"The monster was human—yet not. The creator was brilliant—yet doomed." Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is not just a tale of horror—it is the birth of modern science fiction. Writt
"The monster was human—yet not. The creator was brilliant—yet doomed." Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is not just a tale of horror—it is the birth of modern science fiction. Written when Shelley was only 18, this timeless masterpiece explores the dangers of unchecked ambition, the thirst for knowledge, and the haunting consequences of playing god. Victor Frankenstein, a young scientist driven by obsession, succeeds in bringing life to a creature made from corpses. But his triumph turns to terror as the being he created—intelligent, sensitive, yet shunned by society—seeks revenge for his misery. Dark, tragic, and deeply philosophical, Frankenstein examines the boundaries of science, morality, and humanity itself. It is both a Gothic horror story and a profound reflection on responsibility, loneliness, and the human soul.