Ratings13
Average rating3.1
Reviews with the most likes.
DNF at 8% I just couldn't stand the narrator that kind of whispery and moist voice is just unbearable to me.
No rating.
Even though the name and the cover blurb might give you the feeling that you're about to read Frankenstein fanfiction (and you might not be half-wrong), this was astounding in its scope and boldness. Taking place in two time periods – the 19th and the 21st centuries – Winterson narrates the tale of a behind-the-scenes story of the writing of Frankenstein (in the former), the rise of AI and sex-bots (in the latter), and manages to merge the disparate aspects so beautifully that you feel as if you're not reading glorified fanfiction.
Mary and Percy Shelley are merged to form the trans protagonist Ry Shelley; Lord Byron becomes a flamboyant entrepreneur called Ron Lord, and so on – only the tragic Dr Frankenstein remains the same. The juxtaposition of characters should not have worked so well, but here we are.
To give you an idea of the sheer scope of the novel, some issues that Frankissstein tackles with aplomb are - feminism in the Victorian era compared to the modern era; how different the lives of cis and trans people are (the refrain ‘What are you' in the 21st century used for Ry is surprising, but considering many people are of this mind-set, not that unexpected); the debate on the value of a woman as more than her body (Ron Lord's USP for his sex-bots is that ‘they don't say no'); and the age-old debate on automation, AI and Luddites. All of this takes place in paragraphs which are so densely packed with witty information that you have to read some twice before it strikes you how good Winterson is as an author and as a conveyor of ideas.
This is one of those stories with a premise that is as outrageous as it sounds, but it works so well that you cannot help but wait to reread it. Would highly recommend.
3.5⭐️ Sort of read like Theory. Meshing topics of AI and Non-binary & Trans community was interesting. Lots of civil (almost Socratic?) discourse between characters, not something we're used to in todays day and age of screaming wars...
Bringing Mary Shelley and Frankenstein was interesting, but a good break from the present day discourse content.