Guillermo del Toro’s 2025 film Frankenstein prompted a re-reading of the 1831 text of the novel and reaffirmed the old maxim about beauty - or meaning - lying in the eye of the beholder. In the film’s Making Of, the director hints toward a theme of harsh fathers and wounded sons, and the film itself renders the Frankenstein family in a stark black-white-red palette suggestive of abusive relationships. This stands in sharp contrast to the novel, where Victor Frankenstein is raised within a loving and supportive family- one whose nurturing environment offers no encouragement for the unchecked, godlike ambition to re-create life that ultimately drives his downfall.
The film therefore unfolds less as an adaptation than as an opulent Gothic fairy tale, in which the terror of the book’s central ethical conflict between creator and creature is eclipsed by an excess of blood and mangled bodies. Wolves also make an appearance in the film, which to me felt entirely superfluous. Unlike the novel, the film seems unwilling to confront the idea that the true source of horror lies in humanity itself - in its ambitions and its choices - and instead relies on external agents of devastation: fire, explosions, and, of course, the wolves.
By contrast, the novel’s enduring appeal is undeniable, its drama of creator and creation is rendered in ornate, elevated prose that gestures toward moral refinement and philosophical depth, further enriched by the intricate narrative layering - a story within a story of a story, as Captain Walton’s letters to his sister recount his rescue of Victor Frankenstein, who in turn relates the creature’s tale, which at one point includes the words of the blind De Lacey patriarch as told to the creature himself. The book does not flinch from the unsettling truth that the greatest horror arises from within us - from what we are capable of, irrespective of nurture or environment. The rejected creature absorbs and symbolises this horror, embodying murder, wrongful accusation culminating in execution, revenge, and annihilation. The book offers no consoling resolution - no sentimental reconciliation, no promise of redemption. The moral dilemma remains unresolved: can one ever be justified in creating, if one is unwilling to bear responsibility for the consequences of that creation?
“The labours of men of genius, however erroneously directed, scarcely ever fail in ultimately turning to the solid advantage of man-kind."
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus remains one of the most intellectually alive novels in English because it is not merely a tale of scientific overreach, but a meditation on what it means to create, to know, to abandon, and to be human. Its enduring power lies in the fact that it refuses simple moral bookkeeping. Victor Frankenstein is not a straightforward villain, nor is the Creature a mere monster. Shelley builds a tragic architecture in which both are deeply legible, both culpable, and both pitiful. One of the novel’s greatest achievements is its layered narrative design. The story arrives to us through Walton’s letters, Victor’s confession, and the Creature’s own eloquent account. This structure is not decorative; it is philosophically necessary. Shelley makes us read responsibility itself through a chain of narrators, each one partial, each one self-justifying. Walton longs for glory and recognition, Victor longs for forbidden knowledge, and the Creature longs for sympathy and belonging. Their voices echo one another so closely that the novel becomes a study in repetition: each man is a version of the others, a soul driven by desire and wounded by isolation. Walton’s opening ambition and Victor’s ruinous pursuit create a frame that warns us from the outset, while still allowing us to be seduced by the very aspiration the novel condemns. Victor Frankenstein is one of literature’s most haunting examples of the Romantic overreacher. His error is not simply that he “creates life,” but that he imagines creation without obligation. He pursues knowledge as if it were pure possession, not relation. His scientific triumph becomes a moral collapse because the instant the Creature lives, Victor recoils. Shelley’s genius is in showing that the true horror is not animation itself, but abdication. The famous plea “Learn from me” is less a noble warning than a self-exposing confession: Victor has learned too late that creation without care is catastrophe. His sin is not curiosity; it is refusal. The Creature, meanwhile, is one of the most astonishingly articulate figures in the Gothic tradition. Shelley denies us the easy comfort of monstrosity by giving him eloquence, memory, tenderness, and self-analysis. When he says, “I ought to be thy Adam,” the line crystallizes the novel’s central ethical inversion. He is not asking to be excused; he is asking to be recognized as a creature made for relationship, not exile. The tragedy is that his violence is born from repeated rejection. Shelley does not excuse his murders, but she carefully traces their cause through humiliation, loneliness, and the crushing knowledge that he has been made into an object before he has had the chance to become a self. That psychological depth is what makes Frankenstein far more than a cautionary fable about science. It is also a novel about the violence of neglect. The Creature begins with openness toward the world: he learns language, observes human feeling, and yearns for moral education. What destroys him is not innate evil but the world’s refusal to meet him halfway. Shelley suggests that moral character is relational. The self is shaped by reception as much as by will. In that sense, the novel is profoundly modern in its understanding of development, trauma, and social formation. Shelley also uses landscape with extraordinary subtlety. The sublime Alps, frozen wastes, and storm-swept seas are not mere background. They reflect interior states, but never simplistically. Nature in Frankenstein offers awe, scale, and temporary consolation, yet it never fully heals the human wound. The mountains may momentarily lift Victor out of despair, but they cannot restore moral balance. The sublime here is both refuge and indictment: it dwarfs human ambition while also mirroring its grandeur. Shelley’s prose repeatedly contrasts the beauty of the natural world with the ugliness of human disconnection. The novel’s gender politics deepen its tragedy. Women in Frankenstein are consistently idealized, silenced, or destroyed. Caroline, Elizabeth, Justine, and Safie illuminate the emotional and moral world of the men, but rarely control their own destinies. Shelley’s novel seems acutely aware of reproduction, inheritance, and creation as masculine monopolies. Victor’s attempt to manufacture life without women is not only scientific hubris but a grotesque parody of generation. The absence of nurturing female agency leaves the novel’s world emotionally and ethically barren. Creation severed from care becomes monstrosity. What makes Shelley’s novel so remarkable is its refusal to settle on a single moral centre. Is the Creature evil because he kills, or innocent because he was made and abandoned? Is Victor a victim of his own ambition, or the true architect of the disaster? Shelley answers: both. The novel’s tragic intelligence lies in holding contradiction without dissolving it. It asks us to see that suffering does not erase guilt, and guilt does not erase suffering. That doubleness is why the book still feels so unsettlingly current. Ultimately, Frankenstein is a novel about the ethical burden of making. Whether one is a scientist, parent, artist, or creator of any kind, Shelley insists on a truth that is still difficult to hear: to bring something into the world is to become answerable to it. Victor seeks the glory of creation, but not the duties of companionship. The Creature seeks love, but receives only horror. Between them lies the novel’s bleakest insight: the thing we make in our own image may become a mirror of our neglect. This is why Frankenstein survives as more than a classic Gothic tale. It is a novel of extraordinary moral seriousness, lyrical power, and psychological precision. Its monsters are not simply stitched from dead flesh; they are made from loneliness, pride, fear, and the failure of human responsibility. Shelley’s achievement is to make that failure feel tragic rather than abstract, and to leave us with the chilling awareness that the deepest horrors are often not born in laboratories, but in the broken relations between maker and made.
Obsessed with this masterpiece. It's so deep in ways I didn't expect. And even though it's fiction, written over 200 years ago, it feels almost uncomfortably real because it reflects so much of the world we still live in today.
Frankenstein is a constantly whining child who created a child himself that he wanted, and swiftly abandoned it only to name it a monster after it successfully raised itself in a world full of nothing but hate for him. The chase surprised me and connected many dots from other versions I have seen.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.