October 18, 2012
The Casebook of Victor Frankenstein, by Peter Akroyd
Using his formidable background as historian and biographer,
Peter Akroyd retools Mary Shelley’s original as a realistic tale set mostly in
London, with famous literary figures cast as a sort of repertory troupe for the
novel’s characters. Percy Shelley is introduced as a fellow student to Victor
Frankenstein, and Harriet Westbrook, Percy’s real-life abandoned wife, appears
as Frankenstein’s fiancée, her drowning by suicide reimagined as murder by the Monster’s
hand. Mary Shelley, Lord Byron and John Polidori, among others — including
scientific figures of the time — are featured, and we get to visit the Villa
Diodati in Geneva.
The Monster in this novel is a young man galvanized back to
life at Frankenstein’s Thames-side laboratory, with ghastly results. Burned and
deformed by the elaborate electrical installation, driven mad, the now
dangerous creature escapes Frankenstein’s influence, thereafter to dog the
experimenter’s every step with death and desolation, like an avenging ghost.
Akroyd brings Frankenstein’s era and the small, everyday
details of the period to vivid, three-dimensional life. The author had me
eagerly scurrying to dictionaries and Google to look up the no-longer familiar
terms used for tradesmen, conveyances, food and drink. This is a generous book,
a very compelling read, with a nasty twist at the end. Whatever you do, don’t
even glance at the last few pages lest you spoil the surprise of the
denouement, made all the more fun when you consider the clues that were
sprinkled throughout the book.
The Casebook of Victor Frankenstein, published by Doubleday in America in 2008, is one
of the very best of all alternate Frankenstein stories. A film version is
reportedly in the works.
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2 comments:
Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I really enjoy Peter Ackroyd's work and somehow missed this.
I can only echo what John has said! Thank you!
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