I have finally uploaded to Kindle Direct my memoir about chasing Mary Shelley for decades; I serialized it here (for more than three years!) as Frankenstein Sundae, and that is how it appears now. It will soon be available on Kindle Direct on Amazon's site ($4.99)--and you do not need a Kindle device to purchase/read the book. Kindle apps are free for your tablet and/or smart phone.
Here's the Preface ...
Preface
This is not a biography of Mary Shelley—except
when it is. It is, principally, a memoir about my decades-long obsession with
her, an obsession that commenced in the early to mid-1990s. A lot of
biographical material is here, of
course, because I can’t assume that readers will know much about her (though
some surely will), and one of a writer’s most essential jobs is to dispel, not
summon, confusion. (I’m sure I’ve done a lot of both here. Oh well.)
As you will read, the fire of my obsession
was hottest in the mid-1990s and on into the early 2000s. It cooled a bit after
I published a YA biography of Mary in 2012 (Kindle Direct). Then, a few years
later, I decided to write this memoir, which began as a series of blog posts
(dawnreader.blogspot.com), then blossomed (?) into thrice-weekly installments—a
process that greatly increased my admiration for those Victorians (Dickens,
Trollope, Collins, et al.) who serialized entire novels (in some cases—more
than one at a time!). Readers can Google those posts to see the many pictures I
included. The serialization consumed more than three years of my life—from
April 28, 2014–August 23, 2017.
By the time I finished, I had a
draft so rough that Rough objected and said it would not allow its name to be
associated with such a work. (Something about damaging its reputation.) And so
began a long, slow, sometimes tedious revision. One of the biggest problems?
Repetition. Because the serialization had continued for so long, I had to keep
reminding readers who characters were, reminding them about what the key events
had been. I’ve tried to remove all/most of this, but I’ve no doubt that some
redundancy remains here and there.
Complicating my task? So much
scholarly work had appeared about Mary and her circle since I had (temporarily)
abandoned them. Not to mention the novels, the movies, and other cultural
contributions. Complicating it more? This year—2018—is the two-hundredth
anniversary of the original publication of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus. And so all sorts of other tributes
and publications have appeared.
In recent months, I’ve read
Kathryn Harkup’s Making the Monster: The
Science Behind Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (2018), Ahmed Saadawi’s novel Frankenstein in Baghdad (2018), and an
older novel (recommended by a friend), Peter Lovesey’s The Vault (1999), a mystery/thriller which involves the city of
Bath, where Mary wrote much of the novel, the novel that plays a key role in
the mystery. And there’s a wonderful
book—chockablock with pictures and illustrations—Christopher Frayling’s Frankenstein: The First Two Hundred Years
(2017).
Oh, and then SP Books published this
year a replica of the Frankenstein
manuscript, a publication I had to
have (of course). It cost a … bit. But it is wonderful, looking through those
pages, seeing the notes of Mary, the notes and suggestions of her husband,
Percy Bysshe Shelley.
And, of course, I realized all of
this was impossible. Purely impossible. There was no way I could keep up with
it. (As I type these words—May 31, 2018—there is about to be published a new
biography of Mary, In Search of Mary
Shelley: The Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein, by Fiona Samson. Which I’ve
ordered. And will read. But I’m not sure how much of it—if any—will find its
way into this text.)
And so … here we go.
I enjoyed this journey about as
much as anything I’ve ever done in my life. And I hope you will find the trip
pleasant, as well, despite the many detours I take down by-ways that sometimes
lead to stunning vistas, sometimes to culs-de-sac, sometimes to dead ends.
And as I type this, I realize: I
have assembled this publication by borrowing pieces of history, of memoir, of
biography, of … whatever. Attaching them. And now I wonder: Can I bring this
creature to life? And if I do, will it turn out to be a monster?
A final word (before many more words ensue): I have been as
careful as I can be, proofreading, but I know in such a complicated work that
typos and other goofs will inevitably escape even a most assiduous eye. Forgive
me. I will fix all that I subsequently learn about—and trust that you, dear
reader, will be … understanding.
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