Characters
Long Fiction
Author
Opening Letters
The Monster
100

character who thirsts for knowledge to the point of tragedy

Victor Frankenstein
100

a recurring element, idea, or concept that has symbolic value.

motif

100

Who is the author of Frankenstein?

Mary Shelley

100

the stranger that is saved from the ice

Victor Frankenstein

100

why does Frankenstein create the monster?

ambition; discover how to create life

200

adopted young girl who is affectionately referred to as "cousin" by Victor

Elizabeth

200

a character who contrasts with another character, in order to better highlight or differentiate certain qualities of a particular character.

dramatic foil

200

Mary's husband

Percy Bysshe Shelley

200

who is Robert writing to?

his sister, Margaret Saville

200

why does the monster hate Victor?

he abandoned him

300

the narrator/recorder of the story

Robert Walton

300

a universally understood symbol; a prototype upon which others are copied, patterned, or emulated.

archetypes

300

How does Percy Shelley die?

boating accident; drowned.

300

where is Robert going?

to the North Pole

300

how does the monster learn to speak and read?

by spying on the DeLacey family.

400

Victor's best friend; he later gets accused of murdering him.

Henry Clerval

400

a character in a story who doesn’t have the typical heroic qualities, such as morality or bravery; usually a mix of hero and villain

antihero
400

Which Greek legend is Frankenstein named for?

Prometheus

400

what was Robert's original desire to be?

a poet

400

name everyone the monster directly kills.

Henry, Elizabeth, William

500

person accused of William's murder

Justine Moritz

500

a Latin phrase that means “in the middle of things”; refers to a story that begins in the middle of the plot, rather than at the beginning.

in media res

500

Mary's parents

William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft

500

these letters are used for a literary technique called ____________.

framed narrative

500

how does the creature frame Justine Moritz?

places the locket (from William's neck) into the folds of her dress.