shadow of her luminary husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley, but was rescued from obscurity by the feminist scholars of the 1970s and 1980s.

This book offers a new perspective on Shelley and on science fiction, arguing that she both established a new discursive space for moral thinking and laid the groundwork for the genre of science fiction. Adopting a contextual biographical approach and undertaking a close reading of the 1818 and 1831 editions of the text, gives readers insight into how this story synthesizes many of the concerns about new science prevalent in Shelley's time. Using Michel Foucault's concept of discourse, the present work argues that Shelley should be not only credited with the foundation of a genre but recognized as a figure who created a new cultural space for readers to explore their fears and negotiate the moral landscape of new science.

Frankenstein Dreams: A Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Science Fiction

Connoisseur's Collection of Victorian Stories: Book 3

Michael Sims

Long before 1984, Star Wars, or The Hunger Games, Victorian authors imagined a future where new science and technologies reshaped the world and universe they knew. The great themes of modern science fiction showed up surprisingly early: space and time travel, dystopian societies, even dangerously independent machines, all inspiring the speculative fiction of the Victorian era.

In Frankenstein Dreams, Michael Sims has gathered many of the very finest stories, some by classic writers such as Jules Verne, Mary Shelley, and H.G. Wells, but many that will surprise general readers. Dark visions of the human psyche emerge in Thomas Wentworth Higginson's "The Monarch of Dreams," while Mary E. Wilkins Freeman provides a glimpse of "the fifth dimension" in her provocative tale "The Hall Bedroom.'

With contributions by Edgar Allan Poe, Alice Fuller, Rudyard Kipling, Thomas Hardy, Arthur Conan Doyle, and many others, each introduced by Michael Sims, whose elegant introduction provides valuable literary and historical context, Frankenstein Dreams is a treasure trove of stories known and rediscovered.

Prodigal Son

Dean Koontz's Frankenstein: Book 1

Dean Koontz

From the celebrated imagination of Dean Koontz comes a powerful reworking of one of the classic stories of all time. If you think you know the story, you know only half the truth. Get ready for the mystery, the myth, the terror, and the magic of...

Dean Koontz's Prodigal Son

Every city has secrets. But none as terrible as this. His name is Deucalion, a tattooed man of mysterious origin, a sleight-of-reality artist who’s traveled the centuries with a secret worse than death. He arrives as a serial killer stalks the streets, a killer who carefully selects his victims for the humanity that is missing in himself. Detective Carson O’Connor is cool, cynical, and every bit as tough as she looks. Her partner Michael Maddison would back her up all the way to Hell itself–and that just may be where this case ends up. For the no-nonsense O’Connor is suddenly talking about an ages-old conspiracy, a near immortal race of beings, and killers that are more—and less—than human. Soon it will be clear that as crazy as she sounds, the truth is even more ominous. For their quarry isn’ t merely a homicidal maniac—but his deranged maker.

City of Night

Dean Koontz's Frankenstein: Book 2

Dean Koontz

From the celebrated imagination of Dean Koontz comes a powerful reworking of one of the classic stories of all time. If you think you know the legend, you know only half the truth. Here is the mystery, the myth, the terror, and the magic of...

Dean Koontz's City of the Night

They are stronger, heal better, and think faster than any humans ever created—and they must be destroyed. But not even Victor Helios—once Frankenstein—can stop the engineered killers he's set loose on a reign of terror through modern-day New Orleans. Now the only hope rests in a one-time "monster" and his all-too-human partners, Detectives Carson O'Connor and Michael Maddison. Deucalion' s centuries-old history began as Victor's first and failed attempt to build the perfect human–and it is fated to end in the ultimate confrontation between a damned creature and his mad creator. But first Deucalion must destroy a monstrosity not even Victor' s malignant mind could have imagined—an indestructible entity that steps out of humankind' s collective nightmare with one purpose: to replace us.

Dead and Alive

Dean Koontz's Frankenstein: Book 3

Dean Koontz

From the celebrated imagination of Dean Koontz comes a powerful reworking of one of the classic stories of all time. If you think you know the legend, you know only half the truth. Now the mesmerizing saga concludes....

Dead and Alive

As a devastating hurricane approaches, as the benighted creations of Victor Helios begin to spin out of control, as New Orleans descends into chaos and the future of humanity hangs in the balance, the only hope rests with Victor’s first, failed attempt to build the perfect human. Deucalion’s centuries-old history began as the original manifestation of a soulless vision–and it is fated to end in the ultimate confrontation between a damned creature and his mad creator. But first they must face a monstrosity not even Victor’s malignant mind could have conceived–an indestructible entity that steps out of humankind’s collective nightmare with powers, and a purpose, beyond imagining.

Lost Souls

Dean Koontz's Frankenstein: Book 4

Dean Koontz

#1 New York Times bestselling author Dean Koontz raises the stakes—and the suspense—taking his Frankenstein saga to a dynamic new level with the riveting story of a small town under siege, where good and evil, destruction and creation, converge as the fate of the world hangs in the balance.

Frankenstein: Lost Souls

The war against humanity has begun. In the dead hours of the night, a stranger enters the home of the mayor of Rainbow Falls, Montana. The stranger is in the vanguard of a wave of intruders who will invade other homes . . . offices . . . every local institution, assuming the identities and the lives of those they have been engineered to replace. Before the sun rises, the town will be under full assault, the opening objective in the new Victor Frankenstein’s trajectory of ultimate destruction. Deucalion—Victor’s first, haunted creation—saw his maker die in New Orleans two years earlier. Yet an unshakable intuition tells him that Victor lives—and is at work again. Within hours Deucalion will come together with his old allies, detectives Carson O’Connor and Michael Maddison, Victor’s engineered wife, Erika Five, and her companion Jocko to confront new peril. Others will gather around them. But this time Victor has a mysterious, powerful new backer, and he and his army are more formidable, their means and intentions infinitely more deadly, than ever before.

The Dead Town

Dean Koontz's Frankenstein: Book 5

Dean Koontz

Dean Koontz’s enthralling Frankenstein series has redefined the classic legend of infernal ambition and harrowing retribution for a new century and a new age. Now the master of suspense delivers an unforgettable novel that is at once a thrilling adventure in itself and a mesmerizing conclusion to his saga of the modern monsters among us.

Frankenstein: The Dead Town

The war against humanity is raging. As the small town of Rainbow Falls, Montana, comes under siege, scattered survivors come together to weather the onslaught of the creatures set loose upon the world. As they ready for battle against overwhelming odds, they will learn the full scope of Victor Frankenstein’s nihilistic plan to remake the future—and the terrifying reach of his shadowy, powerful supporters.

Now the good will make their last, best stand. In a climax that will shatter every expectation, their destinies and the fate of humanity hang in the balance.

The Casebook of Victor Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Peter Ackroyd

Two nineteenth-century Oxford students- Victor Frankenstein, a serious researcher, and the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley- form an unlikely friendship. Shelley challenges the conventionally religious Frankenstein to consider his atheistic notions of creation and life. Afterward, these concepts become an obsession for the young scientist.

As Victor begins conducting anatomical experiments to reanimate the dead, he at first uses corpses supplied by the coroner. But these specimens prove imperfect for Victor's purposes. Moving his makeshift laboratory to a deserted pottery factory in Limehouse, he makes contact with the Doomsday men- the resurrectionists- whose grisly methods put Frankenstein in great danger as he works feverishly to bring life to the terrifying creature that will bear his name for eternity.

Frankenstein Unbound

Frankenstein

Brian W. Aldiss

Joe Bodenland, a 21st century American, passes through a timeslip and finds himself with Byron and Shelley in the famous villa on the shore of Lake Geneva. More fantastically, he finds himself face to face with a real Frankenstein, a doppelganger inhabiting a complex world where fact and fiction may as easily have congress as Bodenland himself manages to make love to Mary Shelley. This title was made into a film, starring John Hurt, Raul Julia, Bridget Fonda, Jason Patric and Michael Hutchence.

I Am Frankenstein

Frankenstein

C. Dean Andersson

I am Frankenstein. I awaken Nightmares. My truth is Terror made Flesh. Two hundred years ago, Mary Shelley told part of my story. Now hear the rest!

I am the Creature of Frankenstein. The Horror of my story is more terrifying than his. I know how it feels to be stripped of flesh. So, I did to Frankenstein what he did to me, cursed him with Immortality!

I am Katiasa. I traveled back in time to help Frankenstein create Life from Death. It was fun, mostly, until his Creature made me a monster, too.

I am Tzigane. I am not a monster. I am a Witch, a Vampire, the Mate of Dracula. Frankenstein and his Creature? Katiasa? Three interesting monsters. I spent time with them. Why? Spend time with them yourself. Read their book!

Wandering Spirits: Traveling Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Selena Chambers

"...although Mary and these poets experienced a lifetime before they were thirty, here I was at 28, having never left my homeland. I needed to flee -- go forth and find sublimity. What better guide than Frankenstein."

Six years ago, Selena Chambers turned her first major trip abroad into a literary scavenger hunt of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Visiting Geneva, Switzerland, Ingolstadt, Germany, and Chamonix, France over a series of several days, she found within the nooks and crannies of these modern European towns the residual Romanticism that inspired the teenage Mary Shelley and shaped her most famous novel.

This special limited edition chapbook collects this Best of the Net-nominated travelogue to commemorate the bicentennial of Frankenstein's conception during the week of June 16, 1816. Written in the epistolary vein as Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley, these letters portray Chambers' visits to three of the most important sites within literature and take us all on a journey through the sublime.

Table of Contents:

Poor Things: A Novel

Frankenstein

Alasdair Gray

In the 1880s in Glasgow, Scotland, medical student Archibald McCandless finds himself enchanted with the intriguing creature known as Bella Baxter. Supposedly the product of the fiendish scientist Godwin Baxter, Bella was resurrected for the sole purpose of fulfilling the whims of her benefactor. As his desire turns to obsession, Archibald's motives to free Bella are revealed to be as selfish as Godwin's, who claims her body and soul.

But Bella has her own passions to pursue. Passions that take her to aristocratic casinos, low-life Alexandria, and a Parisian bordello, reaching an interrupted climax in a Scottish church. Exploring her station as a woman in the shadow of the patriarchy, Bella knows it is up to her to free herself--and to decide what meaning, if any, true love has in her life.

The Revenge of Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Shaun Hutson

There is a fine line between obsession and madness and Frankenstein just stepped across it, in this novelization of a Hammer classic

Escaping the guillotine, Victor Frankenstein is now posing as Doctor Stein, altruistic patron of the hospital for the poor. But in a secret basement laboratory he is harvesting body parts from his helpless patients, using them in his twisted experiments in a bid to create the perfect man. And this time he has help from a would-be pupil. His pupil seeks knowledge, but Frankenstein desires vengeance against all those who have tried to stop his terrifying work.

The first time he tried, it ended in bloody mayhem, but now he is determined that nothing will go wrong. He wants revenge and God help anyone who gets in his way.

The Mammoth Book of Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Stephen Jones

Frankenstein... his very name conjures up images of plundered graves, secret laboratories, electrical experiments and reviving the dead.

Within these pages, the maddest doctor of them all and his demented disciples once again delve into the Secrets of Life, as science fiction meets horror when the world's most famous creature lives again!

The Mammoth Book of Frankenstein collects together for the first time twenty-fourelectrifying tales of cursed creation that are guaranteed to spark your interest - with classics from the pulp magazines by Robert Bloch and Manly Wade Wellman, modern masterpieces from Ramsey Campbell, Dennis Etchison, Karl Edward Wagner, David J. Schow and R. Chetwynd-Hayes, and contributions from Graham Masterson, Basil Copper, John Brunner, Guy N. Smith, Kim Newman, Paul J. McAuley, Roberta Lannes, Michael Marshall Smith, Daniel Fox, Adrian Cole, Nancy Kilpatrick, Brian Mooney and Lisa Morton.

Plus you're sure to get a charge from three complete novels: The Hound of Frankenstein by Peter Tremayne, The Dead End by David Case, and Mary W. Shelley's original masterpiece Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus.

As an electrical storm rages overhead, the generators are charged up, and beneath the sheet a cold form awaits its miraculous rebirth. Now it's time to throw that switch and discover all that Man Was Never Meant to Know.

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction: It's Alive! - (1994) - essay by Stephen Jones
  • Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus - (1818) - novel by Mary Shelley
  • A New Life - (1987) - short story by Ramsey Campbell
  • The Creator - (1978) - short story by R. Chetwynd-Hayes
  • Better Dead - (1994) - short story by Basil Copper
  • Creature Comforts - (1994) - short story by Nancy Kilpatrick
  • Mannikins of Horror - (1939) - short story by Robert Bloch
  • El Sueño de la Razón - (1994) - short story by Chaz Brenchley
  • Pithecanthropus Rejectus - (1938) - short story by Manly Wade Wellman
  • Tantamount to Murder - (1994) - short story by John Brunner
  • Last Train - (1994) - short story by Guy N. Smith
  • The Hound of Frankenstein - (1977) - novelette by Peter Tremayne
  • Mother of Invention - (1994) - short story by Graham Masterton
  • The Frankenstein Legacy - (1994) - short story by Adrian Cole
  • The Dead Line - (1979) - short story by Dennis Etchison
  • Poppi's Monster - (1994) - short story by Lisa Morton
  • Undertow - (1977) - novelette by Karl Edward Wagner
  • A Complete Woman - (1994) - short story by Roberta Lannes
  • Last Call for the Sons of Shock - (1991) - short story by David J. Schow
  • Chandira - (1994) - short story by Brian Mooney
  • Celebrity Frankenstein - (2012) - short story by Stephen Volk
  • Completist Heaven - (1994) - short story by Kim Newman
  • The Temptation of Dr Stein - (1994) - novelette by Paul J. McAuley
  • To Receive Is Better - (1994) - short story by Michael Marshall Smith
  • The Dead End - (1969) - novella by David Case
  • Frankenstein - (1994) - poem by Jo Fletcher

The Bride of Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Mike Resnick

Hugo Award nominated short story. It originally appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, December 2009. The story is included in the collections Win Some, Lose Some: The Hugo Award Winning (and Nominated) Short Science Fiction and Fantasy of Mike Resnick (2012) and The Incarceration of Captain Nebula and Other Lost Futures (2012).

The Memoirs of Elizabeth Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Theodore Roszak

The passionate story of Elizabeth Lavenza, a girl rescued from poverty and raised by a remarkable noblewoman of Geneva, describes how the demise of her sensual bond with Victor Frankenstein sends him hurtling into a secret life, and along a path of destruction

Frankenstein in Baghdad

Frankenstein

Ahmed Saadawi

Winner of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction and France's Grand Prize for Fantasy

From the rubble-strewn streets of U.S.-occupied Baghdad, Hadi--a scavenger and an oddball fixture at a local café--collects human body parts and stitches them together to create a corpse. His goal, he claims, is for the government to recognize the parts as people and to give them proper burial. But when the corpse goes missing, a wave of eerie murders sweeps the city, and reports stream in of a horrendous-looking criminal who, though shot, cannot be killed. Hadi soon realizes he's created a monster, one that needs human flesh to survive--first from the guilty, and then from anyone in its path.

The Frankenstein Papers

Frankenstein

Fred Saberhagen

This novel picks up where Mary Shelley's classic tale left off, continuing the narrative from the monster's point of view. Through flashbacks in the monster's journal, Saberhagen also rescrambles the original story in such a way that the monster is absolved of the murders of Victor Frankenstein's brother William and fiancee Elizabeth. The monster sets off on a quest for his own identity that takes him from the Arctic and his first sexual experience with an "Esquimeaux" to a meeting in Paris with Ben Franklin, whose experiments with electricity led Frankenstein to attempt the monster's initial animation. Throughout, the irrationality of the monster's sheer existence is set against the values and science of Enlightenment Europe. In the tour-de-force ending, rationality triumphs by means of a neat science-fiction twist.

The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Kiersten White

Elizabeth Lavenza hasn't had a proper meal in weeks. Her thin arms are covered with bruises from her "caregiver," and she is on the verge of being thrown into the streets... until she is brought to the home of Victor Frankenstein, an unsmiling, solitary boy who has everything--except a friend.

Victor is her escape from misery. Elizabeth does everything she can to make herself indispensable--and it works. She is taken in by the Frankenstein family and rewarded with a warm bed, delicious food, and dresses of the finest silk. Soon she and Victor are inseparable.

But her new life comes at a price. As the years pass, Elizabeth's survival depends on managing Victor's dangerous temper and entertaining his every whim, no matter how depraved. Behind her blue eyes and sweet smile lies the calculating heart of a girl determined to stay alive no matter the cost... as the world she knows is consumed by darkness

Frankissstein: A Love Story

Frankenstein

Jeanette Winterson

From 'one of the most gifted writers working today' (New York Times) comes an audacious new novel about the bodies we live in and the bodies we desire

In Brexit Britain, a young transgender doctor called Ry is falling in love - against their better judgement - with Victor Stein, a celebrated professor leading the public debate around AI.

Meanwhile, Ron Lord, just divorced and living with Mum again, is set to make his fortune launching a new generation of sex dolls for lonely men everywhere.

Across the Atlantic, in Phoenix, Arizona, a cryogenics facility houses dozens of bodies of men and women who are medically and legally dead... but waiting to return to life.

But the scene is set in 1816, when nineteen-year-old Mary Shelley writes a story about creating a non-biological life-form. 'Beware, for I am fearless and therefore powerful.'

What will happen when homo sapiens is no longer the smartest being on the planet? Jeanette Winterson shows us how much closer we are to that future than we realise. Funny and furious, bold and clear-sighted, Frankissstein is a love story about life itself.

Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus

Frankenstein: Book 1

Mary Shelley

At once a Gothic thriller, a passionate romance, and a cautionary tale about the dangers of science, Frankenstein tells the story of science student Victor Frankenstein, who is obsessed with "bestowing animation upon lifeless matter." Frankenstein assembles a human being from stolen body parts but upon bringing it to life, he recoils in horror at the creature's hideousness. Tormented by loneliness, the creature unleashes a campaign of murderous revenge against his creator.

This Dark Endeavor

Frankenstein: The Apprenticeship of Victor Frankenstein: Book 1

Kenneth Oppel

Victor and Konrad are the twin brothers Frankenstein. They are nearly inseparable. Growing up, their lives are filled with imaginary adventures...until the day their adventures turn all too real.

They stumble upon The Dark Library, and secret books of alchemy and ancient remedies are discovered. Father forbids that they ever enter the room again, but this only peaks Victor's curiosity more. When Konrad falls gravely ill, Victor is not be satisfied with the various doctors his parents have called in to help. He is drawn back to The Dark Library where he uncovers an ancient formula for the Elixir of Life. Elizabeth, Henry, and Victor immediately set out to find assistance in a man who was once known for his alchemical works to help create the formula.

Determination and the unthinkable outcome of losing his brother spur Victor on in the quest for the three ingredients that will save Konrads life. After scaling the highest trees in the Strumwald, diving into the deepest lake caves, and sacrificing one’s own body part, the three fearless friends risk their lives to save another.

Such Wicked Intent

Frankenstein: The Apprenticeship of Victor Frankenstein: Book 2

Kenneth Oppel

Devotion turns deadly in this second Gothic thriller from Kenneth Oppel.

When does obsession become madness? Tragedy has forced sixteen-year-old Victor Frankenstein to swear off alchemy forever. He burns the Dark Library. He vows he will never dabble in the dark sciences again-just as he vows he will no longer covet Elizabeth, his brother’s betrothed.

If only these things were not so tempting.

When he and Elizabeth discover a portal into the spirit world, they cannot resist. Together with Victor’s twin, Konrad, and their friend Henry, the four venture into a place of infinite possibilities where power and passion reign. But as they search for the knowledge to raise the dead, they unknowingly unlock a darkness from which they may never return.

Frankenstein in Love

The Clive Barker Playscripts: Book 5

Clive Barker

"Frankenstein in Love opens a new chapter in the life (and death) of fiction's most popular monster, as Frankenstein's monster, more terrifying, more insatiable than ever, bursts into the 20th century.

In a devastated South American state, the monster is acclaimed as a revolutionary hero. But his dreams of absolute power are threatened when his inhuman lust for the beautiful Veronique drives him to one last confrontation with his maker.

In this electrifying romance, the horror of Frankenstein spills out of the cinema screen onto the live stage!" -- Production flyer, 1982

Frankenstein in Love by Clive Barker, originally performed by The Dog Company in 1982. This new publication of the full script includes 8 photos from the original production and later Edinburgh Fringe Festival and poster art from the Clive Barker Archive.

Edited, with an additional afterword by Phil & Sarah Stokes.