
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
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- lurch
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Just a side note on this subject...During interviews of Mel Brooks, the subject of his movie " Frankenstein" always comes up and he always gets in, " Frankenstein is actually a story of "Womb Envy"..Usually it gets a laff, but with the background provided here, I can see Brooks may have a valid point. Shelley turned her painful experience into a sad fiction.
If she withdrew from exaltation, she would be forced to think- And every thought led to fear and contradictions; to dilemmas for which she was unprepared.
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Hate to disagree, wf, but what you are calling "filler" was the discursive style that went back much earlier than Dickens. Read any Austen? Hawthorne? Melville? A lot of space was given to thinking and talking over philosophical implications, personal ramifications, etc. That was considered part of the book, and maybe people felt ripped off if a story moved too fast. Nowadays if a hero or heroine stops to breathe or pee, people get bored.wayfriend wrote:I read it once a while back. I thought that most of it is thought-provoking, but there were some stretches that were outright boring. That dang Charles Dickens - whom I detest - got everyone stretching out their novels with a lot of filler.
I thought Frankenstein was pretty short, almost a novella. But then my husband teases me that I buy my books by the pound.

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ahhhh... if only all our creativity in wickedness could be fixed by "Corrupt a Wish." - Linna Heartlistener
ahhhh... if only all our creativity in wickedness could be fixed by "Corrupt a Wish." - Linna Heartlistener