3.5/5
An uneven collection of stories with the connecting theme of "Frankenstein". The collection starts with the original "Frankenstein" novel by Shelly and also includes two other novels making this a huge tome. Some stories are about the Creature or modern versions others about the Doctor or modern-day mad scientists. There are a couple which explore the "Bride" theme, others that feature new doctors genetically related to the original Dr., Victor; There is even an appearance by Dr. Pretorius. This is a hodgepodge collection with stories I rated anywhere from duds of 0 to excellent 5-star renderings. My actual average worked out to a strong 3.5 stars.
Foreword by Neil Gaiman (2014) - How the book came to be written and brief literary analysis.
Introduction by Stephen Jones (1994) - The history of Frankenstein in film and adaptations.
1. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (1831) - read my review under the original title. (5/5)
2. A New Life by Ramsey Campbell (1976) - A mounting terror as a man regains consciousness but doesn't remember his own name. Slowly he remembers some thigs about his life but he is blind and cannot move any of his limbs. The reader finally finds out what has happened to him. (3/5)
3. The Creator by R. Chetwynd-Hayes (1978) - This is an amusing read, having a comical tone. A young man decides to create a monster once he gets his hands on his deceased grandfather and a recently demised goat. (4/5)
4. Better Dead by Basil Copper (1994) - Another amusing story. A woman is embittered because her husband spends all his time with his hobby, watching classic films (especially "Bride of Frankenstein". A murder does occur but I found the whole story light-hearted rather than dark. (3/5)
5. Creature Comforts by Nancy Kilpatrick (1994) - A girl sneaks backstage with a fake press pass to see "Creature" from the band, Monster. She loves all his scars and how big he is. Surprisingly, she gets into a pretend interview with Creature, she hasn't a clue the reason she got in is her fake ID uses her real name, "Elizabeth"... (3/5)
6. Mannikins of Horror by Robert Bloch (1939) - This alludes to one of my favourite scenes in "Bride", that of the tiny people created by the other Dr. Pretorius. In this story, Colin, a former brain surgeon is now shell-shocked and imprisoned in a madhouse. To keep what remains of his sanity he takes to making small clay people. With skeletons, organs, nervous systems, brains, etc. The worst is to come when the figures start to twitch. I really enjoyed this. My favourite so far. (5/5)
7. El Sueno de la Razon by Daniel Fox (1994) - A genetically created boy, both by genes and upbringing is trained to be the best of the best. As part of a tough survival course for teens he is part of the team and yet is never excepted as he learns he has many perfections but they forgot one thing, a personality, an ability to be social. Good ending. (4/5)
8. Pithecanthropus Rejectus by Manly Wade Wellman (1937) - A scientist experiments on an ape, giving him speech, intellect, and raising him alongside his son. This is the ape's life story according to himself. A sad take on mankind. (4/5)
9. Tantamount to Murder by John Brunner (1994) - A Marquis has kept his wife in a hermetically sealed mausoleum for seven years awaiting a cure for what ails her. Then one night her brother with an entourage of doctors, lawyers, etc arrives and spoils everything. (4/5)
10. Last Train by Guy N. Smith (1994) - This is just dumb. A 20-year-old sheltered farm boy goes to London to get laid. There he meets up with a ghastly trio late in the night. (1/5)
11. The Hound of Frankenstein by Peter Tremayne (1977) - Next up we have a whole novel, a short one, but indeed a novel. This is pure 1970s Gothic fiction. As I read I could just see Vincent Price as the Baron in full Technicolor, LOL. The story is unadulterated gothic camp but was a lot of fun to read. Supposedly this is a sequel to Shelley's "Frankenstein" and it furthers the adventures of Victor Frankenstein after he comes back from the Arctic. The author plays fast and loose with the facts of the original novel having the Baron survive, come to England and send for his wife, Elizabeth. Not exactly good writing but very readable and a quick read that just gave me a huge dose of entertainment. It even ends with the classic twist so perhaps there's a sequel. Pure fun! (4/5)
12. Mother of Invention by Graham Masterton (1994) - This is my favourite so far! A very well-written tale of the macabre. A man decides to go through the old photo albums and present his aged mother, in a nursing home, with a "This is Your Life" type of album. He discovers a horrid secret about both his father and mother. Great suspense. The writer keeps a couple of sentences ahead of the reader, letting the secret reveal itself as he writes. Wonderful. (5/5)
13. The Frankenstein Legacy by Adrian Cole (1994) - Another one I really enjoyed. This assumes Dr. F. did not die in the original book and Robert Walton lied in his letters. It's 200 years later and the experiments have changed to transferring living brains into other bodies. Life immortal. Interesting twist having Walton be the bad guy. Very good! (5/5)
14. The Dead Line by Dennis Etchison (1979) - A terrifying tale of organ "harvesting". (5/5)
15. Poppi's Monster by Lisa Morton (1994) - The monster is metaphorical this time. An abused little girl watches the original Frankenstein movie one time she is locked in her closet by her father. A sad tale in which the girl relates to the gentle Karloff version of the monster. (4/5)
16. Undertow by Karl Edward Wagner (1977) - This is one of the longer stories in the book and about the author's recurring character Kane, the sorcerer. It's a gothic type of tale set in an 18th-century-ish world. As we follow the story of Desylyn and Kane we wonder why it's included in this Frankenstein collection. It wasn't until the last 6 mins mark that I guessed the connection and the dreaded ending was satisfying. (4/5)
17. A Complete Woman by Roberta Lannes (1994) - I didn't read this story because the author says in her blurb about the story "This story was written for those idiots who still believe all gays and transsexuals have a choice". First of all, authors should not insult their readers and secondly, I am not an idiot so the story is not for me. ALL human beings above the age of reason have a choice about their behaviour, sexual or otherwise. (0/5)
18. Last Call for the Sons of Shock by David J. Schow (1991) - The "real" Frankenstein, Dracula and Wolfman get together for their yearly gathering, at Blank Frank's current bar the Un / Dead. They reminisce about the past, present and future. Pretty boring. (1/5)
19. Chandira by Brian Mooney (1994) - Rather boring. Set in Raj India, a two-hundred-year-old holy man gives a young officer a duty to perform at his death. This is when he learns of the man's wife's secret. (2/5)
20. Celebrity Frankenstein by Stephen Volk (2012) - This is a silly story but I liked it anyway. A "Frankenstein" is made on camera for a reality show. Then the guy goes on to become a famous singer, gets his own talk show, is everywhere in the media. Then he starts to loose it and there are scenes straight from the tabloids, a couple of Michael Jackson incidents, jumping on the couch a la Tom Cruise and the O.J. car chase. A fun read and commentary on "reality TV" and celebrety worshipping. (4/5)
21. Completist Heaven by Kim Newman (1994) - A man finds a channel that shows only Frankenstein movies but he soon realises that the never before seen mash-ups of old Universal stars with more modern actors are not real movies but imaginary ones. Very boring as nothing happens. Just lists of movies he watches. (1/5)
22. The Temptation of Dr. Stein by Paul Mcauley (1994) - This was an interesting story set in an alternate history of one of the author's novels. The year is unknown but it's set in an Italy where Leonardo da Vinci has brought all his inventions to realisation making Italy the capital of the world. It is here that we encounter the story of a man experimenting with bringing the dead back to life piece by piece. (5/5)
23. To Receive is Better by Michael Marshall Smith (1994) - The narrator is telling us about his escape. He is a clone, a body double, and lives on the Farm with all the other clones. They serve as body harvests for their "real" sibling when they need a new part because of accidents or disease. Pretty creepy! (4/5)
24. The Dead End by David Case (1969) - This the third and final novel included in the collection. My Kindle notes that the novel is 19% of the entire book. It was great fun with a plot straight out of a horror B-movie. Not a page turner but it grabbed my attention so much I had to put other reading aside to concentrate on it. The story takes place in the mountains on the border between Chile and Venezuela where a recluse "mad" scientist is living. The narrator of our story searches him out and finds the horror he has been working on. (5/5)
25. Frankenstein by Jo Fletcher (1994) -a poem, 'nuff said. (1/5)