COMMENTS & QUESTIONS

Chapter 301,569 wordsCompleted

The chapter “Comments & Questions” offers a collage of critical perspectives followed by discussion prompts. It begins with a January 1818 review in the Quarterly Review, noting the creature’s self‑education through listening at the De Lacey cottage, his consumption of works like Plutarch’s Lives, Paradise Lost, Volney’s Ruins of Empires, and The Sorrows of Werter, and how this “delicate monster” turns self‑knowledge into self‑hatred and vengeance, culminating in his demand for a female companion. Next, Percy Bysshe Shelley’s contemporary appraisal praises the novel’s originality, relentless narrative momentum, and moral core that “mistreatment breeds malevolence,” emphasizing the creature’s tragic pathos and the significance of the blind De Lacey episode. The Athenaeum’s 1832 review declares the work unparalleled in tone and structure, highlighting the accelerating intensity after Elizabeth’s death, the supernatural Arctic climax, and the creature’s powerful final speech. From these reviews the chapter extracts recurring critical themes: the role of education and knowledge, the Prometheus myth, social rejection and moral determinism, and the impact of Shelley’s epistolary framework. Finally, three open‑ended questions invite readers to consider (1) the effect of the monster’s reading list on his character, (2) how the layered letters and speeches shape interpretation, and (3) why Frankenstein endures across adaptations, probing themes of scientific hubris, outcast suffering, and collective unconscious rage.