1
2
3
4
5
100

Who is the outer frame narrator of the novel?

Robert Walton.

100

Who tells most of the main story?

Victor Frankenstein.

100

Where does Victor study natural philosophy?

Ingolstadt

100

What is the creature’s physical appearance described as?

Large and grotesque.

100

Is the creature given a personal name?

No.

200

Which family does the creature secretly observe?

The De Lacey family.

200

What book shapes the creature’s moral thinking most strongly?

Paradise Lost.

200

Who is murdered by the creature first?

William Frankenstein.

200

Who is wrongly executed for William’s murder?

Justine Moritz.

200

Where does the creature first confront Victor?

On Mont Blanc.

300

Where does Victor destroy the female creature?

The Orkney Islands.

300

Who is killed shortly after the female creature is destroyed?

Henry Clerval.

300

What natural setting frames the beginning and ending of the novel?

 The Arctic

300

What theme is highlighted by Victor’s abandonment of the creature?

Responsibility.

300

Which emotion dominates the creature’s experience?

Loneliness.

400

Who is murdered on Victor’s wedding night?

Elizabeth Lavenza.

400

Which character symbolizes unchecked scientific ambition?

Victor Frankenstein.

400

Who rescues Victor in the Arctic?

Robert Walton.

400

What does the creature plan to do at the end of the novel?

Destroy himself.

400

Which literary movement strongly influences the novel?

Romanticism

500

Which other two books does the creature read?

Plutarch’s Lives and The Sorrows of Young Werther.

500

What demand does the creature make of Victor?

To create a female companion.

500

How does Victor die?

From illness and exhaustion.

500

Which scientific idea is most associated with Victor’s experiment?

Reanimation of dead matter.

500

What major warning does the novel present?

The danger of uncontrolled scientific ambition.

M
e
n
u