Victor Frankenstein, an ambitious young scientist, dares to defy the natural order. Driven by an insatiable thirst for knowledge, he creates life itself, assembling a being from lifeless parts. But what begins as an experiment in brilliance soon spirals into a nightmare.
Horrified by the creature he has brought into existence, Frankenstein abandons his creation, leaving it to face a world that recoils in fear and cruelty. Tormented and isolated, the creature becomes a mirror of human failure, seeking understanding but finding only rejection. Its wrath grows, sparking a relentless pursuit of vengeance that will destroy both creator and creation.
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is a haunting meditation on ambition, responsibility, and the ethical boundaries of science. A cornerstone of gothic literature, it probes the depths of human hubris and the consequences of tampering with the unknown.
A tale both tragic and terrifying, Frankenstein remains a chilling reminder of the fragile balance between creation and destruction.