...It wasn't until later that I remembered that in the novel, before he begins his scientific studies, Victor dabbles in the occult, even attempting to raise the dead (albeit he is only a teenager at the time)...I consulted the novel and found that the books mentioned include the very ones displayed in the exhibit. Namely, in Chapters 2 and 3, Victor speaks of his early interest in Agrippa, Albertus Magnus, and Paracelsus.
I do hope that the Hallmark's production will include most of these literary mentions as well as depict that the monster acquired some learning and was an intelligent being.
Did you also catch the monster reading Milton's "Paradise Lost", Goethe's "Sorrows of Werter" and Plutarch's "Lives"? Did they have old copies of those books at your book exhibit?I do hope that the Hallmark's production will include most of these literary mentions as well as depict that the monster acquired some learning and was an intelligent being.
Your comment about "Paradise Lost" reminded me that I tried to read that work after being introduced to it in Mary Shelley's novel ... I think I was about 10 or 11 at the time ...