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Description
Placing Frankenstein in the critical frameworks of book history and secondary authorship, this book explores the increasing array of book-based reworkings of, and sequels to, the novel that up to this point, have been largely ignored. Covering novels, novellas and short stories across a range of genres from romance to YA fiction, Frankenstein Retold examines a broad range of these texts in different purviews and demonstrates their own critical value as well and pertinence for understanding new approaches to literary adaptation in theory and practice more broadly. Organised thematically, the book cover topics including: filial characterisation; continuations and sequels explicitly tied to Shelley's narrative; epistolary, journal-based, found-text and other storytelling forms; coquels set against the original material; fiction in which Shelley's materials have been transplanted to entirely new settings, periods or genres; cameos; and the ghostly presence of the original author. A testament to the vitality of the original story more than two centuries after it first appeared, Daniel Cook explores works from a huge range of writers such as Peter Ackroyd, Jeanette Winterson, Ahmed Saadawi, Suzanne Weyne, Jon Skovron, William A. Chandler, Susan Heyboer Okeefe, Hailey Bailey, Laurie Sheck, Edward M. Erdelac, Fred Saberhagen and Kate Horsley among many others. With a large body of scholarship already exploring the rich cinematic, transmedial and cultural afterlife of Shelley's novel, Frankenstein Retold offers a bridge between literary studies notions of book history and authorship, and media studies approaches to transmedia storytelling, between fan writing and media production histories.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Hideous Progeny
Chapter 2: Continuations
Chapter 3: Chronicles
Chapter 4: Coquels
Chapter 5: Transplantations
Chapter 6: Cameos
Coda: Mary Shelley Unbound
Bibliography
Index
Product details

Published | Apr 16 2026 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9781350501959 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
Series | Gothic Legacies |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Set against a marching hoard of Frankenstein scholarship that tends to focus disproportionately on Shelley's cinematic afterlives, this book makes a fresh intervention by considering the literary, book-based adaptations that animate the enduring myth of Frankenstein. Treating Frankenstein as a “foundational allegory of Gothic authorship,” this book provides a formal analysis and taxonomy of the exciting and at times monstrous literary experiments that unfold and feed into one another as contemporary authors rewrite and reassemble Shelley's “hideous progeny.” Original and compelling, this is a must-read for scholars interested in Shelley or the Gothic, or in how literature continues to reinvent itself.
Kirstin Mills, Senior Lecturer, Macquarie University, Australia