"Fiona Sampson (
The creation myth,
Review, 13 January) provides an overview of possible sources for the
central theme of Frankenstein, but fails to mention a significant one:
Prometheus. It is no coincidence that Percy Shelley grasped this myth in
Prometheus Unbound,
and that Mary critiqued it in Frankenstein and subsequent work. As she
commented to Byron’s mistress after his death: “We are all Cassandras;
and we are so blind that we do not give heed to the silent voice which
makes itself heard within our soul.” While exploring the story of the production of Frankenstein,
Sampson also inadvertently encourages the myth that Mary was a
one-great-book wonder, lumping her impressive lifetime’s achievement
under the category “dogged survivor and consummate professional”.
Valperga (1823) was already in train when Frankenstein was published.
The Last Man (1826) is set in a future in which a plague has killed off
all but one human on the planet. In addition Mary wrote three further
novels, dozens of short stories, biographical sketches, and, of course,
prepared her late husband’s collected works for publication. An
impressive literary legacy for which Frankenstein is only the first
chapter."
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