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The book isn't as technical as other historical novels or non-fiction maritime narratives, but you still get a good feel for how clippers were sailed. I enjoyed the new perspective as most narratives are from that of the sailor or capitain but rarely of the captain's wife.
Douglas Kelley obviously enjoyed the years of research he spent in order to tell this story of a wife's devotion. His language is lively and lovely, two qualities necessary for a love story at sea.
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One of the major themes throughout the book is science technology. When Victor creates the monster, he is challenging science, and therefore challenging God. When the creature awakes, Victor realizes that he has just done a "horrible" thing. He is disgusted with the thing he created, which led him to feel extreme guilt and compete rejection of the monster. Is it science that led him to self destruction? Shelly wonders how far will technological advances go before a man becomes too dependent on technology? Science destroys his life because the monster dominates him, and Victor winds up being a slave to his own creation.
What was also interesting about the novel was how Shelly made the reader feel sympathetic for the monster. After all aren't we supposed to hate this thing? She portrayed the creature as a "normal human", showing love and affection. The creature's ugliness deterred anyone from coming close to him, and made him feel like an outsider. This rejection from society made the monster sad and helpless. His only revenge was to engage in destruction. This is when the "real" monster is created. After reading parts of the novel I felt bad for the monster, in a way I never thought I would.
Although slow paced, Mary Shelly's style of writing will allow you to take on different dimensions and force you to develop your own profound ideas about the topics discussed in the novel. I think Frankenstein is a great Romantic classic for anyone who has a imagination.
His longing for love, especially from Victor, was so painful that it became difficult for me to read. I kept hoping he'd find someone to show him the littlest bit of kindness. His turn to violence is entirely understandable, and Victor's irresponsibility toward his creation is despicable. Victor, who is outwardly handsome but cowardly and cruel, is the story's true monster.
In addition to writing a captivating story, Shelley raises many social issues that are still relevant today, nearly 200 years later, and the book provides a superb argument against *ever* cloning a human being.
(Note: I have the edition with the marvelous woodcut illustrations by Barry Moser and the Joyce Carol Oates afterword - superb!)
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It begins essentially as a narrative about the interaction between Puritan and Native American cultures, but is soon dissolves into an Austen-esque romance, though it lacks Austen's genius and unmistakable narrative voice. While the issues of interaction between disparate cultures still are raised, the primary action of the latter part of the story involves a struggle over marrying off the heroine. She raises some fairly compelling dust by making an Indian maiden and a white boy fall in love early on in the story, but she soon abandons that in the name of convention. Sedgwick appears to borrow the Austen motif of the dashing young suitor with a dark past in Sir Philip Gardiner, and makes three women fall in love with the same man, who wisely (of course) chooses the heroine for his wife. Sedgwick doesn't exactly keep you at the edge of your seat, but then again, she probably didn't intend to. And we'll continue to sing her praises simply because she was a woman with enough intellect to compose a mildly interesting story involving a slightly plucky and free-thinking heroine.
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