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The dark, captivating story of one remarkable young woman. And her monster.
Creative genius...?
Inventor of science fiction...?
Pregnant teenage runaway...?
Who was the real Mary Shelley?
Publishing to mark the 200th anniversary of the publication of Frankenstein, Mary's Monster is the compelling, and beautifully illustrated, story of Mary Shelley - the original rebel girl and an inspiration for everyone from teenage readers to adult. When her fractured bond with her beloved father, and her elopement with the mercurial (and married) poet Percy Bysshe Shelley at the age of 16, led her to Switzerland, few could have imagined the consequence would be such a book. But, in the crucible of societal disapproval and tenuous circumstances, Mary Shelley created Frankenstein, and his monster, forged in the fire of her troubled and tragic life.
Part biography, part fantasy and part feminist allegory, Mary's Monster is an engrossing take on one remarkable young woman. And her monster.
320 pages, Hardcover
First published January 30, 2018


Mary is dead
nearly two hundred years
Her corpse rests within her grave,
but her spirit whispers
eternally through me,
her creature.
It is I
who keep her faith alive.




HEART POUNDING AGAINST RIBS
Cold sweat drips down my spine
and I am seized by a wakeful dream.
I see a pale student of unhallowed arts
kneeling beside the thing
he has put together.
A hideous phantasm of a man
with watery eyes and blackened lips
stirs with motion.
Science gives us the ability to pull back the skin of life
and reveal the truth of things. It allows us to understand
the mysteries of mountain-making and falling stars.
But knowledge isn't meant to be held as a weapon
in a battle to defy our fates and manipulate life over death.
Evil lodges too easily in men's hearts.
What will happen if they assume the power
to create life?





