Frankenstein is the story of a young scientist who learns the secret of creating life. Fueled by a burning ambition for fame and glory, Frankenstein builds a hideous patchwork body out of scavenged corpses, but no sooner does he animate the gruesome creature than he abandons it in horror. Longing for love and companionship, the monster looks elsewhere for affection, but finds himself cruelly shunned wherever he goes. At last—grotesque and misunderstood, frustrated and alone—the creature turns to violence and hate. Frankenstein's reckless experiment is doomed to failure, ending in tragedy and ruin as the raging monster wreaks his revenge.
A chilling and precise journey into the minds of both creator and 'monster'. I'm not a big fan of the horror genre, but the language was such a joy that I conquered my fear and read on!! not at all disappointed!
Drahoš Zak’s disturbingly macabre illustration and muted pallet is devastating in the extreme and shows the absolute perfection of his art for this tale of tragic horror. If Zak was drawing in 1818, Mary Shelley would have asked him to illustrate her hideous progeny.