I wish I had re-read Mary Shelley's Frankenstein before reading this book. It's been a very long time since I read her novel, and since then I've heard, seen, and read so many twists on the original tale I'm not sure what the real story is anymore. So many versions and many of them have the monster as the victim; I just automatically assume the monster is innocent. From what I gather from this story, Shelley's version had Victor Frankenstein as a sympathetic character, and the monster was evil. Zeltserman's version is telling the story from the Monster's perspective, and in his version Frankenstein is truly evil.
This story is told by Friedrich Hoffmann, a young chemist who was in love and engaged to his beloved Johanna and they were soon to be married. But he woke up in a alley, with blood on his clothes and Johanna's locket and was convicted of her murder. He was tortured on the wheel until he finally died. But he woke up on a table with a man standing over him. The man's name was Victor Frankenstein and Friedrich learned that his body was no longer the body he remembered, but an 8-foot monstrosity of various parts. He met Charlotte, a woman who was a head in a jar, kept alive by satanic rituals and a strange liquid. Months went by and one day Victor left him for a period of time. Friedrich escaped.
Friedrich set off to pay his respects to Johanna. He met a doctor in the woods who put together a remedy for him, but Friedrich put it in his pocket and forgot about it. He visited Johanna then went into the woods. He found a community of monks and spent months with them. They accepted him and he was happy to work with them. But he was compelled to leave and spent months looking in villages, as if he was in a haze. He kept hearing how girls were disappearing and he was being blamed. But one day he came across a group of villagers accusing a young woman of being a witch and he saved her. Her name was Henriette and Friedrich decided to take her to Venice so she could start a new life. They became close on their journey, as brother and sister, and he stole clothes, food, and riches so she could easily start a new life. But one day they were set upon by vampires and Friedrich could not save her in time.
Then he came across a group of devil worshipers who were about to sacrifice a young girl in the woods. He made them return the girl and let them worship him. They brought him food and drink and he made them do horrible things to each other. But when he learned they had already sacrificed a few children, he told them to wait for him at a place in the woods where they should build him a temple. It was where the nest of vampires was.
Friedrich was compelled south, but he resisted and around Lake Geneva finally found Frankenstein's family. He learned he was engaged, or soon to be engaged, to a woman named Elizabeth. But he left and continued South where he found a ruined castle in the mountains. Inside was Frankenstein and others, along with about 100 stolen girls (and some boys). They were turning this castle into a place of debauchery and depravity. There was a going to be a big night, once the castle was finished, and the victims would be defiled, raped, and killed. But Frankenstein discovered, to his horror, that he must obey Frankenstein. He could not resist his order, nor could he harm him.
Friedrich was reunited with Charlotte and was allowed to kill her (her wishes). He was also given the choice to have Johanna brought back to life. He had to pick the girl whose body Johanna would be in. Then he and Victor set off for London/Scotland where they would perform this transition. The night before the transition, Friedrich remembered the remedy and made the tincture. Almost immediately he was in control of himself again. Friedrich frees the girl and gets her home safely, and frames Victor for his friend Henry Clavil's murder. But Victor gets off and returns to his family home. He is set to marry Elizabeth and Friedrich warns him. The day of the wedding, Friedrich tries to warn Elizabeth but she won't listen and in a rage he accidentally kills her.
Friedrich chases Victor all the way north. Victor is trapped on the ice but an ice boat rescues him. Friedrich stays in the north, living alone. He can only hope that Victor paid for his crimes. It also appears that Friedrich does not age, or ages slowly, for the world had changed by the time he re-entered it.
This was a good read. I like the perspective, but it would have been even more interesting if I had read Shelley's version first.