This section contains 217 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: A review of Gothic Romance, in Publishers Weekly, Vol. 237, No. 21, May 25, 1990, pp. 51-2.
In the following review, the critic summarizes the plot of Gothic Romance.
An allusive and contrived retelling of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) and the circumstances of its composition—when the Shelleys, Byron, and his mad young medic "poor Polidori" lived abroad and traded ghost stories—this novel [Gothic Romance] shuttles to and fro in time as if an intertextual exercise. It opens with the embittered addict Polidori living in squalor with a prostitute and claiming that Shelley stole his ideas for her story while his own tale, The Vampire, has been slighted. In a suicidal overdose, he imagines himself drenched on the deck of a sinking ship. The scene shifts to contemporary London, where the ship's captain, Robert Walton (the Arctic explorer in Shelley's novel, to whom the marooned Dr. Frankenstein described his monstrous creation...
This section contains 217 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |