What does it take to write one of the most enduring novels in human history at eighteen years old, in the middle of a volcanic winter, surrounded by grief? In this episode of the Brit Lit Book Club, we dive deep into Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, tracing the extraordinary life behind one of Gothic literature's greatest masterworks.
We explore Mary's radical inheritance: daughter of pioneering feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin — and the personal tragedies that shaped her obsession with creation, loss, and the desperate wish to undo death. We journey to the shores of Lake Geneva, where the stormy summer of 1816 gave birth to the famous ghost story competition and, ultimately, to the spark of Frankenstein itself.
Along the way, we discuss why the creature is not the villain of this novel, how Mary Shelley invented science fiction while drawing on the very real and very fashionable science of Galvanism, and why the 1931 Boris Karloff film, brilliant as it is, robbed the creature of his most essential quality: his eloquence.
We also look at Frankenstein's extraordinary legacy, from the National Theatre's 2011 Benedict Cumberbatch production to its DNA running through every conversation we're currently having about artificial intelligence and the ethics of creation. That question has never felt more urgent.
In this episode:
Mary Wollstonecraft's radical legacy and its influence on Frankenstein
The Year Without a Summer and the Villa Diodati ghost story competition
Why the 1818 first edition differs — and why it matters
The feminist and humanist reading of the creature
Gothic literature's origins and how Mary Shelley transformed the tradition
Literary pilgrimage sites related to Mary Shelley
Perfect for: fans of Gothic literature, British literary history, feminist literary criticism, science fiction origins, the Romantic era, and literary travel.
📚 Reading List
Start Here: Frankenstein: The 1818 Text (Penguin Classics) — Mary Shelley The original, unrevised edition — rawer, more radical, and more interesting than the commonly reprinted 1831 version. This Penguin edition includes an introduction by Charlotte Gordon and notes that place Mary in a feminist literary legacy.
Biography: Mary Shelley — Miranda Seymour The gold-standard life of Shelley. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written — the kind of biography that reads like a novel and leaves you feeling you've lost a friend when it's over.
Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley — Charlotte Gordon A National Book Critics Circle Award winner that tells the story of both mother and daughter in alternating chapters — two women who never knew each other but shared a literary and feminist legacy. This one will absolutely wreck you in the best way possible.
The Gothic Tradition: The Mysteries of Udolpho (Penguin Classics) — Ann Radcliffe The Gothic novel that defined the genre before Mary Shelley came along and revolutionized it. Atmospheric, suspenseful, and surprisingly modern
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